Capital Punishment Essay, Research Paper
Capital Punishment
The use of capital punishment has been a permanent fixture in
society since the earliest civilizations and continues to be used
as a form of punishment in countries today. It has been used for
various crimes ranging from the desertion of soldiers during
wartime to the more heinous crimes of serial killers. However, the
mere fact that this brutal form of punishment and revenge has been
the policy of many nations in the past does not subsequently
warrant its implementation in today’s society. The death penalty is
morally and socially unethical, should be construed as cruel and
unusual punishment since it is both discriminatory and arbitrary,
has no proof of acting as a deterrent, and risks the atrocious and
unacceptable injustice of executing innocent people. As long as
capital punishment exists in our society it will continue to spark
the injustice which it has failed to curb.
Capital punishment is immoral and unethical. It does not matter who
does the killing because when a life is taken by another it is
always wrong. By killing a human being the state lessens the value
of life and actually contributes to the growing sentiment in
today’s society that certain individuals are worth more than
others. When the value of life is lessened under certain
circumstances such as the life of a murderer, what is stopping
others from creating their own circumstances for the value of one’s
life such as race, class, religion, and economics. Immanual Kant, a
great philosopher of ethics, came up with the Categorical
Imperative, which is a universal command or rule that states that
society and individuals “must act in such a way that you can will
that your actions become a universal law for all to follow” (Palmer
265). There must be some set of moral and ethical standards that
even the government can not supersede, otherwise how can the state
expect its citizens not to follow its own example. Those who
support the death penalty believe, or claim to believe, that
capital punishment is morally and ethically acceptable. The bulk of
their evidence comes from the Old Testament which actually
recommends the use of capital punishment for a number of crimes.
Others also quote the Sixth Commandment which, in the original
Hebrew reads, “Thou Shall Not Commit Murder.” However, these
literal interpretations of selected passages from the Bible which
are often quoted out of context corrupt the compassionate attitude
of Judaism and Christianity, which clearly focuses on redemption
and forgiveness, and urges humane and effective ways of dealing
with crime and violence. Those who use the Bible to support the
death penalty are by themselves since almost all religious groups
in the United States regard executions as immoral. They include,
American Baptist Churches USA, American Jewish Congress, California
Catholic Council, Christian reformed Church, Episcopal Church,
Lutheran Church in America, Mennonite General Conference, National
Council of Churches of Christ in the USA, Northern Ecumenical
Council, Presbyterian Church (USA), Reformed Church of America,
Southern California Ecumenical Council, Unitarian/Universalist
Association, United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist
Church (Death Penalty Focus). Those that argue that the death
penalty is the ethical state that former great leaders and thinkers
such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin,
Kant, Locke, Hobbes, Rousseau, Montesquieu, and Mill all supported
it (Koch 324). However, Washington and Jefferson, two former
presidents and admired men, both supported slavery as well. Surely,
the advice of someone who clearly demonstrated a total disregard
for the value of human life cannot be considered in such an
argument as capital punishment. In regard to the philosophers,
Immanuel Kant, a great ethical philosopher stated that the motives
behind actions determine whether something is moral or immoral
(Palmer 271). The motives behind the death penalty, which revolve
around revenge and the “frustration and rage of people who see that
the government is not coping with violent crime,” are not of good
will, thereby making capital punishment immoral according to
ethical philosophy (Bruck 329). The question of whether executions
are a “cruel” form of punishment may no longer be an argument
against capital punishment now that it can be done with lethal
injections, but it is still very “unusual” in that it only applies
to a select number of individuals making the death penalty
completely discriminatory and arbitrary. After years of watching
the ineffectiveness of determining who should be put to death, the
Supreme Court in the 1972 Furman v. Georgia decision “invalidated
all existing death sentence statues as violative of the Eighth
Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment and thus
depopulated state death rows of 629 occupants” (Berger 352). This
decision was reached not because it was believed that the death
penalty was intrinsically cruel and unusual but because, as Justice
Stewart put it, the “death penalty as actually applied was
unconstitutionally arbitrary” (Berger 353). Local politics, money,
race, and where the crime is committed can often play a more
decisive role in sentencing someone to death than the actual facts
of the crime. According to Amnesty International, the “death
penalty is a lethal lottery: just one out of every one hundred
people arrested for murder is actually executed” (Death Penalty
Focus). In regards to racial discrimination in sentencing, it has
been found that “racial bias focuses primarily on the race of the
victim, not the defendant” (Berger 355). Only 31 out of the more
than 15, 000 recorded executions in this country have been of white
defendants convicted of killing black victims, while black
defendants convicted of raping white women were commonly sentenced
to death (Death Penalty Focus). Stephen Nathanson, a professor of
philosophy at Northwestern University addresses the problems of
discrimination and randomness best by saying, “as long as racial,
class, religious, and economic bias continue to be important
determinants of who is executed, the death penalty will continue to
create and perpetuate injustice” (Nathanson 346).
