"Support for the death penalty is on the decline, and more people are embracing the alternative sentence of life without parole, which is now available in almost every state."
Thirty-seven states permit capital punishment.
"Support for the death penalty is on the decline, and more people are embracing the alternative sentence of life without parole, which is now available in almost every state."
Thirty-seven states permit capital punishment.
"Capital punishment is risky, expensive and could result in irreversible error," Dieter said.
"Fewer people are now willing to put their faith in such a flawed policy."
Less crime may be a factor
Joshua Marquis, vice president of the National District Attorneys Assn., strongly disagreed, attributing the drop in death sentences instead to a recent nationwide reduction in violent crime generally "and murder specifically," as well as to jurors and prosecutors who were "becoming appropriately more discriminating about when to respectively seek and impose a death sentence."
The Gallup Poll found this year that 63% thought an innocent person had been executed in the last five years and 64% thought the death penalty had no deterrent effect.
On the other hand, 60% said they thought the death penalty was administered fairly, and only 21% thought the death penalty was imposed too often.
Death penalty foes said they were heartened by a number of developments this year beyond the decline in death sentences and executions.
New Jersey became the first state to enact a moratorium on executions through legislation, and it joined states including California and North Carolina in forming a commission to study the fairness and reliability of the death penalty. New York legislators declined to reinstate the state's death penalty statute, which had been thrown out by a court.
Dieter also noted that the American Bar Assn. overwhelmingly passed a resolution in August calling for an exemption from the death penalty for the severely mentally ill.
A similar resolution was endorsed earlier by leading mental health groups.
Texas still leads
The number of executions may have decreased nationally, but Texas, the nation's perennial leader, executed five more people this year than in 2005. Texas' 24 executions represented 45% of the national total. Ohio was second, with five.
There are 3,316 inmates on death rows nationwide, with California having by far the most at 655.
California executed one person this year -- the 13th in the state since capital punishment was reinstated, in 1977.
henry.weinstein@latimes.com
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Death penalty decline
Executions in the U.S. hit a 10-year low this year, with no others scheduled for the remainder of 2006. Texas led all states in executions:
States with executions in 2006
Texas: 24
Ohio: 5
Florida: 4
North Carolina: 4
Oklahoma: 4
Virginia: 4
All others: 8*
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* Alabama, California, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, South Carolina and Tennessee each had one execution.
Source: Death Penalty Information Center. Graphics reporting by Tom Reinken