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DEATH PENALTY AND SENTENCING INFORMATION
In the United States
10/1/97
By Dudley Sharp, Death Penalty Resources Director, Justice
For All
The death penalty debate in the U.S. is dominated by the fraudulent
voice of the anti-death penalty movement. The culture of lies and deceit
so dominates that movement that many of the falsehoods are now wrongly
accepted as fact, by both advocates and opponents of capital punishment.
The following report presents the true facts of the death penalty in America.
If you are even casually aware of this public debate, you will note that
every category contradicts the well-worn frauds presented by the anti-death
penalty movement. The anti-death penalty movement specializes in the abolition
of truth.
- Imposition of the death penalty is extraordinarily rare. Since
1967, there has been one execution for every 1600 murders, or 0.06%. There
have been approximately 560,000 murders and 358 executions from 1967-1996
FBI's Uniform Crime Report (UCR) & Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS).
- Approximately 5900 persons have been sentenced to death
and 358 executed (from 1973-96). An average of 0.2% of those were executed
every year during that time. 56 murderers were executed in 1995, a record
number for the modern death penalty. This represented 1.8% of those on
death row. The average time on death row for those 56 executed - 11 years,
2 months ("Capital Punishment 1995", BJS, 1996), an all time record of
longevity, breaking the 1994 record of 10 years, 2 months.
- Death penalty opponents ("opponents") state that "Those who
support the death penalty see it as a solution to violent crime." Opponents,
hereby, present one of many fabrications. In reality, executions are seen
as the appropriate punishment for certain criminals committing specific
crimes. So says the U.S. Supreme Court and so say most death penalty supporters
("advocates").
- Opponents equate execution and murder, believing that if two
acts have the same ending or result, then those two acts are morally
equivalent. This is a morally untenable position. Is the legal taking of
property to satisfy a debt the same as auto theft? Both result in loss
of property. Are kidnaping and legal incarceration the same? Both involve
imprisonment against one's will. Is killing in self defense the same as
capital murder? Both end in taking human life. Are rape and making love
the same? Both may result in sexual intercourse. How absurd. Opponents
flawed logic and moral confusion mirror their "factual" arguments - there
is, often, an absence of reality. The moral confusion of some opponents
is astounding. Some equate the American death penalty with the Nazi holocaust.
Opponents see no moral distinction between the slaughter of 12 million
totally innocent men, women and children and the just execution of society's
worst human rights violators.
A. THE RISK
OF EXECUTING THE INNOCENT
B. THE INCAPACITATION AND THE DETERRENT
EFFECTS
C. RACE, SENTENCING AND THE DEATH PENALTY
D.
THE COST OF LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE VS THE DEATH PENALTY
E. DEATH PENALTY PROCEDURES
F. CHRISTIANITY AND
THE DEATH PENALTY
A. THE RISK
OF EXECUTING THE INNOCENT
Great effort has been made in pretrial, trial, appeals, writ and clemency
procedures to minimize the chance of an innocent being convicted, sentenced
to death or executed. Since 1973, legal protections have been so extraordinary
that 37% of all death row cases have been overturned for due process reasons
or commuted. Indeed, inmates are six times more likely to get off death
row by appeals than by execution. (Capital Punishment 1995", BJS, 1996).
And, in fact, many of those cases were overturned based on post conviction
new laws, established by legislative or judicial decisions in other cases.
Opponents claim that 69 "innocent" death row inmates have been released
since 1973. ("Innocence and the Death Penalty", Death Penalty Information
Center, July, 1997). Just a casual review, using the DPICs own case descriptions,
reveals that of 39 cases reviewed (Sec. A, B, & C, pg. 12-21),
that the DPIC offers no evidence of innocence in 29, or 78%, of those cases.
Incredibly, the DPIC reviews "Recent Cases of Possible Mistaken Executions"
(p 23-24), wherein they list the cases of Roger Keith Coleman, Leonel Herrera,
and Jesse Jacobs - 3 cases which helped solidify the anti-death penalty
movements penchant for lack of full disclosure and/or fraud. For the fourth
case, therein, that of Coleman Wayne Gray, the DPIC makes no effort to
claim innocence.
Furthermore, the DPIC and most opponents fail to review that the role
of clemency and appeals in such cases is to judge the merits of death row
inmates claims regarding innocence and/or additional trial error. Indeed,
the release of those 69 inmates proves that such procedures worked precisely,
and often generously, as intended. Also contrary to opponents claims,
clemency is used generously to grant mercy to death row murderers and to
spare inmates whose guilt has come into question. In fact, 135 death row
inmates have been spared by clemency or commutation from 1973-95 (ibid.).
This represents 43% of the total of those executed during that time - a
remarkable record of consideration and mercy.
In reviewing the DPICs original 1993 study, finding 48 (of the 69)
"innocent" defendants on death row, the DPIC states its debt for the "
. . . ground breaking work done by . . . Professors Michael Radelet and
Hugo Bedau"(p 1) in their "Miscarriages of Justice in Potentially Capital
Cases". See below.
The most significant study conducted to evaluate the evidence of the
"innocent executed" is the Bedau-Radelet Study ("Miscarriages of Justice
in Potentially Capital Cases," 40, 1 Stanford Law Review, 11/87). The study
concluded that 23 innocent persons had been executed since 1900. However,
the study's methodology was so flawed that at least 12 of those cases had
no evidence of innocence and substantial evidence of guilt. Bedau &
Radelet, both opponents, "consistently presented incomplete and misleading
accounts of the evidence." (Markman, Stephen J. & Cassell, Paul G.,
"Protecting the Innocent: A Response to the Bedau-Radelet Study" 41, 1
Stanford Law Review, 11/88). The remaining 11 cases represent 0.14% of
the 7,800 executions which have taken place since 1900. And, there
is, in fact, no proof that those 11 executed were innocent. In addition,
the "innocents executed" group was extracted from a Bedau & Radelet
imagined pool of 350 persons who were, supposedly, wrongly convicted of
capital or "potentially" capital crimes. Not only were they at least 50%
in error with their 23 "innocents executed" claim, but 211 of those 350
cases, or 60%, were not sentenced to death. Bedau and Radelet already knew
that plea bargains, the juries, the evidence, the prosecutors, judicial
review and/or the legal statutes had put these crimes in the "no capital
punishment" category. Indeed, their claims of innocence, regarding the
remaining 139 of those 350 cases, should be suspect, given this studys
poor level of accuracy. Calling their work misleading hardly does this
"academic" study justice. Had a high school student presented such a report,
where 50-60% of the material was either false or misleading, a grade of
F would be a likely result.
Indeed, Michigan Court of Appeals Judge Stephen Markman finds that
" . . . the Bedau-Radelet study is remarkable not (as retired Supreme
Court Judge Harry Blackmun seems to believe) for demonstrating that mistakes
involving the death penalty are common, but rather for demonstrating how
uncommon they are . . . This study - the most thorough and painstaking
analysis ever on the subject - fails to prove that a single such mistake
has occurred in the United States during the twentieth century." Presumably,
Bedau and Radelet would have selected the most compelling 23 cases of the
innocent executed to prove their proposition. "Yet, in each of these cases,
where there is a record to review, there are eyewitnesses, confessions,
physical evidence and circumstantial evidence in support of the defendants
guilt. Bedau has written elsewhere that it is false sentimentality to
argue that the death penalty ought to be abolished because of the abstract
possibility that an innocent person might be executed when the record fails
to disclose that such cases exist. . . . (T)he Bedau and Radelet
study . . . speaks eloquently about the extraordinary rarity of error in
capital punishment." ("Innocents on Death Row?", National Review, September
12, 1994).
Another significant oversight by that study was not differentiating
between the risk of executing innocent persons before and after Furman
v Georgia (1972). There is, in fact, no proof that an innocent has been
executed since 1900. And the probability of such a tragedy occurring has
been lowered significantly more since Furman. In the context that hundreds
of thousands of innocents have been murdered or seriously injured, since
1900, by criminals improperly released by the U.S. criminal justice system
(or not incarcerated at all!), the relevant question is: Is the risk of
executing the innocent, however slight, worth the justifications for the
death penalty - those being retribution, rehabilitation, incapacitation,
required punishment, deterrence, escalating punishments, religious mandates,
cost savings, the moral imperative, just punishment and the saving of innocent
lives?
Predictably, opponents still continue to fraudulently claim, even today*,
that this study has proven that 23 "innocent" people have been executed,
even though Bedau and Radelet, the authors of that study, conceded
- in 1988 - that neither they nor any previous researchers have proved
that any of those executed was innocent: "We agree with our critics that
we have not proved these executed defendants to be innocent; we never claimed
that we had." (41, 1 Stanford Law Review, 11/1988).
One of opponents most blatant frauds is their claim that the U.S. Supreme
Court, in Herrera v. Collins (113 S. Ct. 853, 870{1993}), found that the
Herrera "decision would allow the states to execute a defendant for a crime
that he did not commit. Justice OConnors concurring opinion makes clear
that Herrera does not stand for that proposition. Justice OConnor stated,
I cannot disagree with the fundamental legal principal that executing
the innocent is inconsistent with the Constitution and the execution
of a legally and factually innocent person would be a constitutionally
intolerable event. As Justice OConnor stated, the Court assumed for the
sake of argument that a truly persuasive demonstration of actual innocence
would render any such execution unconstitutional and that federal habeas
relief would be warranted if no state avenue were open to process the claim.
Id., at 874. That is the holding in Herrera, and any claim to the contrary
is simply not correct."
"Moreover, Herreras claim of innocence was weak at best, seeking to
blame his dead brother for the crimes Herrera was found guilty of committing.
When the evidence against Herrera is considered against the proffered evidence
of innocence, it is not surprising that none of the federal judges to hear
this claim, including the dissenters in the Supreme Court, have ever expressed
any doubt as to Herreras guilt." Kenneth S. Nunnelley in Congressional
testimony, July 23, 1993
*Example: Stephen Bright, Director, Southern Center For Human Rights
(Atlanta, Ga.). claims that Aubrey Adams of Florida represents a
case of the innocent executed. (Cochran & Grace, Court TV, 3/ 25/97).
Since neither JFA nor the Death Penalty Information Center could locate
an Aubrey Adams for which such claims had been made, JFA assumes that Mr.
Bright meant the well known case of James Adams of Florida.
The James Adams case is particularly worthy of review. Not only is
the Adams case one of those alleged 23 "innocent" executed, but his is
the only post-Furman case cited by Bedau and Radelet. Bedau and Radelets
claims and "evidence" are too lengthy to review here. A short review is
all that is required to discredit such claims. They "proved" Adams innocence
by a review, not of the case facts, but of Adams own claims from his clemency
hearing! This dishonest review was presented as an objective evaluation
of the case when, in fact, it was completely biased, with only one goal
- to present the case facts in the light most favorable to Adams and to
neglect or suppress the voluminous evidence of Adams guilt. Cassell and
Markman exposed this academic fraud and presented the case facts from the
full record, as Bedau and Radelet should have. The case for Adams guilt
is solid. Mr. Bright is a leading spokesperson in the anti-death penalty
movement
Both Bedau and Radelet refused to claim that Adams was innocent. Yet,
this does not prevent opponents from making false claims to the contrary.
If Mr. Bright was discussing the James Adams case, this is a classic, standard
example of the type of anti-death penalty fraud found every day.
Irresponsible editors, publishers and authors are common within this
debate. Two examples: Punishment and the Death Penalty, Baird, Robert &
Rosenbaum, Stuart, Prometheus, 1996 and Capital Punishment: the death penalty
debate, Gottfried, Ted, Enslow, 1997. Both still claim that 23 "innocents"
have been executed!
B.
