ADVANCE FOR RELEASE AT 4:30 P.M. EST BJS SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2000 202/307-0784 TWENTY STATES EXECUTED 98 PRISONERS IN 1999 MOST SINCE 1951 Average Death Row Stay Was 11 Years and 11 Months WASHINGTON, D.C. Twenty states executed 98 prisoners in the United States during 1999, 30 more than in 1998. This was the highest number of executions in a single year since 1951, when 105 were put to death, the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) announced today in its annual capital punishment report. Texas executed 35 prisoners, Virginia 14, Missouri 9, Arizona 7 and Oklahoma 6. Arkansas, North Carolina and South Carolina each put 4 to death. Alabama, California and Delaware each executed 2 prisoners. Nine states (Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Utah) executed one. Twelve states and the District of Columbia have no death penalty. The prisoners executed last year had been under a death sentence for an average of 11 years and 11 months 13 months longer than that for the prisoners executed in 1998. As of December 31,1999, there were 3,527 prisoners on death row the most in California, (with 553), followed by Texas (460), Florida (365), Pennsylvania (230) and North Carolina (202). The federal system had 20 death row prisoners. BJS reported that at the end of last year 1,948 white prisoners were under a death sentence, 1,514 blacks, 28 American Indians, 24 Asians and 13 with other backgrounds. Fifty women were under a death sentence in 1999, up from 35 in 1990. The youngest inmate on death row was 18 years old, the oldest 84. Of the 6,365 people under a death sentence between 1977 (the year executions resumed following U.S. Supreme Court approval) and 1999, 9 percent were executed; 3 percent died by other causes, such as natural death, murder or suicide; and 32 percent received other dispositions, such as a vacated sentence, a reduced sentence or a new trial. The number of states that authorized lethal injection increased from 20 in 1989 to 34 in 1999. Last year 96 percent of all executions were by lethal injection, compared to 44 percent in 1989. In addition to lethal injection, states authorize death by lethal gas, hanging or firing squad. Between 1930, when the federal government commenced gathering annual capital punishment data, and 1999, 4,457 men and women were executed in the United States. Texas put the most to death (496), followed by Georgia (389), New York (329), California (299), North Carolina (278), Florida (214), South Carolina (186), Ohio (173), Virginia (165), Louisiana and Mississippi (158 each), Pennsylvania (155), Alabama (154), Arkansas (139), Kentucky (105), Missouri (103), and Illinois (102). This year through December 1, 2000, 14 states had executed 79 prisoners. Texas carried out 37 executions, about 47 percent of the total. Oklahoma executed 11 (14 percent), Virginia 7 (9 percent) and Missouri and Florida 5 each (6 percent). The Texas total matches the number executed in that state in 1997 and represents the most executions in a single state in any year since the federal government began tracking executions on an annual basis. Tennessee carried out its first execution since 1960. The report ("Capital Punishment 1999" (NCJ-184795), was written by BJS statistician Tracy L. Snell. Single copies may be obtained from the BJS fax-on-demand system by dialing 301/519-5550, listening to the complete menu and selecting document number 225. 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 # # # BJS01025 After hours contact: Stu Smith at 301/983-9354