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28 Psychol. Pub. Pol'y & L. 1 (2022)

handle is hein.journals/psypbclw28 and id is 1 raw text is: AW F = AMERICAN
* * - PSYCHOLOGICAL
_    ASSOCIATION

Psychology, Public Policy, and Law

© 2022 American Psychological Association
ISSN: 1076-8971

2022, Vol. 28, No. 1, 1-31
https://doi.org/10.1037/law0000335

The Continuing Unfairness of Death Qualification: Changing Death Penalty
Attitudes and Capital Jury Selection
Craig Haney, Eileen L. Zurbriggen, and Joanna M. Weill
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz
The present research examines whether and how the biasing effects of the death qualification process
the unique procedure by which prospective jurors are screened for eligibility on the basis of their death
penalty attitudes have been affected by the changing landscape of opinions about capital punishment.
In-depth telephone surveys were conducted with statewide representative samples of persons eligible for
jury service in three distinctly different states California, New Hampshire, and Florida. Despite differen-
ces in geographical location, demographic make-up, and death penalty history and politics, very similar
patterns of death qualification bias were observed. Persons whose death penalty attitudes qualified them
to serve on a capital jury were more punitive overall, less well-informed about the system of death sen-
tencing, more willing to use aggravating factors to impose death and less willing to use mitigating factors
to impose life in prison without the possibility of parole, and less racially diverse than persons who would
be excluded by death qualification. The implications of these results are discussed, including the need
for legal authorities to formally acknowledge and to effectively address these serious biasing effects.
Keywords: death qualification, death penalty, capital juries, jury selection

The death penalty has been the focus of intense public debate in the
United States throughout much of the nation's history. Legal decision-
makers have taken stock of citizens' attitudes about this topic with an
attentiveness reserved for no other legal sanction. This is in part because
capital punishment is said to reflect the conscience of the community
in which a death penalty verdict is meted out. Indeed, one historian
referred to capital punishment as the gold standard of community
expression (Laqueur, 1989, p. 355). Perhaps for this reason, just as
capital punishment may be one of the most frequently studied topics in
This article was published Online First January 24, 2022.
Craig Haney   https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6861-1113
Joanna M. Weill   https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1407-9445
We thank Lois Heaney from the National Jury Project for her invaluable
assistance at numerous stages of this research, especially in the case of the
California survey. We are also extremely grateful to a consortium of
donors whose generosity made it possible for us to conduct these statewide
surveys. The consortium of funders included, for the California survey, the
Impact Fund, the ACLU of Northern California, the American Society of
Trial Consultants, and several private attorneys; for the New Hampshire
survey, funding was provided by a private law firm; and in Florida, the
consortium of funders included the Bowers Family Foundation, Florida
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the Florida Public Defenders
Association, and the Tides/Advocacy Fund. In each instance, the authors
retained complete autonomy over the design and implementation of the
surveys as well as the analysis and interpretation of the results. Preliminary
versions of the results were presented at the annual conference of the
American Psychological Association and the UC Santa Cruz Annual
Graduate Research Symposium, both in 2014.
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Craig
Haney, Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz,
CA 95064, United States. Email: psylaw@ucsc.edu

law and social science, death penalty attitudes along with the issues
of whether the death penalty deters and the influence of race on death
sentencing are among the most studied aspects of capital punishment.
This interest is more than merely academic. Because of the pro-
cess of death qualification, death penalty attitudes play a very
direct, practical role in the administration of capital punishment.
Death qualification is a unique feature of jury selection in capital
cases in which potential capital jurors are screened explicitly on
the basis of their attitudes about the death penalty. Those who hold
what are deemed disqualifying attitudes are dismissed from par-
ticipation. Although the practice dates to at least the 19th century
(see United States v. Cornell, 1820, & Logan v. United States,
1882), the U.S. Supreme Court first established the standard by
which prospective jurors could be constitutionally excluded from
capital jury service in Witherspoon v. Illinois (1968). The Wither-
spoon standard mandated that only prospective jurors who
expressed unequivocal opposition (i.e., explicitly said that they
could never impose the death penalty, no matter what the facts or
circumstances of the case) could be legally excused for cause on
these grounds.
Throughout the more than 50 years since Witherspoon was
decided, the process of death qualification has been the subject of
extensive legal commentary (e.g., Gross, 1984; Schnapper, 1984;
White, 1973) and social science research (e.g., Bronson, 1970;
Haney, 1984; Thompson, 1989). It also has been the focus of several
constitutional challenges, some of which resulted in significant modi-
fications of the Witherspoon doctrine itself (e.g., Morgan v. Illinois,
1992; Wainwright v. Witt, 1985). Critics argued that the process cre-
ated capital juries that functioned differently in comparison to the
kind of juries that were impaneled in every other type of criminal
case, and that those differences operated to the disadvantage of

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