The death penalty is the ultimate denial of civil liberties. Innocent people are being sentenced to death. Moreover, capital punishment is often unfairly and unjustly applied. The ACLU supports a moratorium on the death penalty.
 
			Between 1973 and 2015, 148 innocent death-row prisoners in 26 different states were exonerated and released.
A mere two percent of this nation's counties have produced both a majority of all executions imposed since 1976 (52 percent) and of prisoners awaiting execution on death row (56 percent).
Seventy-six percent of executions imposed since 1976 were for killing (at least one) white victim.
“More often than we want to recognize, some innocent defendants have been convicted and sentenced to death…After 20 years on (the) high court, I have to acknowledge that serious questions are being raised about whether the death penalty is being fairly administered in this country.”
— Sandra Day O'Connor, 
U.S. Supreme Court Justice
The death penalty is the ultimate denial of civil liberties. Innocent people are being sentenced to death. Moreover, capital punishment is often unfairly and unjustly applied.
The ACLU supports a moratorium on the death penalty for the following reasons:
 
		 
		 
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