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State & Federal

Washington

Notable Cases

In March 2004, both hous­es of the Washington state leg­is­la­ture passed res­o­lu­tions stat­ing that Chief Leschi was wrong­ly con­vict­ed and exe­cut­ed in Washington ter­ri­to­ry in 1858 and asked the state supreme court to vacate Leschi’s con­vic­tion. The court’s chief jus­tice, how­ev­er, said that this was unlike­ly to hap­pen, since it was not at all clear that the state court had juris­dic­tion in a mat­ter decid­ed 146 years ear­li­er in a ter­ri­to­r­i­al court. On December 10, 2004, Chief Leschi was exon­er­at­ed by a unan­i­mous vote by a Historical Court of Inquiry fol­low­ing a tri­al in absentia.

Notable Exonerations

On March 2, 1994, U.S. District Judge Robert Bryan over­turned Benjamin Harris’ con­vic­tion and vacat­ed his sen­tence of death for the 1984 mur­der of Jimmy Turner on the basis that his orig­i­nal tri­al lawyer had been incom­pe­tent. Harris’s attor­ney inter­viewed only 3 of the 32 wit­ness­es list­ed in police reports and spent less than 2 hours con­sult­ing with Harris before tri­al. Harris’s co-defen­dant was acquit­ted. Bryan ordered Harris released from cus­tody if not brought to a speedy retri­al. The deci­sion was upheld by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on September 12, 1995. The pros­e­cu­tion decid­ed not to retry Harris but tried to have him con­fined as insane. (They had pre­vi­ous­ly argued that he was com­pe­tent to stand tri­al.) On July 16, 1997, a jury decid­ed that Harris should not be impris­oned at Western State Hospital. Harris main­tains his inno­cence and says he was framed.

Milestones in Abolition/​Reinstatement

Washington abol­ished the death penal­ty in 1913, but rein­stat­ed it in 1919. The statute remained unchanged until 1975, when it was again abol­ished. An Initiative to the People in the same year, Initiative 316, rein­stat­ed it for a sec­ond time as the manda­to­ry penal­ty for aggra­vat­ed mur­der in the first degree. U.S. Supreme Court rul­ings in Woodson v. North Carolina and Roberts v. Louisiana inval­i­dat­ed laws that man­dat­ed death sen­tences and the statute was mod­i­fied to give detailed pro­ce­dures for impos­ing the death penalty.

This new law was itself found uncon­sti­tu­tion­al by the Washington Supreme Court, as a per­son who had pled not guilty could be sen­tenced to death, while some­one who pled guilty would receive a max­i­mum sen­tence of life impris­on­ment with­out pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole. The cur­rent law was passed in 1981 to cor­rect these constitutional defects.

On February 11, 2014, Governor Jay Inslee announced that he would issue a reprieve for any death penal­ty case that reach­es his desk. He indi­cat­ed that he did not intend to com­mute the sen­tences of the nine men on the state’s death row as part of this mora­to­ri­um, but no exe­cu­tions are expect­ed to occur while he is governor.

On October 11, 2018, in State v. Gregory, the Washington Supreme Court declared the state’s death penal­ty statute uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, say­ing that it was applied in an arbi­trary and racial­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry man­ner. You can read the plead­ings filed in the Washington Supreme Court here.

Other Interesting Facts

At the time its death penal­ty was declared uncon­sti­tu­tion­al in October 2018, Washington was the only state with an active gal­lows. Death-row pris­on­ers in Washington were able to choose if their exe­cu­tion would be car­ried out by lethal injec­tion or hang­ing. If the pris­on­er made no deci­sion, the default method was lethal injection.

On September 10, 2010 Washington became the sec­ond state, after Ohio, to use a sin­gle dose injec­tion of sodi­um thiopen­tal as opposed to the typ­i­cal three-drug pro­to­col used in most other jurisdictions.

Mt. Rainier. Photo by Kelvin Kay.

