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Justifications for Capital Punishment Part I

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Only 1% of street killers actually get the death penalty ... The death penalty 'is imposed far too infrequently and illogically to serve as retribution. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Justifications for Capital Punishment Part I


1
Justifications for Capital Punishment (Part I)
  • Retribution

CJ 4530, The Death Penalty Appalachian State
University Dr. Matthew Robinson
2
Retribution
  • The first is private but the second is public
  • The first is not justified by law but the second
    is justified
  • The first entails the offender being paid back by
    the victim but the second entails the offender
    paying back society
  • The first is only a natural emotion rooted in our
    biology but the second is also about socialization
  • There are at least two meanings
  • 1) emotional response aimed at getting even
    (vengeance or just desserts)
  • 2) rational response aimed at righting a wrong
    (retribution or justice)

3
Retribution and Public Support
  • Historically, retribution is the highest reason
    cited in public opinion polls as to why people
    favor capital punishment
  • (to get even with offenders, they deserve it, a
    life for a life, etc.)

4
Key facts to remember up front
  • Only 1 of street killers actually get the death
    penalty
  • LITERALLY NO white-collar / corporate offenders
    get the death penalty
  • Thus, we FAIL to provide retribution by using the
    death penalty ...
  • or is some justice better than none?

5
How does the class feel about DEATH for the sake
of vengeance?
  • Many say that the intentional taking of life by
    the government should be based more on reason
    than on emotion
  • Plus, murder is a crime against the government
    and the government has no emotion
  • Does the state have the responsibility to make
    victims feel better?

6
Is there really vengeance?
  • Murderers are now executed using lethal injection
    (much easier than their heinous crimes)
  • And, we do not give other types of offenders
    punishment that equals their crimes (e.g., burn
    homes of arsonists, rape rapists, take cars of
    car thieves, rob robbers, etc.)
  • So do we ever really get even with them?

7
How does the class feel about DEATH for the sake
of retribution?
  • Many suggest we could balance the scales of
    justice with another form of punishment (e.g.,
    life imprisonment without possibility of parole)
    and still get even
  • (This is what we mostly do now for 99 of
    murderers)
  • This also prevents harms suffered by families of
    murderers (which is startlingly like that of
    murder victims families)

8
Death penalty supporters say ...
  • There is no doubt that murderers deserve to die.
  • Murder is the ultimate crime which calls for the
    ultimate punishment.
  • Currently the death penalty is the ultimate
    punishment in 38 American jurisdictions.
  • Key question assuming murderers merit death,
    does the government have the responsibility to
    carry it out? or is it just their right?

9
What do the experts say???
10
  • Does capital punishment, as actually practiced in
    the United States, achieve retribution (i.e.,
    provide justice for murder victims, their
    families, and society at large)?
  • Yes 31
  • No 36
  • Unsure 33
  • N 42

11
  • The death penalty is imposed far too
    infrequently and illogically to serve as
    retribution.
  • At the present time, capital punishment is
    utilized far too infrequently to provide justice
    for more than a few murder victims and their
    families.

12
  • Capital punishment might provide retribution for
    families of murder victims, but it cant for
    broader society. No social science evidence to
    suggest that it has any 'therapeutic' value for
    anyone.
  • There is no retribution possible after a murder
    because the scales of justice can never be
    balanced. No amount of punishment will redeem
    the value of the dead victim.

13
  • Research indicates many families still feel
    sorrow and have no sense of closure. What is
    needed is counseling for the families and friends
    of murder victims. Additionally, retribution is
    not a good goal for society. The offender can be
    punished and society protected by using LWOP.

14
  • This is a difficult question to answer because
    it is to some degree a matter of opinion. I
    expect that there are families of murder victims
    who do feel that the execution of the perpetrator
    provided justice for them. Others feel the
    precise opposite. In a broader sense, the
    failings of the criminal justice system and the
    inequities of society at large make it unlikely
    that any punishment could be imposed in a way
    that provided retribution. In an ideal society
    in which burdens and benefits were distributed
    solely on the basis of merit, the situation might
    be different. Given the system we have and the
    propensity of humans to error, it is impossible
    that we can impose death sentences in a just way,
    making it impossible that we can achieve justice
    through this punishment.

15
  • I dont think retribution is an appropriate
    motivation for punishment. How can you make
    things right for someone who is dead? You
    cannot. That is nonsense. It is also highly
    variable as to how well the families are served.
    Many think that it will bring closure, but it
    usually does not. Others are more victimized by
    the death penalty than served. Many families of
    victims oppose capital punishment. None benefit
    from going through the repeated cycles of the
    appeals process and concurrent media attention.
    As for society, I think it feeds into a very
    negative part of our psyche, feeds our
    aggression. Furthermore, it creates a new class
    of victims friends and families of the accused
    as well as those working within the system.

16
  • Of course, I can't speak for any particular
    murder victims or their families, so this is a
    tough question to answer. In the broader sense,
    I don't think the death penalty serves these
    populations well at all. It may indeed achieve
    some sense of revenge or retribution for some
    co-victims or some members of society at large,
    but it certainly does not for others. The bigger
    question is Is serving this form of revenge
    constructive or destructive for these individuals
    (or society at large)? My answer to this would
    be that it is destructive.

17
  • The wording of your question implies that
    retribution (i.e., a paying of tribute,
    something given or exacted in recompense, as my
    Websters has it) is justice a life for a life.
    Im sure youre aware that this model of justice
    is only one of several proposed by criminologists
    and sociologists. I dont think the retributive
    model is the most constructive one. It throws
    away a human life and makes killers of every
    citizen of the polity -- man, woman, and child.
    At the same time, the way execution is handled
    distances us from what our political and
    enforcement representatives are doing in our
    name. Last, retribution encourages us to believe
    that meting out punishment is a transparent
    process, potentially a simple one. Our
    retributive system hides the realities, including
    but not limited to the prevalence of plea
    bargaining, the inequalities of legal
    representation, and the numerical tokenism of the
    death penalty.

