2014
DOI: 10.3390/laws3010153
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The Dog that Stopped Barking: Mass Legal Executions in 21st Century America

Abstract: During the first two centuries of European colonization of what is now the United States, executions for a variety of offenses relatively frequently involved mass executions, that is, the execution for the same criminal incident of four or more persons. By the time of American independence, some of those crimes had largely ceased to exist or to elicit such punishment, like witchcraft and piracy. However, the punishment of slaves and Indians kept the percentage of executed persons involved in mass executions si… Show more

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