THE INCAPACITATION AND THE DETERRENT EFFECTS
SUMMARY - The incapacitation effect saves lives - that is, that by executing
murderers you prevent them from murdering again and do, thereby, save innocent
life (B.1-4, 7, 9, 10 & 15). The evidence of this is conclusive and
incontrovertible. Furthermore, the individual deterrent effect also proves
that executions save innocent life (B.7-9 & 11-18). This effect represents
those potential murderers who did not murder under specific circumstances
because of their fear of execution. There are many, perhaps thousands,
of such documented cases, representing many innocent lives saved by the
fear of execution. Circumstances dictate that the majority of these cases
will never be documented and that the number of innocent lives saved by
individual deterrence will be, and has been, much greater than we will
ever be able to calculate. Finally, there are more than 30 years of respected
academic studies which reveal a general, or systemic, deterrent effect,
meaning that there is statistical proof that executions produce fewer murders
(B. 7-9 & 11-18). However, such studies are inconclusive because there
are also studies that find no such effect - not surprising, as the U.S.
has executed only 0.08% of their murderers since 1973. Because such studies
are inconclusive, we must choose the option that may save innocent lives.
For, if there is a general deterrent effect, and we do execute, then we
are saving innocent lives. But, if there is a general deterrent effect
and we dont execute murderers, we are sacrificing innocent lives. If our
judgement is in error regarding general deterrence, then such error must
be made on the side of saving innocent lives and not on the side of sacrificing
innocent lives. This is a moral imperative. Furthermore, the individual
deterrent effect could not exist without the general deterrent effect bring
present. The individual deterrent effect is proven. Therefore, even though
it may be statistically elusive, the general deterrent effect is proven
by individual deterrence. Individually and collectively, these three effects
present a strong morale argument for executions. Executions save lives.
Period. Our choice is to spare the lives of the murderers and to, thereby,
sacrifice the lives of the innocent or to execute those murderers and to,
thereby, spare the lives of the innocent. What do you choose?
The test for deterrence is not whether executions produce lower murder
rates, but that executions produce fewer murders than if the death penalty
did not exist. For example, the fact that the state of Delaware executes
more people per capita (1/87,500) than any other state and has a murder
rate 16 times lower than Washington, D.C. (5/100,000 vs 78.5/100,000) is
not proof, per se, that the death penalty deters murder in Delaware or
that the lack of the death penalty escalates murders and violent crime
in Washington, D.C., which has the highest violent crime and murder rates
in the U.S. Be careful how you explain and understand deterrence.
- The argument that murderers are the least likely of all criminals
to repeat their crimes is not only irrelevant, but also increasingly false.
6% of young adults paroled in 1978 after having been convicted of murder
were arrested for murder again within 6 years of release. ("Recidivism
of Young Parolees," 4, 1987, BJS). Murderers have so violated the human
rights of their victims and of society that it should be a moral imperative
that they never again have that opportunity.
- Obviously, those executed cant murder again. "Of the roughly
52,000 state prison inmates serving time for murder in 1984, an estimated
810 had previously been convicted of murder and had killed 821 persons
following their previous murder convictions. Executing each of these inmates
would have saved 821 lives." (41, 1 Stanford Law Review, 11/88, pg. 153)
Using a 75% murder clearance rate, it is most probable that the actual
number of lives saved would have been 1026, or fifty times the number legally
executed that year. This suggests that some 10,000 persons have been murdered,
since 1971, by those who had previously committed additional murders (JFA).
See B.5.
- Death penalty opponents spend millions of dollars and countless
man hours fighting the legal execution of, at most, 56 of our worst human
rights violators per year, when they do nothing to fight for the end of
those inhumane parole and probation release policies which result in the
needless injury and slaughter of the innocent. "The U.S. Department of
Justice estimates that convicted criminals free on parole and probation
. . . commit at least 84,800 violent crimes every year, including 13,200
murders, 12,900 rapes, and 49,500 robberies." American Guardian, May 1997,
pg. 26. Incredibly, this slaughter does not include violent crimes committed
by repeat offenders who are released and who are not on "supervision".
Where is the compassion in honoring the previous victims suffering and
in protecting the human rights of future victims? Opponents actions show
virtually no compassion for the victims of violent crime or concern for
future victims, yet, they exhibit overwhelming support for those who violate
our human rights and murder our loved ones.
- 9-15% of those on death row committed, at least, one additional
murder, prior to that murder (or those murders) which has currently put
them on death row; 67% had a prior felony conviction; 42% had an
active criminal justice status when they committed their capital offense;
14% of those sentenced to death from 1988-94, had received two or more
death sentences ("Capital Punishment 1994", BJS 1995 & JFA). Should
we err on the side of caution and protect the innocent and honor the memories
of those murdered or should we give murderers the opportunity to harm again?
Should we put prison personnel and other prisoners at any additional risk
from known murderers? Prisoners on death row are 250% more likely to murder,
in prison, than are prisoners in the general population. Lester, D., "Suicide
and Homicide on Death Row", American Journal of Psychiatry, 143, 559, 1986.
- The expected punishment for murder was only 1.5 years in 1985
and rose to only 2.7 years in 1995! (THE REYNOLDS REPORT, "Crime and Punishment
in the U.S.", National Center for Policy Analysis, 1997). Expected punishment
is calculated by measuring the probability of being caught, incarcerated,
and time served. Why have we chosen to be so generous to murderers and
so contemptuous of the human rights and suffering of the victims and future
victims? See B. 2.
- For a criminal justice system to have credibility and deterrent
value, two factors are required: (1) a high rate of arrest and (2) punishment
which reflects the severity of the crime, the criminals record and the
demand for justice. The U.S. system has neither. Of the 10.3 million violent
crimes in 1993, only 100,000 of those victimizations, or 1%, resulted in
an actual jail sentence. Only 6.2% of all violent crimes result in arrest.
(Prof. John J. DiIulio, Jr., Princeton Univ. 1995, The State of Violent
Crime in America, 1/96 and Criminal Victimization 1993 , BJS, 1995.) The
human rights of victims and future victims are consistently ignored.
- With no death penalty and only life without parole (LWOP), there
is no deterrent for LWOP inmates killing others while in prison or after
escape. Indeed, there is actually a positive incentive to murder if a criminal
has committed a LWOP offense and had not yet been captured. Currently,
there are a number of inmates who have killed numerous people in prison or after
escape. Their punishment could not be increased because there is no death
penalty in those states. Therefore, they will never be punished for those
crimes. Never. Totally unacceptable, by any standard. Not surprisingly,
death penalty opponents believe that LWOP is more severe than the death
penalty. Hamilton, V., & Rakin, L.: "Interpreting the 8th Amendment",
Bedau, H., & Pierce, C., ed., Capital Punishment in the United States,
New York, AMS, 1976. This absurd belief, which has now become the newest
mantra of opponents, is contradicted by all other surveyed groups, including
prisoners (B.11 & 16).
- Death Penalty opponents claim that there is a "brutalization effect"
with executions, meaning, that executions show a low regard for human life
and do, thereby, cause an increase in the murder rate. If the brutalization
effect is real, it would be the only known legal sanction to cause an increase
in wrongful behavior. Why would criminals become more likely to engage
in illegal activities because the punishments for those activities become
more severe? How absurd. Have dramatic increases in the rates of incarceration
resulted in dramatic increases in kidnappings? Just the opposite. Further
denouncing the brutalization effect is the fact that many respected studies
show that executions do produce an individual and a general deterrent effect.
And, there is, of course, common sense.
- There are four rational conclusions one can make regarding
general, or systemic, deterrence. (1) If the death penalty is not a deterrent
and we execute, then we are executing our worst human rights violators.
(2) If the death penalty is a deterrent and we execute, then we are executing
those criminals and saving innocent lives. (3) If the death penalty is
not a deterrent and we dont execute, then we are not sacrificing innocent
lives. (4) If the death penalty is a deterrent and we dont execute, then
we are sacrificing innocent lives. Regarding deterrence, it is necessary
to err on the side of saving innocent life and not to err on the side of
sacrificing innocent life. These are moral imperatives.
- There are two mistakes we can make with those convicted of violent
crimes. First, we can misjudge their character and keep them incarcerated
too long, when they could have become constructive free persons, repaying
even more their debt to society and to their victim(s). Secondly, we can
misjudge their character and release them too soon, so that they further
destroy the lives of our children, our brothers and sisters, our spouses
and our parents, creating additional economic, physical, emotional and
spiritual loss. For far too long, the U.S. has chosen to err on the side
of those who have violated our human rights and has, thereby, expanded
the river of blood and tears for victims and their survivors (See B.3).
No more. Not in our name. We demand that the memories and suffering of
crime victims be honored by justice - that is by a just punishment which
reflects the severity of the crime. And, we must always err on the
side of caution and compassion for those not yet harmed.
- The most conclusive evidence that criminals fear the death penalty
more than life without parole is provided by convicted capital murderers
and their attorneys. 99.9% of all convicted capital murderers and their
attorneys argue for life, not death, in the punishment phase of their trial.
When the death penalty becomes real, murderers fear it the most. While
it is obvious that the fear of execution did not deter those murderers
from committing a capital crime, it is also clear that such fear is reduced
because executions are neither swift nor sure in the U.S. However, as the
probability of that punishment rises for those murderers, even they show
a great fear of the death penalty. Although you will never deter all murderers,
the effect of deterrence will rise as the probability of executions rise.
Because, as the probability of executions rises, the fear of that punishment
will also rise. And, that which we fear the most deters the most. Indeed,
prisoners rate the death penalty as the most feared punishment, much more
so than life without parole. Sehba, L. & Nathan, G., "Further Explorations
in the Scale of Penalties", British Journal of Criminology, 24:221-249,
1984.
- Opponents proclaim that the death penalty is a barbaric act so
dreadful in its implications that we can hardly bear to contemplate the
horrors of its terrible character. On the other hand, they also assert
that potential murderers, when confronted with the horrors of execution,
will not be deterred by its infliction upon them. That proposition is,
of course, absurd on the face of it (Revised from M. Stanton Evans, Clear
and Present Danger).
- Assume that all murderers would instantly die upon murdering. Murderers
would then kill only if they wished to die themselves. Murder/suicide is
an extremely small component of all murders. Therefore, if a swift and
sure death penalty was universally applied to our worst criminals, it is
logically conclusive that the death penalty would be a significant deterrent
and that many innocent lives would be saved. In fact, swift and sure executions
do result in deterrence: (A) The greater the publicity surrounding executions,
the greater the deterrent effect. Phillips, D. "The Deterrent Effect of
Capital Punishment". American Journal of Sociology, 86;139-158, 1980: Philipps,
D. & Hensley, J., "When Violence is Rewarded or Punished". J.
Commun., 34(3); 101-116, 1984; and the various studies by Prof. Steven
Stack, Wayne St. U.(1988-1995) and (B) The higher the rate of execution,
the greater the deterrent effect. Lester, D. "Executions As A Deterrent
To Homicide", 44:562,1979a and "Deterring Effect of Executions on Murder
as a Function of Number and Proportion of Executions", 45:598, 1979b, both
from Psychol. Rep. and Wasserman, L.: "Non-deterrent Effect of Executions
on Homicide Rates", Psychol. Rep., 58:137-138, 1981. The State of
Delaware has the highest execution rate per capita and low homicide rates.
- The individual deterrent effect is proven by many, perhaps thousands,
of individual, fully documented cases where criminals have admitted that
the death penalty was the specific threat which deterred them and/or others
from committing murder. Indeed, one study showed that criminals, by a 5:1
ratio, believed that capital punishment was a significant enough deterrent
to prevent them and/or others from murdering their victims (People vs Love,
56 Cal 2d 720 (1961), McComb, J. dissenting. see also: (A) "Controversy
Over Capital Punishment", Congressional Digest, Jan.,73, p. 13; (B) L.A.P.D.
study within Aikens vs Ca., No. 68-5027, Oct. Term, 1971, U.S. Supreme
Court; ( C ) Carol Vance, "The Death Penalty After Furman", The Prosecutor,
vol. 9, no. 4 (1973), p. 703; (D) Carrington, F., Neither Cruel Nor Unusual,
Pgs. 92-100(1978); (E) Don Hooloschultz, "Gunman Slain, Hostages O.K.",
Washington Star News, 8/23/73, p.A-1; (F) Jim Landers, "4 Guilty in Holdup
Sentence", Washington Post, 12/8/73,p.B-1; (G) Larry Derryberry, "It Is
The Fear That Death May Be The Punishment That Deters", Police Digest,
Spring/Summer 1973, p.27, col.2. ; (H) "Langley says Texas death penalty
affected his actions during escape", by Stephen Martin, The Daily Democrat
(Ft. Madison, Iowa), 1/8/97, pg 1. Indeed, prisoners rate the death
penalty as a much more severe penalty than they do life without parole
(B.12).While it is difficult to prove a negative, i.e. "How many murders
does the death penalty cause not to occur?", there is absolute evidence
that the individual deterrent effect of executions saves innocent lives.
