FROM CENTER FOR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
Human Rights Groups Release Preliminary Death Penalty Findings
Missions to California, Louisiana Find Torture, Discrimination
press@ccrjustice.org
June 14, 2013, New York and Paris – Today, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH) released summary findings about the United States’ use of the death penalty, based on missions to California and Louisiana. CCR’s Executive Director, Vincent Warren, presented the findings today at the fifth World Congress Against the Death Penalty in Madrid. The organizations conclude that use of the death penalty in both states violates human rights, from the fundamental human rights violation represented by the death penalty itself to the way it is implemented, which constitutes torture and discrimination.
“California and Louisiana have intensified the human rights problems inherent in the U.S.’s continued use of the death penalty by holding prisoners in conditions and for durations that constitute torture and by imposing the death penalty in racially discriminatory ways,” said CCR Executive Director Vincent Warren. “The treatment of prisoners on death row violates both U.S. and international law.”
During their missions, CCR and FIDH found that in California, the state with the largest death row population – more than 700 people – prisoners spend an average of two decades on an overcrowded death row as they wait for attorneys to be assigned and courts to rule on their post-conviction claims. In Louisiana, death row prisoners face blistering heat over 100 degrees, scalding hot water and solitary confinement, and they receive little rehabilitation or recreation. African Americans are overrepresented on death row in both states. While they make up only 32 percent of the general population in Louisiana, they represent 65 percent of the state’s death row. In California, African Americans make up 6.7 percent of the general population, but 36 percent of those on death row. Juries in death penalty cases are overwhelmingly white in both states.
“The death penalty violates the fundamental right to life and must be quickly and universally abolished, but in the interim, California and Louisiana must make immediate changes to ensure that the death penalty is not carried out in a discriminatory manner and that conditions on death row satisfy minimum standards clearly articulated under international law,” said Florence Bellivier, FIDH’s chargĂ© de mission and President of the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty.
The World Congress Against the Death Penalty is a gathering of anti-death penalty advocates from around the world. CCR Executive Director Vincent Warren spoke on a panel entitled “The Death Penalty as Torture.”
The findings released today can be found here.
The Center for Constitutional Rights also addressed the death penalty as torture in its 2011position paper, “The United States Tortures Before It Kills: An Examination of the Death Row Experience from a Human Rights Perspective.”
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