I asked you a question about this but you ignored or skipped it. See above.
See what you are saying sounds great from a purely philosophical standpoint. From an in-the-trenches standpoint it is much harder to remedy than just stopping the death penalty. I should like to hear your reasoning behind it, evidence for it (such as what percentage of blacks that receive the death penalty were innocent compared to the percentage of whites, etc.) and how to remedy it. I know there are some statistics on this topic out there. But I have also seen stats that show it is not as black and white (excuse the pun) as it is portrayed.
Edit:
I decided to google a bit and found this really good piece about it:
https://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/de...ite-who-lives-who-dies-who-decides#Conclusion
And I have a solution.
Require than in every state with the death penalty a panel of law experts be established to review only capital cases. They are given the facts of the case, with all names redacted (using only victim, defendent, etc.) and any details that may indicate race or even sex (such as names of schools if applicable, and street addresses, etc.) and the final verdict of the jury as to guilt. This panel would be cross-race and gender and consist of 5 or 7 individuals (more or less as warranted). They would then review the case academically according to the laws of the state and determine if the death penalty would be warranted based on precedent according to the case facts. If it is warranted it would be sent back to the trial judge as an option for sentencing. If it is not warranted, it is eliminated as a possible sentence entirely. This would not be that difficult to establish, would not be overly costly, and would go a long way to being fair to the defendents and victims alike. The panel could be built to represent the statistical makeup of the population of the state in general, but would be required to have at least 40% non-white.
In states with higher numbers of capital cases annually they could establish multiple panels. Could do so in other states as well. It could be a voted position or appointed. If they required a minimum of 5 panels, let's say, and they rotated through, then it would minimize the chances of lobbying of the panel. And if it kept the schedule of the panels secret.
The same panels could be used to periodically review case work of judges and find racial trends, which could be a way to police this issue among the trial judges themselves.