U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ADVANCE FOR RELEASE AT 4:30 P.M. EST BJS SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1998 202/307-0784 SEVENTEEN STATES EXECUTED 74 PRISONERS DURING 1997 WASHINGTON, D.C. Seventeen states executed 74 prisoners during 1997, the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) announced today. Texas executed half of them--37. Virginia put 9 to death, Missouri 6, Arkansas 4 and Alabama 3, according to BJS' annual death penalty bulletin. Those executed were all males: 45 whites, 27 blacks, 1 Asian and 1 American Indian. Five were Hispanics, who can be of any racial background. At the end of last year, 34 states and the federal prison system held 3,335 men and women (44 females) on death row: 1,876 whites, 1,406 blacks, 28 American Indians, 17 Asians and 8 of other races. There were 283 Hispanic prisoners. The youngest capital punishment inmate was 18 years old, the oldest was 82. Two percent were 17 years old or younger at the time of their arrest for the capital offense. During 1997, 29 states and the Federal Bureau of Prisons received 256 inmates under sentence of death, a significant drop from the average 300 admissions per year since 1990. Thirty-eight states and the Federal government authorize capital punishment. Eighteen states reported 76 inmates whose death sentences were overturned in 1997. Appeals courts vacated 38 sentences while affirming the convictions and vacated 35 convictions and sentences. In addition, 3 death sentences were commuted. At the end of last year, 43 of these inmates were serving a reduced sentence, 23 were awaiting a new trial, 9 were awaiting re- sentencing, and 1 was found not guilty in retrial. Nearly two-thirds of inmates under sentence of death at the end of 1997 had previous felony convictions, including 9 percent with at least one prior homicide conviction. Forty-two percent of those on death row had an active criminal justice status at the time of their capital offense: 20 percent were on parole, 10 percent on probation and 1 percent on escape from a prison or jail. Of the 5,796 people under a death sentence between 1977 and 1997, 8 percent were executed, 3 percent died from other causes and 32 percent received other dispositions, such as appellate court decisions or commutations. Among those under sentence of death during this period, about the same percentage of whites (8 percent), blacks (7 percent) and Hispanics (6 percent) were executed. Between 1930 and 1997, 4,291 men and women were executed in the United States. Texas has put the most to death (441), followed by Georgia (388), New York (329), California (296), North Carolina (271), Florida (209), South Carolina (175), Ohio (172), Mississippi (158), Louisiana (157), Pennsylvania (154), Alabama (151), Virginia (138), Arkansas (134), Kentucky (104) and Illinois (100). The report also noted that as of November 30, 1998, 18 states had put 58 prisoners to death. Texas carried out 17, about 30 percent of the total. Virginia had executed 12 inmates by xNovember 30--the most in that state since 1930, when the federal government began tracking executions on an annual basis. The bulletin, "Capital Punishment 1997" (NCJ-172881), was written by BJS statistician Tracy L. Snell. Single copies may also be obtained from the BJS on-demand system by dialing 301/519-5550, listening to the complete menu and selecting document number 137. Or call the BJS Clearinghouse number: 1-800-732-3277. Fax orders for mail delivery to 410/792-4358. The BJS Internet site is: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/ Additional criminal justice materials can be obtained from the Office of Justice Programs homepage at: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov # # # After hours contact: Stu Smith at 301/983-9354 (END OF FILE)