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Journal Article

Citation

Cunningham MD, Reidy TJ, Sorensen JR. Law Hum. Behav. 2007; 32(1): 46-63.

Affiliation

Dallas, TX, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1007/s10979-007-9107-7

PMID

17876695

Abstract

The federal prison disciplinary records of federal capital inmates (n = 145) who were sentenced to life without possibility of release (LWOP) by plea bargain, pre-sentencing withdrawal of the death penalty, or jury determination were retrospectively reviewed (M = 6.17 years post-admission). Disaggregated prevalence rates were inversely related to infraction severity: serious infraction = 0.324, assaultive infraction = 0.207, serious assault = 0.09, assault with moderate injury = 0.007, assault with major injuries or death = 0.00. Frequency rates of misconduct were equivalent to other high-security federal inmates (n = 18,561), regardless of infraction severity. Government assertions of "future dangerousness" as a nonstatutory aggravating factor were not predictive of prison misconduct. These findings inform federal capital risk assessments and have public policy implications for procedural reliability in death penalty prosecutions.


Language: en

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