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Comparative Proportionality Review: A Nationwide Examination of Reversed Death Sentences

NCJ Number
171932
Journal
American Journal of Criminal Justice Volume: 22 Issue: 1 Dated: (Fall 1997) Pages: 13-40
Author(s)
D H Wallace; J R Sorensen
Date Published
1997
Length
28 pages
Annotation
This article examines death sentences from across the country that have been reversed on comparative proportionality grounds.
Abstract
A required part of the appellate review of death sentences in many capital punishment jurisdictions is comparative proportionality review. This procedure requires the court to compare the death sentence under review with sentences in similar cases to determine whether it is excessive. Relatively few death sentences have been reversed on these grounds, and the number of reversals is decreasing. The reviews that reverse sentences infrequently compare only to other death sentences, commonly use a method that requires more than a mere common aggravating factor for selecting comparison cases, and rarely use the frequency method of comparative proportionality review. The US Supreme Court has sent a clear signal that States need not be overly concerned about meaningful consideration of claims of inequality of sentencing. Comparative disproportionality, both in the law and in practice, is no longer a constitutive element of "arbitrary and capricious" sentencing. Note, tables, figure, references, cases cited

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