Реферат на тему UnH1d Essay Research Paper BY Katie Lynn
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Untitled Essay, Research Paper
BY: Katie Lynn FoxCapital PunishmentCapital Punishment is the ultimate denial of human rights. There are strong indications
that rather than deterring violence, it increases people’s tolerance of and tendency
toward violence. Though capital punishment does not deter capital crimes it does
constitute a uniquely cruel and degrading punishment. It’s imposition forever
deprives a potentially innocent individual the benefits of new evidence or a new law that
might warrant the reversal of a conviction or the setting aside of a death sentence. In
addition, the cost of executing a person in the U.S. is far higher than the cost of
imprisoning him or her for life. States wishing to condemn cruel and inhuman acts of
killing do not serve their purpose by repeating the act of killing.The average homicide rate in the 13 states without the death penalty is lower than the
average homicide rate in the 37 states where it is legal. Between 1972 and 1990, the
homicide rate in Michigan which has no death penalty, was generally as low or lower than
the neighboring state of Indiana, which restored the death penalty in 1973. The U.S.
Bowers- Pierce study analyzing executions between 1907 and 1963 concluded, that an average
of two additional homicides were committed in the month after an execution; they also
noted a “brutalizing” effect on society resulting from executions. According to
FBI statistics the murder rate in some states which use the death penalty is twice that of
some states which do not use the death penalty. Between 1976 and 1985, almost twice as
many law enforcement officers were killed in death penalty states as were killed in states
that don’t use the death penalty. The death penalty has not proven its worth to
society; study after study has shown!
that it fails to deter crime, no credible body of evidence contradicts them.Capital punishment is pre- meditated killing and, like all killing, involves a cruel and
violent assault on the human body. If administering 100 volts of electricity to the most
sensitive parts of a man’s body is rightly condemned as torture, how does a state
condone the administration of 2,000 volts to a human body in order to cause death? At a
1990 Florida execution, a malfunction of the electric chair equipment caused flames to
leap six inches above the prisoner’s head each time the current was turned on. In
1992, a prisoner in Oklahoma had a violent reaction to the drugs used in the lethal
injection. While he gasped and gagged violently, the muscles in his jaw, neck and abdomen
reacted spasmodically. Eleven minutes elapsed before the man died. In 1994 it took five
minutes for David Lawson to die in North Carolina’s gas chamber. During that time he
screamed, “I’m human! I’m human!” Since 1984 there have been over 24
“botched executions,” all of which have inflicted cruel!
and unusual punishment and have clearly violated the eighth amendment.Experience has shown that innocent people are often convicted of crimes including capital
crimes and that some of them have been executed. A recent study revealed over 400 cases of
wrong conviction for capital offenses in the United States between 1900 and 1991. Most of
the convictions were upheld on appeal, with evidence produced years after sentencing to
prove the prisoner’s innocence. But, for 24 of the prisoners, that evidence appeared
too late they had already been executed. Because human beings are fallible, innocent
people have been executed in the past and will continue to be executed in the future. As
stated by the famous social historian Marquis de Lafayette, “I shall ask for the
abolition of the punishment of death until I have the infallibility of human judgement
demonstrated to me.” Supreme Court Justice, Harry Blackmun made this statement on the
subject, “Nothing could be more contrary to contemporary standards of decency…
or more shocking to the conscience… t!
han to execute a person who is actually innocent. That comes perilously close to simple
murder.” All of society is responsible for the death of an innocent person when the
state kills in our name. Abolition of the death penalty is the only guaranteed protection
against this tragedy.The actual cost of an execution is substantially higher than the cost of imprisoning a
person for life. A 1982 in- depth study of death penalty costs in New York placed the cost
of executing a prisoner at over $1.8 million. This figure is three times the cost of
imprisoning a person for life, and it includes only three stages of the judicial
proceedings. It does not include additional court security, and counsel fees, nor does it
include the estimated millions of dollars associated with state and federal post-
conviction reviews and with the execution itself. California spends an extra $90 million
per year on capital punishment. In Florida, each execution costs the state $3.2 million,
six times more than incarcerating a prisoner for life. Texas, with the highest execution
rate and one of the highest murder rates in the country, spends an estimated $2.3 million
per capital case. This is roughly three times the cost of keeping someone in prison for 40
years. The death penalty!
costs more than life imprisonment and wastes scarce resources, which could be
better used for proven anti- crime programs.Opposition to the death penalty does not arise from misplaced sympathy for convicted
murderers. On the contrary, murder demonstrates a lack of respect for human life.
Executions give society an unmistakable message that human life no longer deserves respect
when it is useful to take it and that homicide is legitimate when deemed justified by
pragmatic concerns. A decent and humane society does not deliberately kill human beings.
But who better to explain this than those who know firsthand of the deep hurt and pain
that occur when a loved one is murdered.“As one whose husband and mother- in- law have died the victims of murder
assassination, I stand firmly and unequivocally opposed to the death penalty for those
convicted of capital offenses. An evil deed is not redeemed by an evil deed of
retaliation. Justice is never advanced in the taking of a human life. Morality is never
upheld by a legalized murder.” -Coretta Scott King“Concerning the claim of justice for the victim’s family, I say there is no
amount of retaliatory deaths that would compensate to me the inestimable value of my
daughter’s life, nor would they restore her to my arms. To say that the death of any
other person would be just retribution is to insult the immeasurable worth of our loved
ones who are victims. We cannot put a price on their lives. That kind of justice would
only dehumanize and degrade us because it legitimates an animal instinct for gut- level,
blood thirsty revenge.” –Marietta Jaeger
Marietta’s daughter was kidnapped, raped and murdered.
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