If someone is accused of murder, death row prisoners and women of Hamrabi law must jump into the nearest river. If the accused drowns, the plaintiff should occupy his house. If the defendant is not harmed, the plaintiff is executed and his house is awarded to the defendant. The US death penalty is not as casual, but it has its own problems and often crosses the boundary between arbitrary and absurd things. Although this problem is certainly worth noting, the difference between white men and colored male prisoners is often the subject of discussion on this issue, but few are paying attention to women as a dead group.
The situation of women prisoners of death row prisoners is similar. These women were placed in the tress in the highest security building of North Carolina State Women's Orthopedics Organization. Each cell has a bed, a toilet and a toilet. There are seven cells on the corridor. There is a day with a TV, table and chair in front of the cell. This is where women eat. This room also functions as a visiting area and all visits are supervised by correctors. Female prisoners take at least an hour of exercise and shower every day. Volunteers offer Sunday worship service to the line of death. Pastor can give advice
The number of deaths of women is significantly lower than that of men, and as of 2013, the number of deaths of women was only 2%. During the past two centuries, all the female death row prisoners committed murder, except for Eser ยท Rosenberg. He was sentenced to death by a spy act. The possibility of actual execution of a death sentence judgment by a woman who was sentenced to death is relatively low. From 1632 to 2012, 571 death sentences were recorded. Currently, about half of the death row women are ranked fifth in the death sentence (California, California, Texas, North Carolina, Ohio). California is the best death sentence, but women have not been executed since 1962.
As of October 1, 2016, the Death Penalty Information Center reports that only 54 women are condemned. This accounts for 86% of total deaths. Since 1976, 16 women have been executed and 1,442 men have been executed. Since 1608, the United States has confirmed 15,391 law enforcement, of which 575 or 6% are women. Women accounted for 1/50 of the death penalty, 1/67 of the death penalty, 1/100 of the actual death penalty. The states that produce the most women are California, Texas, Florida. In the case of women, the ethnic distribution of those who were sentenced to death is 21% black, 13% Latin, 2% American American, 61% white, and 3% Asian.