The United States saw the lowest number of executions in two decades in 2014, a year in which intense focus was placed on several high-profile botched executions and questions were raised about new drug cocktails that were used in lethal injections.
Thirty-five people were executed in 2014, according to a year-end report released Thursday by the Death Penalty Information Center. In 2013, 39 people were executed. And the 72 new death sentences handed down this year marked the lowest level since 1974, according to the report. In 1996, there were 315 death sentences.
Seven states carried out executions in 2014, the fewest in 25 years, the report said. Missouri, Texas and Florida each executed more people than the four other states combined: Missouri and Texas executed 10 people, respectively. Florida executed eight residents; Oklahoma executed three people; Georgia executed two people; and Arizona and Ohio each executed one person.
But seven death row inmates were exonerated in 2014, the most in five years, according to the report.
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The United States is one of 40 countries in the world that still employs capital punishment. More than two-thirds — or 141 countries — have abolished the death penalty, according to Amnesty International. Polling shows that, since 1937, support for the death penalty has been as low as 42% in 1966, and as high as 80% in 1994.
The legal standard remains that the death penalty is constitutional in the U.S. if it imposes on individuals no more pain than is necessary, which is stated in the Eighth Amendment. The Supreme Court ruled in Panetti v. Quarterman in 2007 that an inmate must have “rational understanding” of the state’s reasons for execution.









