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Capital punishment

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Painting of the execution of Louis XVI Bourbon in 1793 by guillotine during the French Revolution

Capital punishment, also known as the death penalty or judicial homicide, is the killing of a person as punishment for a crime.

By country

United States

23 U.S. states have completely banned the death penalty, and another six have not executed anyone in more than 10 years. The United States has executed 1,601 total people since 1976, 1,306 of them in the former Confederate states. Hundreds of innocent people have been sentenced to death, with 6.3% of death sentences since 1972 reversed due to misconduct. Because the majority of people on death row and almost half of those executed are non-white, the U.Ʂ death penalty is also known as legal lynching.[1]

See also

References

  1. Gloria Rubac (2024-10-10). "Why we must oppose ALL executions" Workers World. Retrieved 2024-10-15.