Death penalty in the United States: an unbalanced practice( Télécharger le fichier original )par Julie Rérolle Université Aix-Marseille 1 - M1 Langues Etrangères Appliquées 2007 |
Appendix 2: Number of Persons Under Sentence of Death, 1976-200595(*)
Source: Capital Punishment 2005, December 2006, NCJ 215083 Appendix 3: Census Regions and Divisions of the United States96(*)Appendix 4: Executions by State97(*)Appendix 5: Capital offenses, by State, 200598(*)Alabama. Intentional murder with 18 aggravating factors Arizona*. First-degree murder accompanied by at least 1 of 14 aggravating factors Arkansas*. Capital murder with a finding of at least 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances; treason. California*. First-degree murder with special circumstances; train wrecking; treason; perjury causing execution Colorado*. First-degree murder with at least 1 of 17 aggravating factors; treason Connecticut*. Capital felony with 8 forms of aggravated homicide Delaware*. First-degree murder with aggravating circumstances Florida*. First-degree murder; felony murder; capital drug trafficking; capital sexual battery Georgia*. Murder; kidnapping with bodily injury or ransom when the victim dies; aircraft hijacking; treason Idaho*. First-degree murder with aggravating factors; aggravated kidnapping; perjury resulting in death Illinois*. First-degree murder with 1 of 21 aggravating circumstances Indiana*. Murder with 16 aggravating circumstances Kansas*. Capital murder with 8 aggravating circumstances Kentucky*. Murder with aggravating factors; kidnapping with aggravating factors Louisiana*. First-degree murder; aggravated rape of victim under age 12; treason Maryland*. First-degree murder, either premeditated or during the commission of a felony, provided that certain death eligibility requirements are satisfied Mississippi. Capital murder; aircraft piracy Missouri*. First-degree murder Montana. Capital murder with 1 of 9 aggravating circumstances; capital sexual assault Nebraska*. First-degree murder with a finding of at least 1 statutorily-defined aggravating circumstance Nevada*. First-degree murder with at least 1of 15 aggravating circumstances New Hampshire. Six categories of capital murder New Jersey. Murder by one's own conduct, by solicitation, committed in furtherance of a narcotics conspiracy, or during commission of a crime of terrorism New Mexico*. First-degree murder with at least 1 of 7 statutorily-defined aggravating circumstances New York*. First-degree murder with 1 of 13 aggravating factors North Carolina*. First-degree murder Ohio*. Aggravated murder with at least 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances Oklahoma. First-degree murder in conjunction with a finding of at least 1 of 8 statutorily-defined aggravating circumstances Oregon. Aggravated murder Pennsylvania. First-degree murder with 18 aggravating circumstances South Carolina*. Murder with 1 of 11 aggravating circumstances South Dakota*. First-degree murder with 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances; aggravated kidnapping Tennessee*. First-degree murder with 1 of 15 aggravating circumstances Texas. Criminal homicide with 1 of 9 aggravating circumstances Utah*. Aggravated murder Virginia*. First-degree murder with 1 of 13 aggravating circumstances Washington*. Aggravated first-degree murder Wyoming. First-degree murder *As of December 31, 2005, 27 States excluded mentally retarded persons from capital sentencing. Mental retardation is a mitigating factor in South Carolina. * 95 http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/cp.htm * 96 http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/5/59/600px-Census_Regions_and_Divisions.PNG * 97 http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/executionmap2006.gif * 98 http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/cp05.pdf |
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