Resources

  • Washington Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
  • Department of Corrections
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Washington Execution Totals Since 1976


News & Developments


News

Apr 10, 2025

A Retreat from the Harshest Punishments for Emerging Adult Defendants

To com­mem­o­rate the 20th anniver­sary of the United States Supreme Court deci­sion that end­ed the juve­nile death penal­ty, DPI will release a report exam­in­ing the lega­cy of this deci­sion and its impli­ca­tions for emerg­ing adults. This arti­cle exam­ines one area of focus in the report: recent state courts deci­sions that have extend­ed legal pro­tec­tions to emerg­ing adults ages 18 to 20. In 2012, in Miller v. Alabama, the U.S. Supreme Court empha­sized that​“youth matters”…

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News

Apr 24, 2023

Washington’s Unconstitutional Death-Penalty Law Stricken from the Books

On April 21, 2023, Governor Jay Inslee signed leg­is­la­tion remov­ing the death penal­ty from the state’s laws. With that action, all three branch­es of the state’s gov­ern­ment have tak­en steps to end cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Washington: Gov. Inslee had declared a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions in 2014, the state Supreme Court found the statute uncon­sti­tu­tion­al in 2018, and the leg­is­la­ture has now strick­en it from the…

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News

Feb 12, 2020

Major Newspapers in Ohio, Washington Editorialize in Favor of Death Penalty Repeal

As state leg­is­la­tures in Ohio and Washington con­tem­plate the future of their death-penal­­ty statutes, major news­pa­pers in each of the states are advocating legislative…

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News

Feb 03, 2020

Washington Senate Passes Bill to Formalize Repeal of Capital Punishment

For the third con­sec­u­tive year, the Washington State Senate has vot­ed to remove the death penal­ty from the state’s statute books. In a 28 – 18 vote praised by abo­li­tion advo­cates for its bipar­ti­san­ship, four sen­ate Republicans joined 24 of their Democratic col­leagues on January 30, 2020 to for­mal­ly repeal Washington’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment law. With a new Speaker replac­ing Democratic lead­er­ship who had pre­vent­ed the bill from com­ing up for a vote in the House in 2018 and…

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News

Dec 23, 2019

DPIC Analysis: Death Penalty Erosion Spreads Across the Western United States in 2019

In a year of declin­ing death-penal­­ty usage across the United States, nowhere was the ero­sion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment as sus­tained and pro­nounced in 2019 as it was in the west­ern United States. Continuing a wave of momen­tum from Washington​’s judi­cial abo­li­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in October 2018, one state halt­ed exe­cu­tions and dis­man­tled its death cham­ber, anoth­er cleared its death row, two cut back on the cir­cum­stances in which the death penalty…

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Additional Information


  • Death Penalty: No
  • Number of Executions Since 1976: 5
  • Number of Executions Before 1976 (may include fed­er­al and military executions): 105
  • Current Death Row Population: 0
  • Women on Death Row: 0
  • Number of Innocent People Freed From Death Row: 1
  • Number of Clemencies Granted: 0
  • Date of Reinstatement (fol­low­ing Furman v. Georgia): November 4, 1975
  • Date of Abolition: October 11, 2018 (State v. Gregory)
  • Location of Death Row/​Executions: Walla Walla
  • Capital: Olympia
  • Population: 7,705,281*
  • Murder Rate (per 100,000 population): 2.6
  • Is Life Without Parole an Option?: Yes
  • Method of Execution: N/​A
  • How is Sentenced Determined?: N/​A
  • Clemency Process: Governor has sole author­i­ty to grant clemency
  • Governor: Bob Ferguson
Upcoming Executions

Upcoming Executions

Information about scheduled executions around the country

Innocence

Innocence

For every 8.2 peo­ple exe­cut­ed in the Unit­ed States in the mod­ern era of the death penal­ty, one per­son on death row has been exon­er­at­ed.

State-By-State

State-By-State

States With and Without the Death Penalty

DPI Fact Sheet

DPI Fact Sheet

PDF handout with facts about the Death Penalty

More Information


Innocence Database

Execution Database

Death Penalty Census Database

Death Penalty Information Center
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