Extensive worldwide research on individual deterrence would, undoubtedly,
reveal significant general deterrent effect.
- Regarding the deterrent affect of the death penalty, poet Hyam Barshay
made the following observation, "The death penalty is a warning, just like
a lighthouse throwing beams out to sea. We hear about shipwrecks, but we
do not hear about the ships the lighthouse guides safely on their way.
We do not have proof of the number of ships it saves, but we do not tear
the lighthouse down." Prof. Ernest van den Haag, "On Deterrence and The
Death Penalty", Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology and Police Science,
vol. 60, no.2 (1969).
- 30 years of studies suggest that the death penalty is a general,
or systemic, deterrent. (See works by Profs. D. Cloninger, S. Cameron,
I. Ehrlich, W. Bailey, D. Lester, S. Layson, K. I. Wolpin, L. Phillips,
S. C. Ray, S. Stack, etc.) Examples: a) A 1967-68 study revealed
27 states showed a deterrent effect (Bailey, W.,1974); b) The 1960's
showed a rapid rise in all crimes, including murder, while both prison
terms and executions declined (Passell, P. & Taylor, T., 1977; Bowers,
W. & Pierce, G., 1975); c) Murder increased 100% during the U.S.s
moratorium on executions (Carrington, F., Neither Cruel Nor Unusual); d)
14 nations that abolished the death penalty showed that murder rates
increased 7% from the 5 year pre-abolition period to the 5 year post abolition
period (Archer, et al, 1977); e) A 37 state study showed that 24 states
showed a deterrent effect, 8 states showed a brutalization effect and 5
states showed no effect (Bailey, W., 1979-80); and f) econometric studies
indicate that each execution may deter 8 or more murders ( Cameron, S.,
1994). Although these studies have been produced by respected social scientists,
there are also studies which show no general deterrent effect. Indeed,
with the complexity of these studies and with the number of variables required
to accurately measure the general deterrent effect of executions on murder
rates, it is arguable if there ever will be a statistical consensus with
general deterrence studies. With so few executions and so many murders,
the general deterrent effect may remain statistically elusive. However,
it is that very inconclusive nature of general deterrence which provides
the two reasons which require executions. First, we must choose to use
executions because they may save innocent life. Whereas, if we choose not
to use executions and there is a general deterrent effect, we would be
sacrificing innocent lives. Therefore, a moral imperative exists to choose
executions (see B. 9). Secondly, the individual deterrent effect would
not exist but for the presence of general deterrence. And because the individual
deterrent effect is proven and cannot be contradicted, we know that the
general deterrent effect must exist, even though its existence may remain
inconclusive by statistical analysis.
- Opponents state that if the death penalty was a deterrent then
states that have the death penalty would have a reduced homicide rate.
Delaware, which executes more murderers per capita than any other state
in the U.S.A., also has low homicide rates. Furthermore, general or systemic
deterrence is not necessarily measured by low or reduced homicide rates,
but by rates that are lower than they otherwise would be if the death penalty
was not present. Additionally, some countries, such as Saudi Arabia, have
swift and sure executions and very low violent crime rates. It is not surprising
that the U.S., which has executed only 0.06% of its murderers since 1967,
does not overtly show a general deterrent effect. While most in the U.S.
would not advocate criminal justice systems like that of Saudi Arabia,
it is also very clear that the American criminal justice system fosters
the additional slaughter of its own innocent citizens.
- The highest murder rate in Houston (Harris County), Texas occurred
in 1981, with 701 murders. Texas resumed executions in 1982. Since that
time, Houston (Harris County) has executed more murderers than any other
city or state (except Texas) AND has seen the greatest reduction in murder,
701 in 1981 down to 261 in 1996 - a 63% reduction, representing a 270%
differential! (FBI, UCR, 1982 & Houston Chronicle, 2/1/97, pg. 31A).
C.
RACE, SENTENCING AND THE DEATH PENALTY
1) The most vile strategy of death penalty opponents is their use of
propaganda to nurture hatreds and mistrust between race and class. Bryan
Stevenson, a well known opposition spokesman and attorney with Equal Justice
Initiative (Montgomery, Al.), claims that the death penalty reflects the
middle class desire to strike out at the poor and racial minorities ("A
Matter of Life and Death", Christianity Today, 8/14/95). Sister Helen Prejean
(Dead Man Walking) joins this hideous chorus, proclaiming that "(m)iddle-class
and upper middle-class white people...are so much for the death penalty
(to) Keep those dangerous people (the poor and minorities) in their place.
" ("Opposing the Death Penalty", AMERICA, 11/9/96. pg.12.) Clearly, these
statements reveal only their prejudice. Prejean continues "It didnt take
long to see that for poor people, especially poor black people, there was
a greased track to prison and death row." (The Progressive, 1/96, p. 32(4)
60,1). Is Sister Prejean saying that poor minorities are incapable
of stopping themselves from committing capital murder!? Not only are Sister
Prejeans statements false, they are also grossly insulting to the poor
and to minorities. Over 99% of all persons, including poor minorities,
restrain themselves from committing capital murder. And there is, of course,
no excuse for anyone that commits capital murder. Stevenson and Prejean
do hereby reflect either their unbelievable ignorance or their willful
and foul deception. Based on their active involvement in the death penalty
debate, both Stevenson and Prejean should (must?) be aware that (1) In
the most extensive study of the economics of death row inmates, it was
shown that, while 74% of Georgia murderers were poor, only 38% of those
on Georgias death row were poor (C.13).; (2) there is no consensus in
statistical analysis which proves that wealthy capital murders are less
likely to be executed than their poorer ilk. In fact, statistics indicate
that wealthy capital murderers may be more likely to be executed. (C.13);
(3) the majority of those on death row are white (NAACP LDF, 1996); (4)
the majority of those executed are white (C.2); (5) since 1929, white murderers
have been more likely to have been executed than black murderers (C.10);
(6) "...white murderers, no matter who they kill, are more likely to get
the death penalty than black murderers (11.1% to 7.3%). Furthermore, whites
who kill whites are slightly more likely to be on death row than blacks
who kill whites. Finally, whites who kill blacks are slightly more likely
to be on death row than blacks who kill whites." (Jared Taylor, Paved With
Good Intentions, 40-41,Carroll & Graf Pub.,1992; (7) whites are executed
15 months quicker than blacks ("Capital Punishment, 1995", BJS 1996); (8)
Whites are executed at rates nearly 50% above their involvement in murder.
Blacks are executed at rates 20% below their involvement in murder. (C.2);
and finally, (9) Murderers are put to death, not based on the race or economic
status of the victim or the murderer, but based upon death penalty statutes,
the aggravated nature of and all specific circumstances of the crime, the
criminal background of the murderer, and the other specific factors mandated
by Supreme Court decisions. Since 1973, there is absolutely no credible
evidence to support any other conclusion. Despicably, opponents cry
"RACISM!" to further their agenda, knowing, full well, that such claims
are false.
2) One of opponents popular false claims is that it is the race of
the victim which determines who is on death row. 82% of the murder victims
in death penalty cases are white, 13% are black, a 6:1 ratio (NAACP
Legal Defense Fund (LDF), 1996). Opponents, such as Kica Matos, NAACP LDF,
Steven Hawkins, Exec. Dir., National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
(NCADP) and Sister Prejean, longtime Chairperson of the NCADP and author,
Dead Man Walking, present this fact as evidence that the "system" values
white lives more than black lives. If true, then we must wonder why whites
represent 56% of those executed, and blacks 38% (NAACP LDF, Summer 1996)
when blacks have committed 47% of all murders, and whites 38%. Whites are
executed at rates nearly 50% above their involvement in murder, blacks
are executed at rates 20% below their involvement in murder. From 1991-94,
34% of murderers have been white, 54% black (Special run 1980-94 BJS data,
1/13/97, for non-Hispanic whites and blacks. JFA calculations for known
race/ethnicity.).
Could it be that we just hate white murderers more? Or that we only
care about white capital murder victims? Or should we conclude that the
"system" focuses its benevolence toward black murderers, but its racism
against black victims? How absurd. Such perverse conclusions, by opponents,
are expected and serve only to further undermine their quickly eroding
credibility. Successful capital prosecutions have nothing to do with the
race of the victim or of the defendant and everything to do with the nature
of the crimes. The most thorough evaluation of this subject was presented
in McCleskey v. Georgia (Zant/Kemp), wherein Federal District Judge Owen
Forester accurately found that "the best models which (McCleskey expert)
Baldus was able to devise...produce no statistically significant evidence
that race (of the victim or of the defendant) plays a part in either
(the prosecutions or the jurys capital decisions)." (580 Federal Supplement
338, p 368, 2/1/84).
Could it be that whites are, overwhelmingly, the victims in death row
cases because whites are, overwhelmingly, the victims in capital crimes?
What is the ratio of white to black victims under the relevant, but non-homicide
circumstances, which, when combined with homicide, become capital crimes?
(A) The most relevant economic violent crime is robbery with injury, which
shows a 4:1 ratio of white victims to black victims (C.5); (B) By a 5:1
ratio, whites are more likely to be victims of rape/sexual assault than
are blacks (BJS, 1977-1984); ( C ) For all property crimes (theft, burglary,
auto theft), there is a 7:1 ratio of white to black victims ("Sourcebook,
1994," BJS 1995, tables 3.21,3.25); (D) A comparison of only black and
white perpetrators and victims reveal that whites are five times more likely
to be the victims of violent crime than are blacks, or 7.5 v 1.5 million,
a 5:1 ratio ("Criminal Victimization, 1993" BJS 1995); and, for homicides,
which by themselves, qualify for the death penalty: (E) In death penalty
states, police victim murders are capital crimes. From 1985-1994, 87% of
murdered officers were white, 12% black, or 7:1 (Law Enforcement Officers
Killed and Assaulted, FBI:UCR, 1994); (F) Whites make up a dominant percentage
of multiple/serial murderers, whose victims are overwhelmingly white, thereby
disproportionately and correctly raising the number of white victims
in execution cases. In such death row cases, 87% of the victims are white,
13% black, or 7:1 (NAACP LDF data, 1996); (G) Many death row cases involve
stranger murders. There is a 7:1 ratio of white to black strangers (US
Census, avg. 1970-80-90); and (H) Research and appellate courts (through
McCleskey) have confirmed that white victim murders are the most aggravated,
thus, by statute, enhancing the likelihood of a death sentence in those
cases (C. 1-5 & 9-12). These factors, and others within this section,
are consistent with the 6:1 ratio of white to black victims in capital
cases.
But, wait, dont blacks and whites represent about an equal number
of murder victims? Yes, but, make no mistake, murder victims and capital
murder victims are two very distinct groups. And only capital murders are
relevant to death penalty cases. Capital crimes are very unique, combining
murder with specific circumstance, such as subsets A-H. IF homicide rates
are statistically consistent within subsets A-D, as McCleskey and additional
studies indicate (C. 1-5 & 9-12), then it is subsets A-H, with additional
required factors such as the murderers criminal history, capital procedures
(see F), capital statutes, crime statistics, aggravating factors and other
specific facts of the case (hereinafter McCleskey et al), which result
in the distribution of victims in these cases.
Should we balance the scales of justice and execute equally the killers
of blacks and whites? Only if you wish to increase the number of black
murderers executed. 93% of all black murder victims are murdered by blacks.
