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Death penalty attitudes and the tendency to convict or acquit
Authors:Rogers Elliott  Robert J Robinson
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, Dartmouth College, 03755, Hanover, NH
2. Psychology Department, Stanford University, 94305, Stanford, CA
Abstract:Three studies examined whether attitudes toward the death penalty were related to conviction or acquittal proneness. They were not, even in a case where it was clear that the prosecution was asking for death. Two questions asked whether attitudes toward the death penalty were related to changes in the threshold of guilt or in the amount of evidence required to find guilt when death as compared to life imprisonment was the potential sentence. They were so related, but answers to such questions were unrelated to verdicts in a death case. In one study, strong opponents of the death penalty were no different from others in attitudes toward attorneys and witnesses, in recollection of the facts of a trial, or in their subjective impressions about the trial. The basis of any attitude-behavior relation in this area is questioned.
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