Russell tests the U.S. Supreme Court's assumption that the
procedure used to select jurors who impose the death penalty does
not inject racial bias into the jury. In Georgia, those who
supported the death penalty and were placed on juries were more
likely to sentence black defendants to death. Further, those who
supported the death penalty tend to hold attitudes that are linked
to racial bias and act as surrogate measures for racial bias. He
also finds no support in his analysis for the results of other
research that indicate that death penalty jurors are conviction
prone. Although earlier empirical evidence has suggested a
consistent pattern of race-related differential sentencing,
Russell's study is the first to demonstrate that the death
qualification tends to eliminate moderate attitudes and concentrate
racial bias in death penalty juries. "The Death Penalty and Racial
Bias" suggests a clear direction for future policy research into
the neutrality of death-qualified juries.
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