California's Death Row

A Long Stay

sandra bell
As of March 15, 2006 California had 634 men on death row in San Quentin. In the California Institute for Women in Frontera, 14 women are on death row. California has the second highest number of inmates on death row, exceeded only by Texas. Although California has one of the largest numbers of prisoner on death row, it has one of the lowest rates of actual executions. California has 20 % of the nation's death row inmates but only 1% of its executions. Since 1977, when the death penalty was re-instituted in California, death row inmates were most likely to die of old age. Since 1977 only 14 of California's death row inmates have been executed, 20 died of natural causes, and 12 committed suicide. No woman has been executed since 1962.

It costs 114 million dollars a year to house inmates on California's death row plus many more millions in court costs. It costs $90,000 more per year to house a death row inmate as compared to a regular inmate. California seems to be very conflicted over the death penalty. On the one hand a rather large number are sentenced to death but only a handful are actually put to death.

California's last execution was in January of 2006. A 76 year old Native American inmate of death row was executed by lethal injection. He required two shots of potassium chloride to die.

The Supreme Court of California is required to hear all death penalty cases and the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has allowed the hearing of most appeals brought to it. The 9th Circuit Court then sends many cases back to the lower courts.

In 1980 a consent decree mandated certain improved treatment of inmates on California's death row. Prisoners are allowed five hours a day in the exercise yard. They are offered a high school course through a cell-study program. They have arts and crafts programs and many inmates have become proficient artists. Employees of San Quentin are allowed to buy inmate's artwork. Each tier of cells has one pay phone. There is a visiting room, which is open four days a week. It is fairly pleasant with murals painted by a condemned man.

There are three death rows at San Quentin and one at the California Institute for Women. The most prized death row at San Quentin is called Old Death Row or North Seg (segregated). It is the original death row at San Quentin and is considered to be the most desirable. Only the best-behaved prisoners are housed there and the atmosphere is peaceful and safe. It houses 34 men on two tiers. Breakfast and dinner are hot meals and are brought to the cells in cardboard trays. After meals there is a cell search and after that prisoners are allowed out of their cells where they can interact with other prisoners until 2 P.M.

In the other two death rows prisoners are not allowed out of their cells except for exercise so they must make do most of the day in their nine by five-foot cells. In the worst of the rows, the most dangerous prisoners are held and life there can be risky.

At best, life on California's death row is not pleasant.

Published by sandra bell

icon photo by Elvis Santana  View profile

  • California has the second highest number of inmates on death row.
  • The mafor cause of death on death row is from old age.
  • there are about as many suicides on death row has there are executions.
Fourteen California women are on death row.

9 Comments

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  • jesse3/25/2012

    Pobrecita
    Veronica Gonzales.

  • Kathryn10/4/2010

    CONT. world should EVER do, eating every meal, taking showers, sleeping comfortably (or as comfortable as she can), she's getting medical attention, electricity, running water, etc... and I CAN'T EVEN GET FOOD STAMPS ASSISTANCE WHILE I AM PREGNANT!!! I CAN'T believe that I am being denied FOOD and NUTRITION for my UNBORN child for a MARIJUANA offense that is over 15 years old!! Go Figure!! I think at the least she SHOULD HAVE TO STARVE or MAYBE FORCED TO FEND FOR HERSELF IN HER LOCKED CELL...

  • Kathryn10/4/2010

    I was on the bus ride from San Diego (Los Colinas Woman's Detention Facility) to Chowchilla California Woman's Prison with Veronica Gonzales (she's the sick person who scalded a little helpless baby girl 3 1/2 years old with her husband in Chula Vista, Ca 1990's), I, along with ALL of the other women on the bus seemed to all feel the same way towards her so we screamed at her the entire way to the prison. The beauty of it was that the deputies did not tell us to be quiet (gosh, if they would have only let me have access to her (she would not live to have to pollute Death Row) I swear to God, I was so angry that she was breathing the same air as I was, I CAN NOT believe that the Deputies did not allow me and the other girls to deal with her (like somewhere in the middle of no-where) oh my God!!! She was sitting in the cage in the front of the bus and they had us sitting in the last 3-4 rows of the bus. I am still angry that she is sitting on Death Row for something that NO human in the

  • heather wiggin4/30/2010

    death row is a very harsh punishmenyt and nobody thinks to find out what would happen to the family members and what happens if that person was really innocent and you put them on death row i think that they should just band it cause what good is it really doing for us but wasteing million and millions of dollars from our pockets.. just think about that..

  • saone3/29/2010

    sorry they should not be on deathrow more then five years

  • Sadone3/29/2010

    I do not think we should abolished the death penalty and I think they should be on deathrow more then five years why should my tax dollars go to feed them and school them when there people fallowing the law and family that have no money to send their children to school. I wonder the people that want to abolish the death penalty if their child was kill by one of them would they still want to abolish the death pinalty I don't think so

  • Russell Morrioson10/4/2009

    No one seems to care about the victim

  • cm5/7/2008

    This article would be a bit more credible if it could get the simple, easy to confirm, details right. Condemmned women have been held at Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla (north of Fresno in the Central Valley) for over 15 years now. And, as one could find out with 15 seconds work on Google, it has been a decade or so since CIW was listed as being in or near Frontera -- it's (more accurate) address is now listed for Corona.

    Nothing mysterious about either fact, neither fact has changed for over a decade, and both facts are easily available from CDCR's web site or many other sources. I would find the information on SQSP to be suspect as well.

  • june 1/14/2008

    i just think the death penalty should be abolished and all the inmates should be givin life this is a travisty having to stay on deathrow for 25-35 years and then die so why dont they just give them life where they can live grow old get sick and die right there in the prison system where the courts deemed they belong now thats a punishment coming in the system young then watching themselves grow old and then worst of all die with the thought of not being able to watch there kids grow up help them when they need most of all is worst than the death penalty

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