SNIP (the death penalty’s) use should be virtually non-existent in countries/states which have secure prison systems, and sentencing laws which permit life, without the possibility of parole in penitence. In a penitentiary. This way, if the person is eventually found to be innocent by DNA or other means, the person is still alive to be released. And if they are truly guilty, there is more time for reflection and sorrow for their actions.
First, innocents are more protected with the death penalty.
The Death Penalty: Do Innocents Matter? A Review of All Innocence Issues
prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2013/10/the-death-penalty-do-innocents-matter.html
Secondly, secure prisons?
crime recidivism 1.73 million results (0.40 seconds)
crime in prison 104 million results (0.25 seconds)
Some few examples:
The following suggests that some 200,000 innocents were murdered buy those criminals the US released from custody, just since 1973, which does not include the staggering numbers of additional innocents harmed by non lethal violent crimes, such as rape and robbery.
“At least 20 members of the security forces were killed . . .” “. . . 500 (to 1200) prisoners had escaped from the notorious Abu Ghraib prison. Most of them were senior members of al-Qaeda who had been sentenced to death . . .”
“Iraq jailbreaks: Hundreds escape in Taji and Abu Ghraib”, BBC, 22 July 2013 Last updated at 13:54 ET
U.S. correctional institutions are a “viable venue for radicalization and recruitment” for al-Qaeda.
“Al-Qaeda and its network of associated organizations has taken full advantage of the relatively lax practices in European, and even some American, prisons. The pool of potential recruits is vast.”
" . . . terrorist groups were able to retain a large degree of cohesion within the prison setting, which they discovered to be a favorable environment for training members in new skills and planning future operations."
“The use of prisons as a means of recruiting new members into terrorist organizations while providing advanced training to existing members is hardly a new phenomenon. FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS (my emphasis) , European countries have been beset by a variety of nationalist and leftist terrorist groups, some of them highly sophisticated organizations with large rosters of combat and support personnel.”
" . . . in October 2003, John Pistole, the FBI’s executive assistant director of counterterrorism/counterintelligence, called U.S. correctional institutions a “viable venue for radicalization and recruitment” for al-Qaeda. Harley Lappin, the director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, sees the bloated prison population of disgruntled and violent inmates as being ‘particularly vulnerable to recruitment by terrorists.’
“Prisons and the Education of Terrorists”, Ian M. Cuthbertson, WORLD POLICY JOURNAL, FALL 2004
“We have proof (cell phones) have been used in escapes, to put hits out on people, and for other criminal activities.”
“In California, for instance, the number of contraband cellphones discovered by corrections staff jumped to more than 15,000 in 2011, more than 10 times the 1,400 seized in 2007.” (“Smuggled cellphone use a growing concern for U.S. prisons,” BY COLLEEN JENKINS, REUTERS,WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina, Apr 18, 2014)
“The Bali bombers were allowed to preach to the prison population, radicalising scores of impressionable young Muslims, as well as fund and organise subsequent attacks from their cells.”
“Hell in the heart of paradise”, 4:40PM Monday November 23, 2009 Source: AAP
tvnz.co.nz/travel-news/hell-in-heart-paradise-3174543
and on and on and on