Proponents of capital punishment believe that the argument that the
death penalty is discriminatory and arbitrary does not give support
to the abolition of capital punishment, but rather to the extension
of it. Edward Koch, the former mayor of New York from 1978 to 1989
and death penalty supporter, states that the discriminatory manner
of the death penalty “no longer seems to be the problem it once
was,” yet in 1987, the Supreme Court case of McCleskey v. Kemp
established that in Georgia someone who kills a white person is
four times more likely to be sentenced to death than someone who
kills a black person (Death Penalty Focus). In response to this,
supporters of the death penalty believe that the death penalty
should be extended to all murders. This is what was attempted after
the Furman decision. A number of states sought to resolve the
discriminatory and arbitrary nature of the death penalty by simply
sentencing to death everyone convicted of first-degree murder, but
the Supreme Court rejected this proposal saying that “mandatory
death sentence laws did not really resolve the problem but instead
’simply papered [it] over’ since juries responded by refusing to
convict certain arbitrarily chosen defendants of first-degree
murder” (Berger 353).
An argument against the death penalty which to sensible and decent
persons should seem undeniable is the fact that innocent people
have been murdered by the state in the past and in all probability
more will follow. The wrongful execution of an innocent person is
such an awful injustice that in any civilized society could never
be justified, yet this is the message that the United States is
willing to pronounce. Simply put by Professor Nathanson, “to
maintain the death penalty is to be willing to risk innocent
lives.” In 1987, a study conducted by Hugo Bedau and Michael
Radelet appeared in the Standford Law Review concerning the
execution of innocent people. The study concluded that in the
period between 1900 to 1980, about “350 people were wrongfully
convicted of capital offenses, 139 of the 350 were sentenced to
death, and 23 were actually executed” (Nathanson 344). Over this
eighty year period this figure averages out to the death of an
innocent person about every 3.4 years. This fact is extremely
disturbing and rightfully so, yet death penalty advocates blatantly
disregard the information or attempt to justify it in some way.
Those who support capital punishment claim that such cases of
innocent people being executed have never occurred. For instance,
Edward Koch quotes Hugo Bedau in support of his claim that such
cases are not true, saying “it is false sentimentality to argue
that the death penalty should be abolished because of the abstract
possibility that an innocent person might be executed.” Koch, in an
attempt to gain political support, acted quite unethically by
quoting Bedau out of context and implying that such cases have not
occurred. According to David Bruck, a prominent lawyer for South
Carolina Office of Appellate Defense, “all Bedau was saying was
that doubts concerning executed prisoners’ guilt are almost never
resolved.” Koch also failed to relate in his essay that Bedau, who
had not yet released the 1987 study, had already comprised a “list
of murder convictions since 1900 in which the state eventually
admitted error” in about 400 hundred cases. Another response to the
fact that innocent people have been executed is that the small
number of innocents executed outweighs the number of lives that
will be saved since the possibility of being executed will deter
others from committing a murder, and also lives will be saved since
that murderer cannot kill again. Scientific studied have failed to
prove that executions deter other people from committing crime.
According to Dr. Ernest van den Haag, a well-known scholar in favor
of the death penalty, “one cannot claim that it has been proved
statistically that the death penalty does deter more than
alternative penalties” (Haag 338). However, Haag supports his stand
on the death penalty by stating that, “when they have the choice
between life and death, 99 percent of all prisoners under sentence
of death prefer life in prison.” This statistic proves nothing but
the fact that man has an innate desire for survival. Those asked
the question have already committed the crime and thus does not
reflect the sentiment of those considering a crime. Also, people
often kill when under great “emotional stress or under the
influence of drugs or alcohol – times when they are not thinking of
the consequences” (Death Penalty Focus). Career criminals and those
that plan a crime do not expect to get caught, thus making the
consequences an invalid issue. In response to the fact that a
executed murderer will never kill again, society must ask itself
whether it is morally and ethically acceptable to risk killing an
innocent person when an alternative such as life imprisonment
without possibility of parole exists. In California since 1978,
more than 1,000 people have received this alternate sentence which
includes no appeals process. The public can be assured that those
who commit heinous murders and receive this sentence will never be
free again. According to Death Penalty Focus, “a recent Field Poll
showed support for the death penalty plummeted when alternative
sentencing is available. Just 29 percent favored death over life
without parole plus requiring the defendant to work in prison and
give part of his earnings as restitution to the families of his
victims.”
The use of capital punishment has endured throughout the ages, yet
its use today in a “civilized” society should no longer be
acceptable to morally and ethically conscience individuals. The
vast majority of countries in Western Europe and North and South
America – more than 80 nations worldwide – have abandoned capital
punishment, yet the United States remains an avid supporter in
company with countries such as Iran, Iraq, and China as one of the
major users of capital punishment (Death Penalty Focus). The use of
the death penalty in its discriminatory and arbitrary methods “only
magnifies inequalities of race that persist in the criminal justice
system and in American society generally (Berger 355). Even with
the death of a guilty man, innocence is lost, for even Edward Koch
admits that “the death of anyone – even a convicted killer –
diminishes us all.” But it is a sad commentary on the state of this
country when we are willing to accept the avoidable death of an
innocent man and allow the “death penalty to continue to create and
perpetuate injustice.”
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