The overwhelming majority of black on black murders have mitigating circumstances,
thereby reducing the numbers of blacks who might otherwise be executed.
3) The U.S. General Accounting Office Report "DEATH PENALTY SENTENCING:
Research Indicates Pattern of Racial Disparities" (GAO/GGD-90-57, 2/90)
is cited by opponents as proof that the "race of the victim" effect has
been proven. Not quite. First, some of the studies which the GAO included
in their analysis included non-capital murders. This certainly impairs
the integrity of the results because only capital murders should have been
included. Secondly, Drs. Stephen Klein and John Rolph, "Relationship
of Offender and Victim Race to Death Penalty Sentences in California"(Jurimetrics
Journal, 32, Fall 1991), found that, "After accounting for some of the
many factors that may influence penalty decisions, neither race of the
defendant nor race of the victim appreciably improved prediction of who
was sentenced to death . . . ". Thirdly, Smith College Professors Stanley
Rothman and Stephen Powers ("Execution by Quota?", The Public Interest,
Summer 1994), found that legal variables, such as prior criminal history
and the aggravated nature of the murder, are the proven basis for imposition
of the death penalty. The black/white variation in sentencing has generally
been reduced to zero when such legal variables are introduced as controls.
Fourth, crime statistics show a 4:1 to a 7:1 ratio of white to black victims
in circumstances relevant to death penalty cases.. Such ratios are consistent
with the 6:1 ratio of white to black victims in death row cases (C.1,2,4,5).
Fifth, any affirmative conclusions regarding the GAO study disregards the
findings in McCleskey, that an empirical/statistical study cannot separate
the causal effect of legitimate factors influencing jury decisions from
the effects of possible racial biases, whereby The Court found "Where the
discretion that is fundamental to our criminal justice process is involved,
we decline to assume that what is unexplained [by measured factors] is
invidious."(481 US at 313). See Dr. Joseph Katz enforcement of the McCleskey
majority: "Statement to the Senate Subcommittee on the Judiciary Concerning
the Relationship Between Race and the Death Penalty" 10/2/89.
4) Based on a study conducted by Profs. Baldus, Woodward and Pulaski,
McCleskey argued that the death penalty was racist. In August, 1983 Federal
District Court Judge J. Owen Forester found that the study's conclusions
of racial bias were without merit. In 1985, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals,
by a 9-3 vote, stated "Viewed broadly, it would seem that the statistical
evidence presented here...confirms rather than condemns the ( death penalty)
system." In April 1987, the Supreme Court (5-4) stated that the referenced
study did not establish that capital punishment discriminates against black
defendants or killers of white victims. "At most, the Baldus study indicates
a statistical discrepancy that appears to correlate with race. Apparent
disparities in sentencing are an inevitable part of our criminal justice
system. The discrepancy indicated by the Baldus study is a far cry from
any major systemic defects". "McCleskey offers no evidence...that would
support an inference that racial considerations played a part in his sentence".
"...the Baldus study is clearly insufficient to support an inference that
any of the decision-makers in McCleskeys case acted with discriminatory
purpose." "Even Professor Baldus does not contend that his statistics prove
that race enters into any capital sentencing decisions or that race was
a factor in McCleskeys particular case."
5) From 1976-1995, 5 white murderers have been put to death for the
murder of black persons and 101 black murderers have been put to death
for the murder of white persons (NAACP LDF, 1996). Opponents falsely contend
that this is evidence of racism in the "system". That 101:5 ratio, or 20:1,
is consistent with statistics that show aggravated crimes (those
crimes committed with the murder which may make a crime eligible for the
death penalty) are committed by blacks against whites in far greater numbers
than by whites against blacks. For all violent crimes, there are ten times
as many black offenders (2,016,939) involved in white victim violent crimes
as there are white offenders (210,869) involved in black victim violent
crimes, or a 10:1 ratio. (The State of Violent Crime in America, pg. 12,1/96,
data derived from Criminal Victimization in the U.S., 1993, BJS forthcoming,
tables 42 and 48. JFA has assumed multiple offenders to be two offenders
for calculation purposes.) In addition, blacks are nearly three times as
likely to murder whites (849), as whites are to murder blacks (304), or
3:1 (Sourcebook 1994, BJS 1995, table 3.123). IF murder rates are statistically
consistent within the violent crime category, as McCleskey et al indicate,
then blacks are, statistically, by a 30:1 (10:1 X 3:1) ratio, more likely
to murder whites, than whites are to murder blacks, in those circumstances
where an additional aggravating factor is present (see C2). These are those
crimes most eligible for the death penalty. That statistically projected
ratio of 30:1 is hardly inconsistent with the 20:1 ratio for black offender(s)/white
victim vs white offender(s)/black victim executions. The most relevant
aggravated crime is robbery with injury, wherein blacks are 21 times more
likely to be involved in such crimes as are whites. This 21:1 ratio represents
1.4 million black offender(s)/white victim vs. 68,000 white offender(s)/black
victim for robbery with injury crimes (JFA, using BJS, 1977-84 data). IF
overall murder statistics are consistent, within this crime category, as
McCleskey et al suggests, then there is a 30-60:1 ratio of black on white
vs white on black murders within this robbery/murder category. (From 1977-1984).
6) 75% of blacks and 35% of whites believe that blacks are treated
more harshly than whites by the criminal justice system. This is
a deserved reputation, particularly in the South. Blacks have suffered
some 400 years of slavery and blatantly racist criminal justice practices.
From the practices of punishing blacks, who rape whites, with death and
whites, who rape blacks, with a slap on the wrist, to the three trials
needed to convict Byron de la Beckwith for the murder of civil rights leader
Medgar Evers, generations of black Americans cannot and must not forget.
7) In 1994, in northeastern states, 36% of those on death row were
white, 59% black. In southern states, 57% were white, 41% black ("Capital
Punishment 1994",BJS, 1995).
8) In 1994, death row inmates median level of education was the 12th
grade.("Cap.Pun.94",BJS 1995)
9) After examining 42,500 criminal files in the nations 75 largest counties,
Patrick Langan (BJS) concluded that there was no evidence"...that, in the
places where blacks in the U. S. have most of their contacts with the judicial
system, that (the) system treats them more harshly than whites." (John
DiIulio, Jr.,"White Lies About Black Crime", The Public Interest, 1995.
See concurring support within "Research on Sentencing", National Research
Council, 1983.)
10)No evidence of system wide discrimination in the imposition of the
death penalty exists beyond the 1950's. From 1929-66, white murderers
were more likely to be executed than black murderers (10.4 vs 9.7/1000).
This trend continues today.(C.2) (Gary Kleck, "Racial Discrimination in
Criminal Sentencing: A Critical Evaluation of the Evidence with Additional
Evidence on the Death Penalty", American Sociological Review, 12/81.)
11) A study of the death penalty, as imposed by Harris County (Houston,
Texas, USA) juries, since 1982, found that the death penalty was imposed
on white and black murderers in proportion to the capital offenses committed
by those race classifications (The Houston Post, 10/16/94).
12) Although blacks make up 12% of the US population, they comprise
44% of the prison population. (BJS, Prisoners in 1994). Researchers find
a close relationship between the racial distribution in arrest and prison
statistics and the race of offenders as described by crime victims. In
other words, according to the reports from victims, racial groups are represented
in prison according to their involvement in criminal activity. (Patrick
Langan, Racism on Trial; New Evidence to Explain the Racial Composition
of Prisons in the U.S., 1985). Overwhelmingly, sentencing studies
show that the offenders prior criminal record and the aggravated nature
of the crime are the key factors in making imprisonment decisions (See
also Texas Criminal Justice Policy Council, A Source Book of Arrest and
Sentencing By Race, 1994; Al Blumstein, On The Racial Disproportionalness
of U.S. Prison Populations, (1982); M. Hindelang, Crime Victimization (1976)
and Race and Involvement (1978);); U.S. General Accounting Office, Racial
Differences in Arrests, 1/20/94.)Nevertheless, the racial aspects
of crime and punishment should be continuously scrutinized. For example,
Langan also finds that in 1979 and 1982, blacks were over represented in
prison by 16% and 15%, respectively.
13) THE WEALTHY AND DEATH ROW - Contrary to opponents claims, there
is no systemic evidence that wealthy capital murderers are less likely
to be executed that their poorer ilk. Drawing only on personal knowledge,
we found that since 1973, in Texas, alone, at least seven middle class
to wealthy murderers have been put on death row. Four, Markum Duff Smith,
George Lott, Robert Black, Jr., and Ronald O'Bryan have been executed.
Three additional await execution. Extensive, objective research would,
undoubtedly, reveal many more. Dont forget John Wayne Gacy and Ted Bundy.
Furthermore, Dr. Joseph Katz found that, while 74% of all Georgia murder
defendants were poor, only 38% of those on death row were poor (McCleskey).
Informed Speculation: 5% of the U.S. population (12 million) can afford
to pay the $400,000* cost for their capital trial and appeals. Because
financial need can be excluded, the category of wealthy capital murderer
can be assumed to murder at a rate 10 times less than their poorer ilk.
Fact: 0.20% of the U.S. population commits murder. 1.3% of those are sentenced
to death. Only 6% of those have been executed. Therefore, the projected
number of wealthy executed from 1976-1996 is 2 , or 12 million x .1 x .0020
x .013 x .06. Using 1973-1996 data. *conservative estimate based on opponents
high cost claims (see E)
14) SEXISM AND THE DEATH PENALTY - Some claim that the death penalty
is sexist. The ratio of men to women on death row (and executed) is 68:1,
or 3400:50 (NAACP LDF, Spring 1996). Men committed 476,937 rapes, robberies
and burglaries, women 47,357 or a 10:1 ratio. From 1976-94, men committed
7 times as many murders as women, or 7:1. (Sourcebook 94, BJS 95, tb.4.9
and 3.22). Therefore, it may be statistically predictable that men are,
by a 70:1 ratio (10:1 X 7:1), more likely to be on death row than
are women. Women appear to be on death row in numbers that would be expected.
However, one would expect that 5 women would have been executed since 1976,
when only 1 has been executed.
D. THE COST OF LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE VS THE DEATH
PENALTY
Many opponents present, as fact, that the cost of the death penalty
is so expensive (at least $2 million per case?), that we must choose life
without parole ("LWOP") at a cost of $1 million for 50 years. Predictably,
these pronouncements may be entirely false. JFA estimates that LWOP cases
will cost $1.2 million - $3.6 million more than equivalent death penalty
cases.
Cost of Life Without Parole: Cases
Equivalent To Death Penalty Cases |
|
|
|
|
Cost of Death Penalty Cases |
|
1. $34,200/year
(1)
for 50 years (2),
at
a 2%
(3)
annual cost increase, plus
$75,000
(4)
for trial & appeals |
= $3.01 million |
|
|
|
$60,000/year
(1)
for 6 years (5),
at
a 2%
(3)
annual cost increase, plus
$1.5 million
(4)
for trial & appeals |
= $1.88 million |
2. Same, except 3%
(3) |
= $4.04 million |
|
|
|
Same, except 3%
(3) |
= $1.89 million |
3. Same, except 4%
(3) |
= $5.53 million |
|
|
|
Same, except 4%
(3) |
= $1.91 million |
-
There is no question that the up front costs of the
death penalty are significantly higher than for equivalent LWOP cases.
There also appears to be no question that, over time, equivalent LWOP cases
are much more expensive - from $1.2 to $3.6 million - than death penalty
cases. Opponents ludicrously claim that the death penalty costs, over time,
3-10 times more than LWOP.
(1) The $34,200
is conservative, if TIME Magazine's (2/7/94) research is accurate. TIME
found that, nationwide, the average cell cost is $24,000/yr. and the maximum
security cell cost is $75,000/yr. (as of 12/95). Opponents claim
that LWOP should replace the DP. Therefore, any cost calculations should
be based specifically on cell costs for criminals who have committed the
exact same category of offense - in other words, cost comparisons are valid
only if you compare the costs of DP-equivalent LWOP cases to the
cost of DP cases. The $34,200/yr. cell cost assumes that only 20%
of the DP-equivalent LWOP cases would be in maximum security cost cells
and that 80% of the DP-equivalent LWOP cases would be in average cost cells.