18
  • In some cases it clearly does.
  • Sporadically so, for some.
  • It does in some cases but fails to do so in many
    cases.
  • Of the various historical, economical,
    political, ideological, and practical arguments
    made by those who favor capital punishment,
    retribution is the ONLY issue supported by
    empirical evidence that is, when analyzed by the
    totally of events, circumstances, and experiences
    of the offender, victim, legal system, and
    society.
  • It is an emotional response to the horrific
    crime of murder.

19
  • By retribution, I mean taking from the
    criminal the advantage he has unfairly taken by
    committing the crime in question. Any penalty
    assigned according the principles of reasonably
    just legal system ... will do that (the death
    penalty as much as any human penalty). Justice
    for the victims or families is a civil matter for
    which a tort claim is the appropriate remedy it
    is a matter of compensation rather than
    retribution. Criminal justice is retribution
    (with or without clemency).

20
  • I would think the death penalty does provide
    for retribution, but the delay in actually
    carrying out the execution may serve to lessen
    any retributive effect.
  • To a limited extent. Because of its
    uncertainties and delays, it is often uncertain
    as to if and when families of victims will
    receive the sense of completion that an execution
    sometimes brings.

21
  • It can reasonably be argued that death for
    murder is a morally just punishment. It is not
    the only morally just punishment, but it is one.
  • Yes it may achieve retribution for murder
    victims some families but life imprisonment
    without parole (LWOP) would also severe
    retribution (I feel).

22
  • It depends on whether you consider retribution
    to be a subjective experience or an objectively
    identifiable phenomenon. We know that many
    victims' families are not satisfied with capital
    punishment while others are satisfied by a life
    sentence. I am not sure what people (i.e.,
    politicians) mean when they say a punishment must
    be consistent with the wishes of the community.
    Who is this 'community'? How does a prosecutor
    or judge or politician know what the will of the
    people is other than a survey/poll that shows a
    majority opinion? I am not sure that making
    justice decisions upon the majority opinion is
    always the best policy.).

23
  • You can argue this point both ways in some
    cases it has brought 'closure.' Many people
    maintain that retribution requires the death
    penalty. I would argue that a life sentence
    achieves retribution without risking the
    execution of an innocent person. Besides, and to
    my point about victims' families, that most
    people 'feel' a sense of retribution does not
    justify the use of the death penalty.
  • I suppose it achieves retribution for some
    victims' families, but other victims' families
    don't necessarily want retribution it won't
    bring their loved ones back and, once the
    offender is dead, closure may not necessarily
    follow. It is a desire to see someone pay for
    their actions, and all of us feel this way at one
    time or another. However, I am not sure the
    death penalty is the way to do it.

24
  • Probably some murder victims' families and some
    members of society think so, but non-death
    penalty jurisdictions (both inside outside the
    U.S.) are apparently able to achieve justice
    without capital punishment.

25
Retribution and Religion
26
Retribution and Religion
  • Anyone feel like this?

27
Retribution and Religion
  • According to studies of the Bible, there is NO
    CLEAR answer about whether capital punishment is
    a good idea according to GOD
  • Who is the closest person to GOD? ... What does
    he say?
  • How many religious organizations favor and oppose
    capital punishment?
  • http//www.deathpenaltyreligious.org/education.htm
    l

28
What about the Bible?
  • The Bible was changed just to suit King James,
    many empty lies he say, she say, me say, we
    say, John public blind people wont know the
    truth today

29
Assuming the Bible is Gods word what does it
say?
  • http//www.justiceblind.com/death/johnson.htm
  • Johnson examines 5 versions of Bible looking for
  • 1) pro-capital punishment statements
  • 2) anti-capital punishment statements
  • 3) what happened to murderers in the Bible
  • Conclusions include
  • There is no clear Biblical mandate for death
    penalty
  • All sides can find support for their arguments
  • More support for death penalty in Old Testament
  • New Testament does not refute it explicitly but
    is less supportive of it
  • Only 4 of 22 murderers in Bible are executed

30
Does this story of Jesus stand out?
  • Now early in the morning he came again into the
    temple, and all the people came to him and he
    sat down and taught them. Then the Scribes and
    Pharisees brought to him a woman caught in
    adultery. And when they sat her in the midst,
    they said to him, Teacher, this woman was caught
    in adultery, in the very act. Now Moses, in the
    law, commanded us that such should be stoned. But
    what do you say? This they said, testing him,
    that they might have something of which to accuse
    him. But Jesus stooped down and wrote on the
    ground with his finger, as though he did not
    hear. So when they continued asking him, he
    raised himself up and said to them, He who is
    without sin among you, let him throw a stone at
    her first. And again he stooped down and wrote
    on the ground. Then those who heard it, being
    convicted by their conscience, went out one by
    one, beginning with the oldest even unto the
    last. And Jesus was left alone, and the woman
    standing alone in the midst. When Jesus has
    raised himself up and saw no one but the woman,
    he said to her, Woman, where are those accusers
    of yours? Has no one condemned you? She said,
    No one Lord. And Jesus said to her, Neither do
    I condemn you go and sin no more. (John 81-11)

31
Ironies
  • If religion is so important to people, why do
    most people support capital punishment?
  • If the New Testament (and Jesus, son of God)
    preaches love your enemy and forgive those who
    trespass against you and turn the other cheek,
    is Old Testament even relevant?
  • Most religious organizations TODAY are against
    capital punishment
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