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Death Sentences are Almost Never Imposed at the Federal Level

Published Aug 3, 2023

The death sentence handed down by a jury yesterday in the case of Robert Bowers, the man who perpetrated the antisemitic attack at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018, is extraordinarily rare.[1] Federal records show that the death sentence is almost never imposed at the federal level, making the case truly exceptional. During the last 10 years, records of sentences by federal prosecutors show that death sentences were previously handed down on just 25 occasions out of more than 1.1 million federal sentences recorded.[2] Figure 1 shows the year-by-year record over the last two decades.

figure1
Figure 1. Number of Federal Defendants Sentenced to Death, FY 2004 - FY 2023

Over the last twenty years, a total of 36 federal districts recorded at least one death sentence handed down out of a total of 2.5 million federal criminal sentences. Districts where this occurred were fairly widely spread across the country. The latest sentence in the Pittsburgh case appears to be the first since federal prosecutors in that district systematically tracked these starting in FY 2004. Only two districts, Arizona and the Eastern District of Texas, had more than five death sentences. Thirty out of the 36 districts recorded just one or two. See Table 1.

These numbers were compiled by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University based on case-by-case federal records obtained from the Department of Justice after lengthy litigation under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

Table 1. Number of Federal Defendants Sentenced to Death by District, FY 2004 - FY 2023
Federal Judicial District FY2004-FY2013 FY2014-FY2023 Total
All 42 25 67
Arizona 6 0 6
Cal, C 2 0 2
Fla, M 0 1 1
Fla, S 2 0 2
Ga, N 1 0 1
Ga, S 1 0 1
Iowa, N 2 0 2
Idaho 1 0 1
Ill, N 1 0 1
Ill, S 0 1 1
Ind, N 1 1 2
La, W 0 1 1
Mass 1 1 2
Maryland 2 0 2
Mich, E 0 1 1
Mo, E 1 0 1
Mo, W 2 2 4
Miss, N 0 1 1
N Car, W 1 0 1
Nebraska 0 1 1
N. Y., S 0 2 2
Ohio, N 0 1 1
Ohio, S 1 2 3
Okla, E 2 0 2
Penn, W 0 1 1
S Car 2 2 4
Tenn, E 1 0 1
Tenn, W 1 0 1
Texas, E 5 3 8
Texas, N 0 1 1
Texas, S 1 0 1
Utah 1 0 1
Virg, E 2 2 4
Virg, W 1 0 1
Wisc, E 0 1 1
W Virg, S 1 0 1
Footnotes
[2]^ Total federal convictions are even larger since they include many convictions for misdemeanors, such as many immigration cases.
TRAC is a nonpartisan, nonprofit data research center affiliated with the Newhouse School of Public Communications and the Whitman School of Management, both at Syracuse University. For more information, to subscribe, or to donate, contact trac@syr.edu or call 315-443-3563.