A very conservative estimate. The $60,000/yr., for those on death row,
assumes that such cells will average a cost equal to 80% of the $75,000/yr.
for the most expensive maximum security cells. A very high estimate. Even
though we are calculating a 75% greater cell cost for the DP than for equivalent
LWOP cases, equivalent LWOP cases appear to be significantly more expensive,
over time, than their DP counterparts. For years, opponents have improperly
compared the cost of all LWOP cases to DP cases, when only the DP equivalent
LWOP cases are relevant.
(2) U.S. Vital Statistics
Abstract, 1994 and Capital Punishment 1995, BJS 1996.
(3) Annual cost increases
are based upon: 1) historical increases in prison costs, including judicial
decisions regarding prison conditions, and the national inflation rate;
2) medical costs, including the immense cost of geriatric care, associated
with real LWOP sentences; 3) injury or death to the inmate by violence;
4) injury or death to others caused by the inmate (3 and 4 anticipate no
DP and that prisoners, not fearing additional punishment, other than loss
of privileges, may increase the likelihood of violence. One could make
the same assumptions regarding those on death row. The difference is that
death row inmates will average 6 years incarceration vs. 50 years projected
for LWOP); 5) the risk and the perceived risk of escape; and 6) the justifiable
lack of confidence by the populace in our legislators, governors, parole
boards and judges, i.e. a violent inmate will be released upon society.
(4) $75,000 for trial
and appeals cost, for DP-equivalent LWOP cases, assumes that the DP is
not an option. We believe this cost estimate is very low. We have over-estimated
that DP cases will cost twenty times more, on average,
or $1.5 million. Our exaggerated estimate states that the DP will
have twenty times more investigation cost, defense and prosecution
cost, including voir dire, court time, guilt/innocence stage, sentencing
stage and appellate review time and cost than DP equivalent LWOP cases.
Even though we have greatly exaggerated the cost of DP cases, DP cases
still prove to be significantly less expensive, over time, than the DP
equivalent LWOP cases.
(5) 6 years on death
row, prior to execution, reflects the new habeas corpus reform laws, at
both the state and federal levels. Some anti-death penalty groups
speculate that such time may actually become only 4 years. If so,
then DP cases would cost even that much less than the DP equivalent LWOP
cases. However, the average time on death row, for those executed from
1973-1994, was 8 years (Capital Punishment 1994, BJS, 1995). Therefore,
6 years seems more likely. Even using the 8 year average, the DP equivalent
LWOP cases are still $1 million more expensive than their DP counterparts
($2 million @ 2% annual increase).
One of the USAs largest death rows is in Texas, with 442 inmates,
of which 229, or 52%, have been on death row over 6 years - 44, or
10%, have been on for over 15 years, 8 for over 20 years. 60 inmates, nationwide,
have been on death row over 18 years. (as of 12/96).
NOTE - 10/19/00 - We received a post which located a flaw within our cost
evaluation. The reader stated that we should "present value" all the
costs of both a life sentence and the death penalty and that, if we do so, a
life sentence is cheaper than a death sentence. Using the numbers in our
analysis, such is a good point.
It should be noted that we were intentionally generous in minimizing life
costs within our analysis. Please review we have not included
1)the recent studies on geriatric care at about $70,000/year/prisoner in
today's dollars , or
2) the recent explosion of Hepatitis C and AIDS within the prison system, or
3) the cost savings to jurisdictions based on plea bargains to maximum life
sentences, which can only occur due solely to the presence of the death penalty.
Such should accrue as a cost benefit of the death penalty, and
4) none of the above have been included in our cost analysis. All of which
either increase the cost of a life sentence or accrue as a cost credit to the
death penalty, and
5) And we have been extremely generous to the anti death penalty position
with our numbers to begin with. I suspect that an average life without parole
sentence costs closer to $150,000-$300,000, for all pre-trial, trial and appeals,
as opposed to the $75,000 used in our study.
Those omissions should not be considered a balancing, because accuracy is
paramount. There is no cost study which fully evaluates all of those issues. We
hope to update the data at some point with a more thorough review.
E. DEATH PENALTY PROCEDURES
There are at least 28 procedures necessary in reaching a death
sentence. They are: (1) The crime must be one listed as a capital
crime in the penal code; (2) a suspect must be identified and arrested;
(3) Beginning with the Bill of Rights, the Miranda warnings and the exclusionary
rules, U.S. criminal defendants and those convicted have, by far, the most
extensive protections ever devised and implemented; (4) in Harris County
(Houston), Texas a panel of district attorneys determines if the case merits
the death penalty as prescribed by the Penal Code (See 12-19); (5) a grand
jury must indict the suspect for capital murder; (6) the suspect is presumed
innocent; (7) the prosecution must prove to the judge that the evidence,
upon which the prosecution will rely, is admissible; (8) the defendant
is assigned two attorneys. County funds are provided to defense counsel
for investigation and trial; (9) it takes 3-12 weeks to select a jury;
(10) trial is conducted; (11) the burden of proof is on the state;
(12) all 12 jury members must find for guilt, beyond a reasonable doubt.
In most cases, the jury knows nothing of the defendant's previous criminal
acts, at this stage. If found guilty, then, the punishment phase of the
trial begins; (13) the prosecution presents additional damning evidence
against the murderer, i.e., other crimes, victims, victims or survivors
testimony, police reports, etc; (14) In order to find for death, the issues
to be resolved by the jury are {a}(14) did the defendant not only act willfully
in causing the death, but act deliberately, as well, {b}(15) does the evidence
show, beyond a reasonable doubt, that there is a likelihood that the defendant
will be dangerous in the future, {c}(16) if there was provocation on the
part of the victim, were the defendant's actions unreasonable in response
to the provocations and {d}(17) is there something about the defendant
that diminishes moral responsibility or in some way mitigates against the
imposition of death for the defendant in this case, whereby, (18) the defense
presents all mitigating circumstance, which may lesson the probability
of the jury imposing death , i.e., family problems, substance abuse, age,
no prior criminal record, mental disability, parental abuse, poverty, etc.
Witnesses, such as family, friends, co-workers, etc., are presented
to speak and offer the positive qualities of the defendant; (19) the jury
must take into consideration those mitigating circumstances (Penry decision)
and, if only 1 juror believes that the perpetrator deserves leniency because
of any mitigating circumstances, then the jury cannot impose the death
penalty; and (20) when the death sentence is imposed, the perpetrator receives
an automatic appeal. (21& 22) the death row inmate is provided an attorney,
or attorneys, to handle the direct appeal, at county expense, through both
the state and federal courts; (23 & 24) the state pays attorneys for
the inmate's habeas corpus appeals, at both the state and federal level;
(25 & 26) death row inmates may be granted a hearing, in both state
and federal court, to present post conviction claims of innocence.
The burden of proof for these claims of innocence mirrors that used by
the Federal courts; and (27 & 28) Convictions and sentences are subject
to pardon or sentence reduction through the executive branch of government,
at both the state level (Governor) and federal level (President).
These 28 procedures represent the broad categories of defendant and
inmate protections. Within these 28 procedures, there are hundreds, if
not thousands, of additional procedures and protections.
In some jurisdictions, the defense must prove mitigating circumstances
by a preponderance of the evidence and the prosecution must prove aggravating
circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt. This is a huge advantage for the
defendant and a major disadvantage for the prosecution.
To punish with death, each one of the 12 jurors must agree with the
prosecution in each of five specific areas ( 12, 14, (a)14, (b)15, (c)16,
and (d)17 (with 18 & 19). A death sentence requires that the prosecution
must prevail in 60 out of those 60 considerations, or 100%. To avoid death,
the defendant must prevail in only 1 out of those 60 considerations, or
1.67%. If convicted and sentenced to death, the inmate may then begin an
appeals process that could extend through 23 years, 60 appeals and over
200 individual judicial and executive reviews of the inmates claims. The
average time on death row for those executed from 1977-1995 was 9 years.
For the 56 executed in 1995, the average time on death row was 11 years,
2 months - a new record of longevity, surpassing the old record of 10 years,
2 months, set in 1994. 60 death row inmates have been on death row for
over 18 years. (Capital Punishment 1994 & 1995, BJS 1995 & 1996).
Could new longevity records of from 12-18 years on death row be set for
those executed from 1996-2002, respectively? Yes. Even with the new federal
and state laws? Easily.
HABEAS CORPUS - Opponents claim that with the new federal guidelines
for appeals in capital cases, that nothing is left to protect the rights
of the death row inmate. Predictably, such hysteria is unwarranted and
untrue. The new federal appeals law, which affects the writ of habeas corpus,
was upheld unanimously by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1996. This law established,
nationally, higher minimum standards for defense counsel in capital cases
and requires said counsel for all indigent capital defendants. Furthermore,
with these new federal standards, there are still at least 17 levels of
post conviction review available to the death row inmate; 6 state and 11
federal, comprised of 5 direct appeals, one at the state level and four
at the federal level; 10 habeas corpus appeals, four at the state level
and six at the federal level; 2 of those habeas appeals are for compelling
post conviction claims of innocence, which are subject to a formal hearing,
one at the state level and one at the federal level; and the 16th and 17th
levels of appeal provide that the inmates claims are subject to review
for executive clemency or commutation, at either the state or federal level,
and sometimes both. Similar appellate issues are often heard at every appellate
level. There is no limit to the number of appellate issues which the inmate
may raise on appeal. Generally, prosecutors and victim survivors have no
right to appeal. Although this section deals specifically with Texas, the
procedures are similar in all death penalty states and at the federal and
military levels. The due process protections in capital cases are so overwhelming
that inmates are six times more likely to get off death row by appeals
than by execution. 37% of all death row cases are overturned on appeal.
The American death penalty continues to have, by far, the greatest due
process protections of any criminal sanction in the world.
Many seem to be unaware of the true meaning of the habeas corpus process.
They may not know that the intent of the Great Writ, established
in pre-Magna Carta England, is to quickly facilitate the release of the
innocent or those otherwise wrongfully held or convicted - a process that
will finally be honored with these reforms. This is a very positive development,
except for the guilty and for those who wish to abuse the habeas corpus
process by delaying justice with frivolous, repetitive and prolonged appeals.
It is a bitter irony that it was just such intentional delays of justice
that the Great Writ was created to abolish. It was just such abuses that
caused many of the states and the federal government to enact new habeas
corpus reforms. Indeed, it was opponents of the death penalty who finally
guaranteed passage of these long delayed reforms. Opponents had begun to
challenge the long stays on death row as unconstitutional, claiming that
such delays were, by themselves, cruel and unusual punishment, a violation
of the eighth amendment. Although all such cynical and humorous claims
were rejected by U.S. courts - there was overwhelming evidence that inmates
and their attorneys were responsible for such delays - such claims
did provide the final push necessary to finally pass these reforms through
the U.S. Congress, thus respecting the claims of opponents, inmates and
their attorneys through legislation.
For those who find themselves hysterical over these habeas corpus reform
efforts, who believe that speeding up the appeals process will threaten
the lives of those convicted and innocent, please contemplate the following
question: What innocent or otherwise improperly convicted inmate would
wish to linger a bit longer on death row as their attorney, snail-like,
labored to prolong their wrongful stay on death row with a series
of delayed and frivolous appeals?
The American Death Penalty is, overwhelmingly, the least arbitrary
and the least capricious of all the worlds legal sanctions for violent
crime.
JUSTICE FOR ALL is a criminal justice reform organization dedicated
to protecting the civil and human rights of all citizens from violent crime.
