There is scant evidence to suggest that the death penalty as a deterrent works. The murder rate in New York, New Mexico and Connecticut continued to go down after those states abolished the death penalty. Southern states execute more people than any other region of the country, yet the murder rate in the South is the highest. The death penalty is also much more expensive than imprisonment for life, because of costly trials and lengthy appeals. Ernest Goss of Creighton University estimates that each death-penalty prosecution costs Nebraska’s taxpayers about $1.5m more than life without parole. Ten people remain on the state’s death row.
Since the death penalty returned to America in 1976, 162 death sentences have been reversed and 1,480 people have been executed, so roughly one in ten was found innocent. Mr Dunham believes that, of those who were executed, at least a dozen were innocent. He cites the case of Carlos DeLuna, who was executed for murder in Texas in 1989 and who is now generally believed to have been convicted in error.
Say a police officer was walking down the street and saw a gangster shoot down an innocent victim. The police officer yells, stop and drop your weapon. The gangster shoots at the police officer and misses. The officer shoots back and kills the gangster. That is also an example of the death penalty. — wellwisher
Can anyone ague that the state must never kill? — tim wood
it is conceivable that Donald Trump is a traitor, engaged in acts of treason. If convicted of same, should he be hanged? — tim wood
The question is what to do with those. And I think there is something to be said for getting it over with... for all parties involved. — ChatteringMonkey
The death penalty being unpopular or popular hasn't changed that much in the last decade. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The main reason the death penalty is so barbaric, and so dehumanising of the society that conducts it, is that it is done in cold blood, against a helpless, powerless individual. — andrewk
There is scant evidence to suggest that the death penalty as a deterrent works.
Since the death penalty returned to America in 1976, 162 death sentences have been reversed and 1,480 people have been executed, so roughly one in ten was found innocent.
Maybe they deserve cruel and unusual punishment, for the criminal took away the rights of an individual by murdering them. — Blue Lux
Whether justice is miscarried or not, a conviction and even a short term in prison is often an enduring punishment, because having been convicting and having served time is frequently an effective barrier against employment. — Bitter Crank
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