Washington’s Supreme Court unanimously struck down the
state’s death penalty as arbitrary and racially biased, making it the
20th state to do away with capital punishment, reported the Seattle Times.
Execution was already extremely rare in Washington, with
five prisoners put to death in recent decades and a governor-imposed moratorium
blocking its use since 2014.
But the court’s opinion eliminated it entirely, converted
the sentences for the state’s eight death row inmates to life in prison without
release, and furthered a trend away from capital punishment in the U.S.
“The death penalty is
becoming increasingly geographically isolated,” said Robert Dunham, executive
director of the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Information Center. “It’s
still on the books in 30 states, but it’s not being used in 30 states. It’s
becoming a creature of the Deep South and the Southwest.”
Texas continues to execute more prisoners than any other
state — 108 since 2010. Florida has executed 28, Georgia 26 and Oklahoma 21 in
that time frame. But nationally, death sentences are down 85 percent since the
1990s, Dunham said.
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