Use of the death penalty has fallen to its lowest level since capital punishment was reinstated in the United States in 1976, according to a report released today.
The Washington-based Death Penalty Information Center, which tracks death penalty data, reported a 75 per cent drop in death sentences since 1996.
Through mid-December, there were 78 new death sentences in 2011, compared to 112 a year earlier. It is the first time the number has dropped below 100 in a single year since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment, the group said.
The number of executions, at 43, was down 56 per cent since 1999 when there were 98.
"This is a historic drop in death sentences. It's indicative of a mood around the country that the death penalty has risks, flaws and needs to be reexamined," said Richard Dieter, the executive director of the center and author of the report.
A growing number of states have abandoned capital punishment in recent years, including New York, New Jersey and New Mexico.
In January, Illinois' governor signed a law abolishing the penalty, bringing the total number of non-death penalty states up to 16. In November, Oregon's governor halted a pending execution and said no more executions would occur in his term.
The centre says the growing discomfort with the death penalty is, in part, due to recent high-profile executions like that of Troy Davis. The case drew international attention as protesters expressed doubts over Davis' guilt in the 1989 murder of a Georgia police officer.
In October, a Gallup Poll showed the lowest level of support and highest level of opposition to capital punishment in almost 40 years.
Sixty per cent of those surveyed supported the death penalty for a person convicted of murder, down from 80 per cent in 1994.
The Supreme Court stopped use of the death penalty in 1972, finding that death sentences had been applied in an arbitrary and discriminatory way. In 1976, the court allowed executions to resume in extreme criminal cases where states' sentencing procedures built in sufficient protections.
Reuters