The document discusses arguments for and against the death penalty in the United States. It notes that the US is one of few countries that still uses capital punishment and executes more people than nations like China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. Arguments against the death penalty include that it is applied arbitrarily and in a racially discriminatory manner, amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, and violates international human rights laws. The document also discusses the high financial costs of the death penalty compared to life imprisonment without parole.
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Death penalty
1. By: Malorie Martin, Jerry Jolly, Marchenay Pierre, and Matt Godown, aka the Safari Masterz
2. The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only object of good government. -Thomas Jefferson
3. The Death Penalty Only 3 nations in the world execute more people than the U.S.
4. China Iran Saudi Arabia As a country that still uses the death penalty, the U.S. is in the company of known human rights violators.
5. Dissuades others from doing serious crimes Makes sure that criminals dont strike again The belief that someone who has taken the life of another doesnt deserve to live Belief that executing a murderer makes us no different than the murderer More often poor people are executed over rich people because they cannot afford lawyers The chance that the person is innocent No relation between capital punishment and the crime rate CONS
6. Included pressing, gibbeting, breaking on the wheel, burning at the stake, and bludgeoning. 1 As time passed, society matured and such inhumane methods of execution were deemed inhumane.
7. After touring New Mexicos Death Row, Governor Bill Richardson signed a bill eliminating the death penalty in New Mexico. The Governor supported his decision by adding, My conclusion was those cells are something that may be worse than death, I believe this is a just punishment. 4 Life without parole is often said to be a living death sentence, the prison is their cemetery, a cell their tomb.
8. Martin Luther King Jr. felt the same way when he organized peaceful protests against society to fight for his freedom. King also stated in his letter from Birmingham Jail Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere
9. The United States was central to the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which laid the foundation for the creation of international human rights law. The United States further acknowledged the importance of international human rights law by signing and ratifying internationally binding treaties.
10. Most relevant to human rights and capital punishment are the following international covenants and their general comments, which are legally binding because the United States signed and ratified them:
11. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Ratified 6/8/92. The International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination ( ICERD). Ratified 10/21/94. The International Convention against Torture, Cruel and Inhuman or Other Degrading Treatment or Punishments (CAT). Ratified 10/21/94.
12. Is the United States fulfilling its legal obligations outlined in these human rights instruments with regard to the protection of the rights of the accused and convicted?
14. The death penalty in the U.S. violates binding international law because it: is arbitrary is discriminatory amounts to cruel and inhuman punishment violates international due process protections The death penalty is a breach of our constitutional values of justice and freedom
15. Arbitrary: The victims race, the location of the crime, defendants who cant afford an attorney, and prosecutorial discretion make the death penalty arbitrary.
16. The death penalty is Discriminatory: The biggest predictor of a death sentence is the race of the victim. African-American defendants receive the death penalty 3 times more often than white defendants where the victims are white.
17. The death penalty amounts to Torture or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment: Lethal injection gives the illusion of being a more humane method of punishment, but it too causes unnecessary pain and suffering . Amnesty international found that lethal injection has inherent potential for problems while the American Veterinary Medical Associate refuses to use the same concoction of drugs in animal euthanasia .
18. The death penalty violates International Due Process Protections: Only 5% of inmates on death row can afford to pay for an attorney and people who are well represented at trial do not get the death penalty (Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Associated Press 4/10/01). Local Politics, location of crime, plea bargaining and pure chance affect the legal process (Amnesty International, Death Penalty Facts.) .
19. The Cost of the Death Penalty The death penalty is far more expensive than life imprisonment. - In Maryland, administering the death penalty is 3 times the cost of non-death penalty cases. Amnesty International USA - In California, death penalty cases cost the current system $137 million. - Without the death penalty , the system would cost only $11.5 million - California Commission for the Fair Administration of Justice - In Indiana, the death penalty costs more than life without parole by about 38% - Amnesty International USA, Indiana Criminal Law Study Commission
20. Ronald Chapman, a prominent West Palm Beach lawyer and graduate of The University of Iowa College of Law, expressed great opposition towards the death penalty when interviewed by Jerry Jolly. Mr. Chapman has defended numerous clients on trial for first-degree murder and face the possibility of receiving death. When asked if he believed there was an equally effective but less controversial alternative to the death penalty Mr. Chapman suggested that life in prison without the possibility of parole does the job just as well.