C
Caveman
Guest
This is exactly why my position is “only in cases of extreme gravity, and only rarely”.How about Ronnie Chandler, the first person sentenced to death after the 1963 suspension? He was convicted on the evidence of a single witness, who has since recanted, and appears (based on physical evidence) to quite possibly be the real killer. The conviction itself may well yet be overturned.
I didn’t start taking a look at this until I read Evangalium Vitae in the 90’s. I felt compelled to obey the Pope as a Roman Catholic, but was struggling with the teaching. When I last look closely at it a few years ago, there were at least 8 cases with DNA evidence and 3 overturned convictions. Most DP proponent groups put the number at 12-16, opponent groups higher.
It shouldn’t be surprising, by 2002 we’d released 100 death row inmates and are still looking at some massive releases in OK and Penn (evidence of consistant false testimony from state experts and dubious racial practices). If you are innaccurately sentencing that large a percentage of people to death, it is inevitable that you are going to execute some of them.
Those where there is no doubt whatsoever… as St Dismas said “we are getting the punishment we DESERVE”.
(caps for emphasis, not for yelling!)