The eighth amendment to a woman on death row prisoners will protect Americans from atrocities and extraordinary punishments. Many opponents of the death penalty use this as a pillar against the debate on the death penalty. In addition to being cruel, I do not think that the death penalty can be used wisely in the United States or elsewhere in the world. Personally, I do not think that humans are perfect, so I can not build a sound justice system. Under the defective judicial system, prejudice is permitted under certain circumstances, the death penalty should not be used as punishment because of its irrevocable nature.
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.
Women account for only one tenth of the murder. At the trial stage, women issued a death sentence for one in five people. Currently, in a deceased row, women account for only 71 times. Since 1976, only one of the women actually executed by women in modern era occupies 92 people. As of January 1, 2011, there were 60 women death rows ("female offenders"). It accounts for 5% of the death toll of approximately 3,251 deaths in the United States.