Yes, I am against the death penalty (Capital Punishment CP).
1)Killing teaches Killing
2)All killings have many unanticipated consequences
3)Capital punishment is more expensive than life in prison(!) over 3:1 and we get to add the potential of being eternally damn for participating! Not exactly the deal I am looking for.
If executions teach murder (which they don’t) do you believe that legal incarceration teaches kidnapping or that fines teach robbery?
Not all, but some killings, have unintended consequences. But, it is important to distinguish between killings, isn’t it? There are moral differences between child rape/murder, self defense killings, just war killings and the execution of those who rape and murder children.
There is certainly no need for capital punishment to be more expensive than a life sentence.
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- All cost studies exclude the cost of geriatric care, recently found to be $69,000/inmate/yr. A significant omission from life sentence costs.
- All studies exclude the cost savings of the death penalty, which is the ONLY sentence which allows for a plea bargain to a maximum life sentence. Depending upon jurisdiction, this may result in a zero net cost for the death penalty, depending on the number of plea bargains Vs the number of death penalty trials, or an actual net cost benefit to the state.
- The Duke University-North Carolina death penalty cost study provides an instructive lesson
Anti death penalty folks have been deceptively stating that it costs* $2.16 million for an execution in North Carolina. However, what the study really says is that $2.16 million is the average cost of execution, for all death penalty cases.* For example, if 10 people are sentenced to death and only one of* those ten is executed and you roll all of the costs for all of those 10 death penalty cases into that 1 execution, you would get an average* cost of $2.16 million per execution.
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You could dishonestly do the same thing with LWOP. As soon your first LWOP prisoner died, you could roll all of the LWOP costs, from all other living LWOP cases, and say that it cost $20 million on average per LWOP. That would be equally inaccurate and misleading.
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In reality (read the Executive Summary) the difference in cost between a North Carolina murder conviction with a “life” sentence* and a death sentence is $163,000. See also paragraph 9 Summing up, page 2.(2)
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But in the study, a life sentence is only 20 years. You need to add 20-30 years – or $500,000 - $750,000/prisoner --* to get a real life sentence. The authors also concede leaving out geriatric care, recently found to be $69,000/yr/prisoner.
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In other words, what the study actually tells us is that an actual life sentence costs much more than a death sentence.
5)* FCC economist Dr. Paul Zimmerman finds that executions result in a huge cost benefit to society. "Specifically, it is estimated that each state execution deters somewhere between 3 and 25 murders per year (14 being the average). Assuming that the value of human life is approximately $5 million (1)
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That is a cost benefit of $70 million per execution.* 9 additional, recent studies support the deterrent effect. Deterrence report upon request.
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We know that living murderers are infinitely more likely to harm and murder, again, than are executed murderers. There is no doubt that executions do save innocent lives. What value do you put on the lives saved? Certainly not less than $5 million.
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While costs can be higher, sometimes much higher, with capital punishment than with life without parole, it isn’t required, States need only improve upon the examples of those states which have the most efficient death penalty systems.
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The bottom line is that states can have a just death penalty system and not spend more than they currently do on life without parole cases.*
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It just takes the will of the legislature and the judges.
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1). “State Executions, Deterrence and the Incidence of Murder”, Paul R. Zimmerman* (
zimmy@att.net),** March 3. 2003, Social Science Research Network
2) www-pps(DOT)aas.duke.edu/people/faculty/cook/comnc.pdf
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copyright 2004-2007
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Dudley Sharp, Justice Matters