Two reports from Ohio draw starkly different conclusions of the State’s death penalty system
source: Death Penalty Information Center
published: 9 April 2026
Image Credit: Jimmy Chan at www.Pexels.com
Ohio’s capital punishment system has come into sharp focus with the release of two reports that examine four decades of the state’s death penalty record and draw starkly different conclusions about the future of Ohio’s death penalty.
On March 30, Ohioans to Stop Executions (OTSE) published Beyond Reasonable Doubt: Confronting the Wrongful Conviction Crisis in the State of Ohio, documenting the record of mistakes and errors that resulted in 12 exonerations. “The death penalty in Ohio is a system defined more by its capacity for error than its pursuit of justice,” the report states, concluding, “It’s time for Ohio to end its death penalty.”
Two days later, outgoing Attorney General Dave Yost released his eighth and final Capital Crimes Report, calling the state’s years-long pause on executions “a mockery of the justice system” and complaining that Ohio has provided death-sentenced prisoners with “more than their fair share of due process.” AG Yost urges lawmakers to pass legislation that would allow executions to resume.
“Beyond Reasonable Doubt centers on data OTSE argues Ohioans can no longer ignore: since the state reinstated capital punishment in 1981, it has executed 56 people and exonerated 12 others from death row — marking one exoneration for every five executions carried out. Collectively, OTSE notes that these 12 men lost 245 years of their lives to wrongful imprisonment. “It turns out that Ohio has a massive wrongful conviction problem, far worse than anyone imagined,” said Kevin Werner, Executive Director of OTSE. Mr. Werner added that “[a]ttempts to restart executions will result in the executions of innocent people, and no one wants that.”
In addition to the 12 individuals who have been wrongfully sentenced to death, Beyond Reasonable Doubt identifies an additional 12 “shadow exonerations,” or cases in which individuals faced capital indictments and were sentenced to life in prison rather than death and were later proven innocent.
The same issues are present in both groups of 12 cases: prosecutorial misconduct, coerced testimony, false eyewitness identifications, and false or misleading forensic evidence.















