A new study suggests that at least 4.1% of death row prisoners are innocent. Image: Shutterstock |
“We conclude that this is a conservative estimate of the
proportion of false conviction among death sentences in the United States,”
reads the abstract for the study—meaning that it’s likely the percentage is
actually higher.
And, as the study notes, there is no “systematic method to
determine the accuracy of a criminal conviction,” which is how we end up with
false convictions in the first place. Throughout history, a few false
convictions have been discovered; because most of those have been concentrated
in death penalty cases, the researchers used this data to estimate the overall
average rate of false convictions.
The study does bring to light one particularly intriguing
point of interest—the fact that there are far more overturned convictions in
prisoners on death row than those spending life (or some term) in prison. This
is because the cases for death row inmates receive far more scrutiny than other
cases in an effort to avoid executing prisoners that are, in fact innocent.
“Our data and the experience of practitioners in the field
both indicate that the criminal justice system goes to far greater lengths to
avoid executing innocent defendants than to prevent them from remaining in
prison indefinitely,” reads the study.
This fact is incredibly saddening, as it means that there
are likely thousands of innocent people locked up—on death row or not—that will
probably never be exonerated for their “crimes” and had their lives ruined by a
false conviction.
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