Through education and legislation we shall take all necessary measures
to reduce the human suffering caused by violent criminals and a failed
criminal justice system. Founded in Houston, Texas in 1993, JFA has
membership throughout the U.S.A. Please inquire about membership and/or
starting a chapter in your area. Visit our site on the web: http://www.jfa.net
copyright, JUSTICE FOR ALL ©
F. CHRISTIANITY
AND THE DEATH PENALTY
NOTE: Although not relevant to the legal application of the death penalty
in the United States, religious issues are a significant thread within
the moral debate. Biblical text is most relevant within a theocracy or
a secular government which has laws that are consistent with biblical text.
The United States does not, of course, fall within either category. This
section is included only to counter the false claim that there is no New
Testament support for capital punishment.
1) Virtually all religious scholars agree that the correctly translated
commandment "Thou shalt not murder" is a prohibition against individual
cases of murder. There is no biblical prohibition against the government
imposition of the death penalty in deserving cases. Indeed, the government
imposition of capital punishment is required for deliberate murder. (Dr.
Charles Ryrie, Biblical Answers to Contemporary Issues & The Ryrie
Study Bible, Exodus 20:13).
2) " . . . pronouncements about divine behavior (in the Hebrew Bible)
correlated in the judicial context to attitudes toward death as a proper
punishment. Quite clearly, the New Testament carries on the earlier
mentality." As Jesus described in the Sermon on the Mount, "Obedience will
be rewarded with life; disobedience will be punished with destruction.
A God who rewards with life and punishes with death is One whose laws provide
for death as a judicial punishment." Dr. Baruch Levine, "Capital Punishment,"
p 31, What the Bible Really Says, ed. Smith & Hoffman, 1993.
3) "If no crime deserves the death penalty, then it is hard to see
why it was fitting that Christ be put to death for our sins and crucified
among thieves. St. Thomas Aquinas quotes a gloss of St. Jerome on Matthew
27: As Christ became accursed of the cross for us, for our salvation He
was crucified as a guilty one among the guilty. That Christ be put to
death as a guilty person, presupposes that death is a fitting punishment
for those who are guilty." Prof. Michael Pakaluk, The Death Penalty: An
Opposing Viewpoints Series Book, Greenhaven Press, (hereafter TDP:OVS),
1991
4) "The same divine law which forbids the killing of a human being
allows certain exceptions. Since the agent of authority is but a sword
in the hand, and is not responsible for the killing, it is in no way contrary
to the commandment Thou shalt not kill, for the representative of the
States authority to put criminals to death, according to the Law or the
rule of rational justice." St. Augustine, The City of God, Book 1, Chapter
21. See F.16
5) "The rejection of capital punishment is not to be dignified as a
higher Christian way that enthrones the ethics of Jesus. The argument
that Jesus as the incarnation of divine love cancels the appropriateness
of capital punishment in the New Testament era has little to commend it.
Nowhere does the Bible repudiate capital punishment for premeditated murder;
not only is the death penalty for deliberate killing of a fellow human
being permitted, but it is approved and encouraged, and for any government
that attaches at least as much value to the life of an innocent victim
as to a deliberate murderer, it is ethically imperative." Dr. Carl F. H.
Henry, Twilight Of A Great Civilization, Crossway, 1988, p 70,72. Father
Pierre Lachance, O.P. (St, Anne Parish, Fall River, Mass.) fully concurs:
"There is no question but that capital punishment was not only allowed
but mandated in the Old Testament. In the New Law (New Testament) (St.)
Paul recognizes the legitimacy of capital punishment . . .It is not without
purpose that the ruler carries the sword. He is Gods servant, to inflict
his avenging wrath upon the wrongdoer Romans 13:4. " (TDP:OVS, 1986, pg.
84)
6) "It is because humans are created in the image of God that capital
punishment for premeditated murder was a perpetual obligation. The full
range of biblical data weighs in its favor. This is the one crime in the
Bible for which no restitution was possible (Numbers 35:31,33). The Noahic
covenant recorded in Genesis 9 ("Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man
shall his blood be shed. "Gen 9:6) antedates Israel and the Mosaic code;
it transcends Old Testament Law, per se, and mirrors ethical legislation
that is binding for all cultures and eras. The sanctity of human life is
rooted in the universal creation ethic and thus retains its force in society.
The Christian community is called upon to articulate standards of biblical
justice, even when this may be unpopular. Capital justice is part of that
non-negotiable standard. Society should execute capital offenders to balance
the scales of moral judgement." From "Capital Punishment: A Personal
Statement", by Charles W. Colson., a former opponent. He is spiritual advisor
and friend to numerous death row inmates and the Founder of Prison Fellowship,
the largest Christian ministry serving incarcerated prisoners. Ph.703-478-0100.
7) St. Thomas Aquinas finds all biblical interpretations against
executions "frivolous", citing Exodus 22:18, "wrongdoers thou shalt not
suffer to live". Unequivocally, he states," The civil rulers execute, justly
and sinlessly, pestiferous men in order to protect the peace of the state."
(Summa Contra Gentiles, III, 146.)
8) "God, Himself, instituted the death penalty (Genesis 9:6) and Christ
regarded capital punishment as a just penalty for murder (Matthew 26:52).
God gave to government the legitimate authority to use capital punishment
to restrain murder and to punish murderers. Not to inflict the death penalty
is a flagrant disregard for Gods divine Law which recognizes the dignity
of human life as a product of Gods creation. Life is sacred, and that
is why God instituted the death penalty. Consequently, whoever takes innocent
human life forfeits his own right to live." Protestant scholar Rev. Reuben
Hahn (Mt. Prospect, Ill.), Human Events, 3/2/85.
9) "The fact that the evil, as long as they live, can be corrected from
their errors does not prohibit the fact that they may be justly executed,
for the danger which threatens from their way of life is greater and more
certain than the good which may be expected from their improvement. They
also have at that critical point of death the opportunity to be converted
to God through repentance. And if they are so stubborn that even at the
point of death their heart does not draw back from evil, it is possible
to make a highly probable judgement that they would never come away from
evil to the right use of their powers." St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Contra
Gentiles, Book III, 146.
10) The movie Dead Man Walking reveals a perfect example of how just
punishment and redemption can work together. Had rapist/murderer Matthew
Poncelet not been properly sentenced to death by the civil authority, he
would not have met Sister Prejean, he would not have received spiritual
instruction, he would not have taken responsibility for his crimes and
he would not have reconciled with God. Had Poncelet never been caught or
had he only been given a prison sentence, his character makes it VERY clear
that those elements would not have come together. Indeed, for the entire
film and up until those last moments, prior to his execution, Poncelet
was not fully truthful with Sister Prejean. His lying and manipulative
nature was fully exposed at that crucial time. It was not at all surprising,
then, that it was just prior to his execution that all of the spiritual
elements may have come together for his salvation. It was now, or never.
Truly, just as St. Aquinas predicted (F.9.), it was his pending execution
which finally led to his repentance. For Christians, the most crucial concerns
of Dead Man Walking must be and are redemption and eternal salvation. And,
for that reason, it may well be, for Christians, the most important pro-death
penalty movie ever made.
A real life example of this may be the case of Dennis Gentry,
executed April 16, 1997, for the highly premeditated murder of his friend
Jimmy Don Ham. During his final statement, Gentry said, "Id like to thank
the Lord for the past 14 years (on death row) to grow as a man and mature
enough to accept whats happening here tonight. To my family, Im happy.
Im going home to Jesus." As the lethal drugs began to flow, Gentry cried
out, "Sweet Jesus, here I come. Take me home. Im going that way to see
the Lord." (Michael Gracyk, Associated Press, Houston Chronicle, 4/17/97).
We cannot know if Gentry or the fictitious Poncelet or the two real murderers
from the DMW book really did repent and receive salvation. But, we do know
that St. Aquinas advises us that murderers should not be given the benefit
of the doubt. We should err on the side of caution and not give murderers
the opportunity to harm again. Indeed, as Dr. W.H. Baker confirms in his
On Capital Punishment (Moody Press, 1985), biblical text finds that it
is a violation of Gods mandate not to execute premeditated murderers
- and nowhere does the text contradict this finding.
11) In his 1995 encyclical, The Gospel of Life (Evangelium Vitae),
Pope John Paul II finds that the only time executions can be justified
is when they are required "to defend society" and that "as a result of
steady improvements . . . in the penal system that such cases are very
rare if not practically non existent." The Pope is in error. Such cases
are not at all rare. In this context, "to defend society" means that the
execution of the murderer must save future lives. Murderers murder again,
often time and time again - in prison, after escape, after
release, and, of course, after we fail to capture or incarcerate them.
In fact, had the Pope correctly evaluated the penal system, using the "defending
society" standard, he would require an increase in executions. We know
that some criminals dont commit murder because of their fear of execution.
The incapacitation effect, the individual deterrent effect and the general
deterrent effect support that the death penalty does indeed "defend society".
Executions save lives. Therefore, expanding the use of executions is required
by a "defending society" standard. However, even though Romans 13:4 and
additional writings reveal a "defending society" consideration, such references
pale in comparison to the mandate that execution is the required punishment
for and atonement for murder, regardless of any consideration "to defend
society." And the writings of Saint Thomas Aquinas and Saint Augustine
concur. Therefore, atonement, proper punishment and "defending society"
each require an increase in executions. Furthermore, one of the most respected
of all popes, Saint Pius V, reaffirmed, in the Catechism of the Council
of Trent (1566), that executions were acts of "paramount obedience to the
(fifth/sixth) commandment." What biblical and theological teachings, developed
from 1566 through 1997, provide that the standard for executions should
evolve from "paramount obedience" to Gods eternal law to a civil standard
reflecting "steady improvements . . . in the penal system?"
Furthermore, if the "defending society" standard is accepted,
then the moral concept of justice becomes irrelevant. Capital punishment
can be used only as a vehicle to preventing future crimes. The moral/biblical
rational - that capital punishment is the just punishment for capital murder
- is no longer relevant to the sin/crime of murder. The biblical standards
of atonement, expiation, and justice have, necessarily, been thrown away,
if "defending society" is the standard. Capital punishment no longer has
any connection to the harm done or to the imbalance to be addressed. In
fact, the injury suffered by the crime of murder isnt even relevant. Punishment
is to be justified solely upon the ability of that punishment to prevent
future murders. Therefore, when considering executions in regard
to capital murder cases, a "defending society" standard renders justice
irrelevant. With minor revisions, the Evangelium Vitae was the basis
for a 1997 amendment to the Universal Catechism of 1992.
12) Christians who speak out against capital punishment in deserving
cases " . . . tend to subordinate the justice of God to the love of God.
. . . Peter, by cutting off Malchus ear,. . . was most likely
trying to kill the soldier (John 18:10)", prompting " . . . Christs statement
that those who kill by the sword are subject to die by the sword (Matthew
26:51-52)." This " implicitly recognizes the governments right to exercise
the death penalty." Dr. Carl F.H.Henry, "A Matter of Life and Death", p
52 Christianity Today, 8/4/95.
13) "When it is a question of the execution of a man condemned to death
it is then reserved to the public power to deprive the condemned of the
benefit of life, in expiation of his fault, when already, by his fault,
he has dispossessed himself of the right to live." Pope Pius XII, 9/14/52.
14) Some speculate that Gods mandate for capital punishment is weak,
because the requirement for two witnesses in such cases (Numbers 35:30;
Deuteronomy 17:6) drastically reduces the application of that sanction.
Such speculation is unwarranted. By wrongly isolating the Hebrew d, "witness",
from its broad biblical context, some interpreters have falsely concluded
that two or more "eye"witnesses are required in capital cases and in all
criminal cases subject to court judgement (Deuteronomy 19:5). Did God want
nearly all criminals, including murderers, to get off, scot-free, if "
. . . (they) had not taken the prudent measure of committing (their) crime
where two people did not happen to be watching him?" The biblical record
rejects any such conclusion.
