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Death row inmates who have exhausted their appeals by county. An inmate is considered to have exhausted their appeals if their sentence has fully withstood the appellate process; this involves either the individual's conviction and death sentence withstanding each stage of the appellate process or them waiving a part of the appellate process if a court has found them competent to do so.
The number in the "#" column indicates the nth person executed since 1982 (when Texas resumed the death penalty). As an example, Earl Carl Heiselbetz Jr. (the first person executed in Texas during the 2000 decade) was the 200th person executed since resumption of the death penalty.
Robert Hayward Gray [17] 34 Black [18] Male Handyman [17] Murder-Robbery [19] 1943-06-25 Electric chair Suffolk 63 Raphael Skopp 36 White Male ? Murder-Robbery 1946-08-16 Electric chair Plymouth 64 Philip Bellino: 32 White Male Gangster Murder 1947-05-09 Electric chair Suffolk 65 Edward Gertsen: 35 White Male Gangster Murder 1947-05-09 Electric ...
The following are the five states with the most executions since the early 1980s, according to the Death Penalty Information Center: Texas, 591. Oklahoma, 126. Virginia, 113. Florida, 106.
Anti-death penalty activists rallied outside the U.S. Supreme Court in 2015 to protest the execution of Oklahoma inmate Richard Glossip, which at the time was scheduled for September of that year ...
He would be the first U.S. inmate shot to death in an execution in 15 years. ... Sigmon would be the oldest of the 46 South Carolina inmates who have been executed since the death penalty was ...
As of January 1, 2025, there were 2,092 death row inmates in the United States, including 46 women. [1] The number of death row inmates changes frequently with new convictions, appellate decisions overturning conviction or sentence alone, commutations, or deaths (through execution or otherwise). [2]
Vermont has abolished the death penalty for all crimes, but has an invalid death penalty statue for treason. [89] When it abolished the death penalty in 2019, New Hampshire explicitly did not commute the death sentence of the sole person remaining on the state's death row, Michael K. Addison. [90] [91]