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Innocent Lives in the Balance: The Real Risk of Executing the Innocent

The lethal injection room at San Quentin State Prison, completed in 2010.

By Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty

There is growing bipartisan support to end the death penalty. Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty is a network of political and social conservatives who question the alignment of capital punishment with conservative principles and values. We are publishing this in observance of Word Day Against the Death Penalty.

Since 1973, at least 194 people have been freed from death row after evidence of innocence revealed that they had been wrongfully convicted. That’s almost one person exonerated for every ten who’ve been executed. Wrongful convictions rob innocent people of decades of their lives, waste tax dollars, and re-traumatize the victim’s family, while the people responsible remain unaccountable.

What we have learned in the DNA era

Despite the best intentions, we can’t be right 100% of the time

The wrong man: Stories of a broken system

We’ve learned a lot about the death penalty in the last 40 years. We now know that innocent people are sentenced to die. When a life is on the line, one mistake is one too many. Can we afford the risk?


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