The word "witness", d, has broad meaning, including, anyone with
(1) " . . . pertinent knowledge concerning the crime, even though he had
not actually seen it."(Lev 5:1), such as motive, opportunity, accomplices,
overheard confessions, wiretaps, etc.; (2) physical evidence can also bear
witness, also d (Ex 22:13), such as bloody clothing, murder weapon, DNA,
fingerprints, etc.; (3) written documents may serve as evidence and witness
( d or dah, Jos 25:25-27), such as a confession, documents showing motive
or implication, etc.; (4) monuments and memorial stones, such as gal-
d in Gen 31:46-49, can also bear witness. Indeed, "there is no contravention
of biblical principles in allowing such testimony, even though only one
actual witness may be found, or none at all." There is no biblical requirement
for two, or any, "eye" witnesses in criminal cases.(Dr. Gleason L. Archer,
Encyclopedia of Biblical Difficulties, Zondervan Pub., 143-145, 1982, also
see the exceptional writings on John 8:11, 371-373, therein.) According
to actual biblical usage, the witness and evidence requirements in capital
cases in the U.S. meet or exceed all biblical standards.
15) Paul, in his hearing before Festus, states:"if then I am a wrong
doer, and have committed anything worthy of death, I do not refuse to die."Acts
25:11. "Very clearly this constitutes an acknowledgment on the part of
the inspired apostle that the state continued to have the power of life
and death in the administration of justice, just as it did from the days
of Noah (Gen 9:6)". Ibid., F.14., p. 342.
16) (A) "If you do what is evil, be afraid; for [ the civil government
] does not bear the sword for nothing; for it is the minister of God, an
avenger who brings wrath upon those who practice evil." Romans 13:4. "God
has given the state the power of life and death over its subjects in order
to maintain order." Dr. Charles Ryrie, The Ryrie Study Bible (NAS), 1978.
(B) Romans 13:4 does not " . . . directly refer to the infliction
of the death penalty; but in the context of first century Rome and against
the Old Testament background (Genesis 9:4-6), Paul would clearly include
the death penalty in the states panalopy of punishments for wrongdoing."
Douglas Moo, The Epistle To the Romans, Erdmans, 1996, pg. 802, footnote
54. (C) "Since the word sword (machaira) has occurred
earlier in the letter to indicate death (Romans 8:35) and since it was
used of execution (Acts 12:2; Revelation 13:10), it seems clear that Paul
means it here as a symbol of capital punishment." Stott, John, ROMANS,
InterVarsity Press, 342, 1994. (D) Specifically, "this
word for sword indicates one that was shaped like a sabre and was carried
by magistrates to show that they had the power to punish, even to death."
Ryrie Study Bible - Expanded Edition, NAS, Moody Press, 1995, pg. 1810,
Romans 13:4, footnote 13:4. (E) "(Jesus) warned Peter that
to die by the sword is the punishment proper for those who take human
life (Matthew 25:26); it should be noted that the sword was meant for execution,
not for life imprisonment." Henry, ibid F. 5, p 71. Also review F. 4, 5
and 25.
17) It is not uncommon for persons of faith to create a god in their
own image, to give to that god their values, instead of accepting those
values which are inherent to the deity. For example, celebrated opponent
Sister Helen Prejean (Dead Man Walking) states, in reference to the death
penalty, that "I couldnt worship a god who is less compassionate than
I am."(Progressive, 1/96; bold "I", JFA). She has, thereby, established
her standard of compassion as the basis for Gods being deserving of her
devotion. If Gods level of compassion does not rise to the level of her
own, God couldnt receive her worship. Director Tim Robbins (Death Man
Walking) follows that same path: "(I) dont believe in that kind of (g)od
(that would support capital punishment and, therefore, would be the kind
of god who tortures people into their redemption)." ("Opposing The Death
Penalty", AMERICA, 11/9/96, p 12). Robbins, hereby, establishes his standard
for his Gods deserving of his belief. Gods standards do not seem to be
relevant. His sophomoric comparison of capital punishment and torture is
typical of the ignorance in this debate and such comments reflect no biblical
relevancy. Perhaps they should review Matthew 5:17-22 and 15:1-9. Be cautious,
for as the ancient rabbis warned, "Do not seek to be more righteous than
your creator." (Ecclesiastes Rabbah 7.33)
18) One of the most respected of all Quaker biblical scholars is Dr.
Gervas A. Carey. A Professor of Bible and past President of George Fox
College, Dr. Carey wrote a landmark essay on the death penalty entitled
"A Bible Study". Here is a synopsis of his analysis: " . . . the decree
of Genesis 9:5-6 is equally enduring and cannot be separated from the other
pledges and instructions of its immediate context, Genesis 8:20-9:17; .
. . that is true unless specific Biblical authority can be cited for the
deletion, of which there appears to be none. It seems strange that any
opponents of capital punishment who professes to recognize the authority
of the Bible either overlook or disregard the divine decree in this covenant
with Noah; . . . capital punishment should be recognized . . . as the divinely
instituted penalty for murder; The basis of this decree . . . is as enduring
as God; . . . murder not only deprives a man of a portion of his earthly
life . . . it is a further sin against him as a creature made in the image
of God and against God Himself whose image the murderer does not respect."
(p. 111-113) Carey agrees with Saints Augustine and Aquinas, that executions
represent mercy to the wrongdoer: ". . . a secondary measure of the love
of God may be said to appear. For capital punishment provides the murderer
with incentive to repentance which the ordinary man does not have, that
is a definite date on which he is to meet his God. It is as if God thus
providentially granted him a special inducement to repentance out of consideration
of the enormity of his crime . . . the law grants to the condemned an opportunity
which he did not grant to his victim, the opportunity to prepare to meet
his God. Even divine justice here may be said to be tempered with mercy."
(p. 116). Essays on the Death Penalty, T. Robert Ingram, ed., St. Thomas
Press, Houston, 1963, 1992.
19) "The just use of (executions), far from involving the crime of
murder, is an act of paramount obedience to this (Fifth) Commandment which
prohibits murder." Pope (and Saint) Pius V, "The Roman Catechism of the
Council of Trent" (1566). Referring to that Catechism, Catholic scholar
Father James Reilly, M.S. notes that "From the time of St. Paul until today
this has always been the official teaching of the Catholic Church and only
the Holy See or a General Counsel has the authority to change it. The curious
thing is that those Catholics who have repeatedly condemned capital punishment
and have, often, apparently at least, declared it immoral, never refer
to that passage from the Roman Catechism. It may be that they are unaware
of it, but such ignorance is, in my opinion, inexcusable." (Haven Bradford
Gow, "Religious Views Support The Death Penalty", The Death Penalty: Opposing
Viewpoints, Greenhaven Press, 1986, p. 82 ).
20) "You have heard the ancients were told, YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT MURDER
and Whoever commits murder shall be liable to the court. But I say to
you that everyone who is angry with his brother shall be guilty before
the court; and whoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be guilty
before the supreme court and whoever shall say, You fool, shall be guilty
enough to go into fiery hell." Jesus, Matthew 5:17-22. Should any explanation
be necessary, Jesus is saying that even as execution is the required punishment
for murderers, as per the Old Testament, He tells us that those who speak
ill of others and have hatred in their heart shall suffer in hell. Not
only does Jesus never speak out against the civil authorities just use
of execution for murder, He prescribes a much more serious, eternal punishment
for those who hate and speak ill of others. And what price does God exact
for any and all sin? Death. (Romans 5:12-14)
21) "It is abundantly clear that the Bible depicts murder as a capital
crime for which death is considered the appropriate punishment, and one
is hard pressed to find a biblical proof text in either the Hebrew Testament
or the New Testament which unequivocally refutes this. Even Jesus admonition
Let him without sin cast the first stone, when He was asked the appropriate
punishment for an adulteress (John 8:7) - the Mosaic Law prescribed death
- should be read in its proper context. This passage is an entrapment
story, which sought to show Jesus wisdom in besting His adversaries. It
is not an ethical pronouncement about capital punishment .Sister Helen
Prejean, Dead Man Walking. The sisters analysis is consistent with virtually
all theological scholarship. From here, the sister states that . . .
more and more I find myself steering away from such futile discussions
(of Biblical text). Instead, I try to articulate what I personally believe
. . . As the long term Chairperson of the National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty, the sister has never shied away from any argument, futile
or otherwise, which opposed the death penalty. She has abandoned biblical
text for only one reason: the text conflicts with her personal beliefs.
It is common for persons to take biblical text out of context
and to, thereby, pervert its meaning. Indeed, Sister Prejean rightly cautions:
"Many people sift through the Scriptures and select truth according to
their own templates." (Progressive, 1/96). Sadly, Sister Prejean appears
to do much worse. The sister now uses that very same biblical text Let
the one who is without sin cast the first stone as proof of Jesus unequivocal
rejection of capital punishment as revenge and unholy retribution!
This appears to be a disgraceful and intentional perversion of biblical
text. (see Sister Prejeans 12/12/96 fundraising letter on behalf of the
Saga Of Shame book project for Quixote Center/Equal Justice USA).
22) Pontius Pilate said to Jesus, "You do not speak to me? Do You not
know that I have authority to release You, and I have authority to crucify
You?" Jesus answered, "You would have no authority over Me, unless it had
been given you from above."(John 19:10-11). "Jesus reminds Pilate that
the implementation of the death penalty is a divinely entrusted responsibility
that is to be justly implemented. Prof. Carl F.H. Henry, 45th Annual N.A.E.
Convention, "Capital Punishment and The Bible". Jesus confirms that the
civil authority has the lawful right to execute Jesus, and others, and
that this right has been given to that authority by God.
23) Some churches are now espousing a pro-life continuum, a philosophy
whereby the taking of any life, under any circumstances, must be condemned
- such as the taking of lives through war, self defense, suicide, abortion
and the death penalty. This is an interesting social philosophy which directly
conflicts with the Word of God. Catholic biblical scholar Father Richard
Roach, S.J. of Marquette and Columbia Universities argues that it is not
a contradiction for religious people to oppose abortion and . . . to support
capital punishment. "Abortion is absolutely prohibited. It is always evil.
No one can ever abort a guilty baby, so the act can never be right. This
is not the case, however, with either capital punishment or a just and
defensive war. It is only murder, along with its subdivisions suicide
and abortion, which Gods law absolutely prohibits. The upshot of all this
is that trying to put abortion, capital punishment and war in one package
makes chaos of Catholic morals and can lead one to misinterpret Gods Law
. . . " Princeton. University scholar Dr. Paul Ramsey fully concurs: "abortion
and capital punishment are two different questions. There is no inconsistancy
between moral disapproval of unnecessarily killing the innocent and the
judicial execution of the guilty." (Haven Bradford Gow, "Religious Views
Support The Death Penalty", The Death Penalty: Opposing Viewpoints, Greenhaven
Press, 1986, p. 81- 82 & 84).
24) "If a man is a danger to the community, threatening it with disintegration
by some wrongdoing of his, then his execution for the healing and preservation
of the common good is to be commended. Only the public authority,
not private persons, may licitly execute malefactors by public judgement.
Men shall be sentenced to death for crimes of irreparable harm or which
are particularly perverted." St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, 11;
65-2; 66-6.
25) If by arming the magistrate, the Lord has also committed
him the use of the sword, then, whenever he punishes the guilty by death,
he is obeying Gods commands by exercising His vengeance. Those, therefore,
who consider it is wrong to shed the blood of the guilty are contending
against God. John Calvin, The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans
and to the Thessalonians, in Calvins Commentaries, trans. Ross McKenzie(Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1960) p.283. see D.16
26) "The opposition to capital punishment is not based on Scripture
but on a vague philosophical idea that the taking of a life is wrong, under
every circumstance, and fails to distinguish adequately between killing
and murder, between punishment and crime. The argument that capital punishment
rules out the possibility of repentance for crime is unrealistic. If a
wanton killer does not repent when the sentence of death is upon
him, he certainly will not repent if he has 20-50 years of life imprisonment.
