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              Congressional
              Research Servik





The Federal Death Penalty



Updated December 1, 2020
In July 2020, under U.S. Attorney General Barr's direction and a revised Federal Execution Protocol
Addendum  (replacing the previous three-drug protocolused in executions with a single-drug procedure),
the federal government resumed executions, ending a 17-year moratorium on the federal death penalty.
Since the beginning of July, eight inmates have been executed and severalmore federal death row inmates
are scheduled to be executed in December and January.
This Insight focuses on federal death penalty policy in the context of death penalty practice in the country
overall. Most death row inmates in the U.S. reside on state death rows in state prisons across 29 states,
while federal death row inmates reside in various federal prisons and are sent to U.S. Penitentiary Terre
Haute in Indiana to be executed.

Capital   Punishment Policy
The federal government practiced capital punishment from the country's beginning until 1972, when the
U.S. Supreme Court (in Furman i. Georigia) found particular applications of capital punishment to be
unconstitutional under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution. In 1976, the Supreme
Court considered revised state statutes (in Gregg v. Georgia and several other decisions), and held that the
death penalty was constitutional under certain, limited circumstances. From 1976 through November 30,
2020, the federal government executed 11 individuals, including 8 in 2020. As of that date, there are 54
inmates on federal death row. While the U.S. military justice system has capital punishment as a
sentencing option, it has not executed anyone since 1961. As of April 2020, four individuals reside on the
military's death row.
Since the Gregg decision in 1976, most executions in the United States have been carried out by the
states; from 1976 through November 30, 2020, states have executed 1,516 individuals. More than 2,500
individuals currently reside on death row across 29 states, including one inmate in New Hampshire even
though it abolished the death penalty in 2019. Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia do not have
the death penalty.

Native  American   Tribes

Under the Federal Death Penalty Act of 1994 (FDPA), Native American tribes may opt in to the federal
death penalty for capital crimes that occur in Indian Country and are subject to the criminal jurisdiction of

                                                                Congressional Research Service
                                                                  https://crsreports.congress.gov
                                                                                     IN11474

CRS  NSIGHT
Prepared for Membersand
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