National Geographic - USA (2021-03)

(Antfer) #1
Jamison
20 years

Burrell
13 years

Bloodsworth
9 years

Keine
2 years

Cobb
7 years

Graham
5 years

Croy
26 years

Jamison
20 years

Ajamu
39 years

Meléndez
17 years

Williams
43 years

Finch
43 years

NATIVE AMERICAN
AND ASIAN

BLACK

1972 1975 1976 1980 1985

WHITE

DATE OF CONVICTION

LATINO

1-5

Exonerees

6-10 11-15 16-20 20+

61

39
30 30
22

White
69

Black
94

Latino
17

Asian
1

Native
American
1

PEOPLE HAVE BEEN
182 EXONERATED

Years
30
20
10

1972 1975 1976 1980 1985

DNA evidence linked
to exoneration

Years

During the past five decades 182 former
death-row prisoners, an average of four
people a year, have been exonerated of all
charges related to their death sentences.
Advances such as the use of DNA testing have
led to a small decrease in wrongful convictions
but have not been sufficient to overcome
official misconduct and human error.

The modern era of the death
penalty is considered to have
started after a 1972 Supreme
Court ruling condemned state
laws and demanded reform.

The exonerees lost years—almost 12
on average—for crimes they didn’t
commit. Here they’re grouped by
time wrongfully convicted.

YEARS UNTIL EXONERATION

Convicted of murder,
Clifford Williams and
Charles Finch spent
the most time in
prison, 43 years each.

U.S. Supreme
Court upholds the
constitutionality of
capital punishment

The first person to be exoner-
ated based on DNA evidence was
Kirk Bloodsworth, in 1993, after nine
years in prison. DNA has led to 26
more death-row exonerations.

YEARS LOST FOR THE


WRONGLY CONVICTED


2,133


Number of years
from sentencing
to exoneration

76 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
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