The sentence of death on a killer is more redemptive than the tendency
to excuse his crime as no worse than grand larceny. Mercy always infers
a tacit recognition that justice and rightness are to be expected. The
Holy God does not show mercy contrary to his righteousness but in harmony
with it. That is why the awful Cross was necessary and a righteous Christ
had to hang on it. That is why Gods redemption is always conditioned by
ones heart attitude. The Church and individual Christians should be active
in their witness to the Gospel of love and forgiveness; but meanwhile wherever
and whenever Gods love and mercy are rejected, as in crime, natural law
and order must prevail, not as extraneous to redemption but as part of
the whole scope of Gods dealings with man. No matter how often a jury
recommends mercy, the law of capital punishment must stand as the silent
but powerful witness to the sacredness of God-given life. Active justice
must be administered when the sacredness of life is violated. Life is sacred,
and he who violates the sacredness of life through murder must pay the
supreme penalty. It is significant that when Jesus voluntarily went the
way of the Cross He chose the capital punishment of His day as His instrument
to save the world. And when He gave redemption to the repentant thief He
did not save Him from capital punishment but gave him paradise instead.
We see again that mercy and forgiveness are something different from being
excused from wrongdoing. Synopsis of Dr. Jacob J. Vellengas "Is
Capital Punishment Wrong", p. 63-72, Essays on the Death Penalty, ed. T.
Robert Ingram, Houston, 1963, 1992. Dr. Vallenga is former Associate Executive
of the United Presbyterian Church (USA).
27) The leadership councils of some Christian denominations in the
U.S. have released statements in opposition to the death penalty. These
statements reflect social positions that have questionable biblical foundation
and, often, they reflect positions which selectively only discuss the mercy
of God and improperly avoid the justice of God. For example, some believe
that it would be hypocritical for Christians to support capital punishment,
because that would suggest that some peoples sins are not forgivable.
They argue that capital punishment conflicts with Jesus teachings - that,
if we are not willing to forgive, then we place ourselves outside of Gods
forgiveness. Such pronouncements are hardly convincing and are biblically
inaccurate. All death row inmates, no matter how vile and numerous their
misdeeds, are subject to the forgiveness of men and of God and, more importantly,
they are subject to redemption and eternal salvation. Indeed, God compels
us, individually, to forgive those who have harmed us. This, in no way,
conflicts with thebiblical mandate that the government authority impose
the death penalty in deserving cases. Social positions cannot and do not
replace biblical instruction. Furthermore, the murder victim is hardly
capable of forgiving the murderer. The biblical requirement to forgive
those who injure us is an individual requirement. Therefore, no one, other
than God, has the moral authority to forgive the crime of murder.
28) "While the thief on the cross found pardon in the sight of God
- Today you will be with Me in Paradise - that pardon did not extend
to eliminating the consequences of his crime - We are being justly
punished, for we are receiving what we deserve for our deeds. (Luke 23:39-43)".
Neither God nor Jesus nor the Holy Spirit nor the prophets nor the apostles
ever spoke out against the civil authorities use of executions in deserving
cases - not even at the very time of Jesus own execution when He pardoned
the sins of the thief, who was being crucified along side Him. Indeed,
quite the opposite. Their biblical support for capital punishment is consistent
and overwhelming. Furthermore, Jesus never confuses the requirements of
civil justice with those of either eternal justice or personal relations.
Charles Colson accurately recognizes this fact in stating that" it leads
to a perversion of legal justice to confuse the sphere of private relations
with that of civil law." All quotations from Charles Colsons "Capital
Punishment: A Personal Statement". See D.6. Continuing this thread, Protestant
scholar and journalist Rev. G. Aiken Taylor states, Most Christians tend
to confuse the Christian personal ethic with the requirements of social
order. In other words, we tend to apply what the Bible teaches us about
how we - personally - should behave toward our neighbors with what the
Bible teaches about how to preserve order in society. And there is a big
difference. Capital punishment is specifically enjoined in the Bible. Who
ever sheddeth mans blood, by man shall his blood be shed(Genesis 9-6).
This command is fully agreeable to the Sixth Commandment, Thou shalt not
kill, (Exodus 20:13), because the two appear in the same context. Exactly
25 verses after saying Thou shalt not kill, the Law says, He that smiteth
a man so that he may die, shall be surely put to death (Ex 21:12)." See
also Leviticus 24:17 and Numbers 35:30-31.(TDP:OVS, pg. 84,1986) Biblical
teachings regarding personal conduct, civil government and eternal judgement
and relations are often taken out of context, thereby replacing one duty
or instruction improperly with another.
29) In addition to the required punishment for murder and the deterrence
standards, both Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas find that executing
murderers is also an act of charity and mercy. Saint Augustine confirms
that " . . . inflicting capital punishment . . . protects those who are
undergoing capital punishment from the harm they may suffer . . . through
increased sinning which might continue if their life went on." (On the
Lords Sermon, 1.20.63-64.) Saint Thomas Aquinas finds that " . . . the
death inflicted by the judge profits the sinner, if he be converted, unto
the expiation of his crime; and, if he be not converted, it profits so
as to put an end to the sin, because the sinner is thus deprived of the
power to sin anymore." (Summa Theologica, II-II, 25, 6 ad 2.)
30) God, through the power and justice of the Holy Spirit, executed
both Ananias and his wife, Saphira. Their crime? Lying to the Holy Spirit
- to God - through Peter. Acts 5:1-11. By executing two such devoted
Christians for lying to Him, does the Holy Spirit show confirmation of
His support for His divinely instituted civil punishment of execution for
premeditated murder or does it show His rejection of capital punishment?
And read all of Revelation.
31) There are two passages in Luke which speak directly to Jesus position
on capital punishment. In 20:14-16, Jesus states: He will come and kill
those tenants and give the vineyard to others. Jesus is stating
that the proper punishment for murder is death. In 19:27, Christ pronounced
this judgement on those who rebelled against their king: But these enemies
of mine, who did not want me to reign over them, bring them here, and slay
them in my presence(NASB). Thus, it is very clear that neither Christ
nor His apostles intended to abrogate the God-given responsibility of the
government (under Old Testament law) to protect its citizens and enforce
justice by capital punishment. ibid, D.14., pg. 342. In the 19:27 parable
their king is Jesus.
32) The Bible clearly asserts, from beginning to end, without any reservation,
that righteous judgement includes the execution of a murderer. In the case
of murder, the biblical materials offer the clearest and most sustained
justification for the death penalty. The purpose of capital punishment
is justice - deterrence is irrelevant. A person who takes a human life,
without proper sanction, forfeits any right to life - no alternative is
allowed and the community must not be swayed by values to the contrary.
Listen carefully to the Bible as the Word of God rather than seek to
improve upon it by means of human values. However meritorious mercy may
be, however abundantly evident it may be in Gods own dealings, murder
was an offense for which mercy and pity were not allowed and for which
monetary compensation was strictly forbidden. The sentence is set by Gods
torah and a judge cannot have discretion in this matter. Murder is something
utterly on its own, nothing can be compared to it.
It should not be overlooked, in seeking to discover the mind of Jesus
Christ on the issue of murder and its punishments, that He goes beyond
torah to the statement that even verbal abuse makes one deserving of the
hell of fire. Far from releasing believers from prior law, Jesus was a
hard liner who made things even tougher, stating that He has come not
to abolish the law and the prophets . . . but to fulfill them.,
offering even stronger interpretations than in the original (Matthew
5:17-22). Indeed, Jesus admonishes the Pharisees not to misuse torah for
their own ends, but to honor God and torah. And of all the text in the
Bible, which one does Jesus select to emphasize that crucial point? HE
WHO SPEAKS EVIL OF FATHER OR MOTHER, LET HIM BE PUT TO DEATH(Matthew 15:1-9).
All interpretations, contrary to the biblical support of capital punishment,
are false. Interpreters ought to listen to the Bibles own agenda,
rather than to squeeze from it implications for their own agenda. As the
ancient rabbis taught, Do not seek to be more righteous than your Creator.
(Ecclesiastes Rabbah 7.33.). Synopsis of Professor Lloyd R. Baileys book
Capital Punishment: What the Bible Says, Abingdon Press, 1987. This is
the definitive work on this subject. It is mandatory reading for those
who wish to undertake a thorough and accurate look at this often misused
and misunderstood area of concern and debate.
Conclusion: Throughout the Hebrew Testament and the New Testament, there
is overwhelming biblical support for the divinely instituted punishment
of death in cases of murder, such punishment to be carried out by the governing
authority. There appears to be no biblical text which withdraws or condemns
the punishment or that authority. Indeed, all evidence is quite to the
contrary.
Opponents and advocates of capital punishment often make fundamental
errors in citing biblical text. Those errors are usually found within the
following categories:
(1) Confusing the obligations of individuals with those of the government.
Example: Matthew 5:38-39: "You have heard that it was said, an eye
for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth. But I say to you, do not resist who
is evil; but whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn to him the other
also." Strangely, opponents cite this as proof of Jesus abandonment of
capital punishment. If one were to assume that this text referenced the
actions of the governing authority and not individual obligations, then
one would clearly find that government could not enforce any law which
sought to protect the lives and property of its law abiding citizens. There
is no reference to capital punishment in the text. Therefore, all wrongdoers,
be that robbers, rapists or murderers could act repeatedly, with impunity,
if the text was an obligation on the governing authority. This text is
directed at individuals and has no application to the governing authority
or its right and duty to execute. ( Carey, ibid F.18, pg. 122)
(2) Isolating specific biblical text from the broader context of the
discussion. Example: Ezekiel 33:11: "As I live, says the Lord God,
I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn
from his way and live; turn back, turn back your evil ways; for why will
you die, O house of Israel?" Lets review Dr. Baileys analysis: "To some
readers, that may be seem clear enough! God not only takes no "pleasure"
in the death (execution?) of the wicked (criminal?), but prefers that they
"turn back" (be rehabilitated?). Such understanding might indeed be justified
if one could read the Bible atomistically, that is, one verse at a time,
with the understanding that the verse has a self contained eternal truth.
However, if the prophet is speaking to a specific audience about a particular
problem, and if his response covers several verses (or even a chapter),
then the modern interpreter must hear him out and look for the central
idea. That is, what a verse says may not be what the context (and thus
the prophet) means. . . .the words are addressed to the house
of Israel (specifically the Judean exiles of Babylonia), in response to
their lament. (And) Who are the wicked? The exiles whose betrayal of the
covenant has led to exile. What is meant by their "death"? Both their political
situation ("we waste away") and their dwindling faith in the ancient concept
of election. God takes no "pleasure" in the death of the wicked (i.e.,
does not see it as necessary that the exiles have this attitude and forever
remain in Babylonia). The Deity desires repentance, change of priorities,
renewal of ancient values, life as it was intended by this community {"turn
back"} . . . and return to the promised land. Thus, the text is not concerned
with the fate of anyone who has been sentenced to death by the judiciary
(or even per se with individuals who face death), and it does not therefore
suggest what the religious persons response should be in that case." Bailey,
ibid F.31,pg. 42-43. "It is a faulty exegesis to take a verse of Scripture
out of context and interpret it without regard to its qualifying words."See
Vallenga, ibid F.26, pg. 65.
(3) Believing that Christ abandoned the Law of the Hebrew Testament
and instituted a new ethic in the New Testament, based solely on
mercy. There are 20 chapters, within the 28 chapters of Matthew, which
discuss destruction, hell, unquenchable fire, and/or differing forms of
punishment and exclusion by God (see Jesus words in Matthew 5:22, 29-30;
8:12; 11:23-24; 12:30-32; 13:41-42, 49-50; 18:8-9; 22:2-14; 23:33, 25:40-46)
and/or honor the Law of the Hebrew Testament (see specific references Matthew
5 and 15). "For this you know with certainty, that no immoral or impure
person has an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God." Ephesians
5:5. "When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven with His mighty
angels in flaming fire, dealing out retribution to those who do not know
God and to those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. And these
will pay the penalty of eternal destruction, away from the presence of
the Lord and from the glory of His power." 2 Thessalonians 1:7b-9. And
so it is throughout the New Testament. See also Mark 3:29; Luke 13:24-28;
John 5:24-29, 15:6; 2 Peter 2:4-9; Jude 1:5-15: Revelation 13:10.
NAS, 1978
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