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Capital Punishment

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Administered as a result to crimes governing bodies agree can only be punished fairly by death ... Also (New York) - attacking parents, denying God's ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Capital Punishment


1
Capital Punishment
  • By Jimmy Bennett, Matt Gaspari, Kerry Grady, and
    Matt Snyder

2
Goals of this Project
  • Provide unbiased insight into the heated argument
    (differing opinions) surrounding the death
    penalty
  • Portray the views of the Catholic Church on the
    death penalty throughout history
  • Lay groundwork to educate the class about the
    death penalty, enabling them to formulate new
    ideas about this issue and see how it relates to
    this class

3
Ethical Questions Concerning Capital Punishment
  • How does/can a state determine when to take a
    human life?
  • What actions can society justify in taking to
    protect itself from harmful criminals?
  • How does society determine which crimes are
    unforgivable?

4
What is Capital Punishment?
  • execution of a convicted criminal by a governing
    body
  • Prisoners sentenced to death are placed in a part
    of prison segregated from the rest (death row)
  • Administered as a result to crimes governing
    bodies agree can only be punished fairly by death
  • Methods include lethal injection (most common),
    electrocution, gas chamber, hanging, firing squad

5
History of the Death Penalty
  • Death penalty goes back to Hammurabis Code (18th
    century B.C.)
  • First British colonists in America brought death
    penalty
  • Colonial America (Virginia) one could be
    executed for stealing food, killing livestock,
    and trading with Indians
  • Also (New York) - attacking parents, denying
    Gods existence were grounds for death
  • Currently criminals can only be killed on grounds
    of treason and murder

6
Early Attempts at Abolishment
  • By the 1860s, resentment against the death
    penalty grew to please the growing outcry, by
    1863 nearly all mandatory capital punishment laws
    had been abolished
  • In early 1900s, 6 states completely outlawed
    death penalty
  • But growing problems led to fear, (socialism,
    Russian Revolution, WWI) and death penalty became
    more popular
  • 1920s-1940s criminoligists decisively argued
    for death penalty along with Prohibition and
    Depression, many executions ensued

7
History of the Death Penalty
  • After WWII, many nations stopped d.p. decline
    in U.S. in 1950s
  • Interpretation of Constitution under review
    loose interpreters thought d.p. necessary
    (elastic clause) Supreme Court in 1958 case
    called for evolving sense of decency in maturing
    society
  • Court practices called into question (handing
    judgment to jury) own views could decide case
    1972 S.C. ruled that d.p. resulted in arbitrary
    sentences suspended death penalty
  • The Supreme Court reinstated the Death Penalty in
    the U.S. in 1978 after a 10 year hiatus
  • In March the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 against
    capital punishment used on criminals who were
    minors at the time they committed their crimes
    (releasing 72 from Death Row)

8
More History
  • States started working to reestablish death
    penalty get rid of arbitrary rulings
    (unconstitutional view of d.p.)
  • Reforms separating trial into two trials
    (finding guilty, then deciding fate) see if
    sentences are equal to other states
  • Reforms led to S.C. reestablishing death penalty
    in 1977
  • Since moratorium on d.p. there have been 121
    exonerations (criminals sentenced to death found
    innocent
  • Currently 64 of nation supports d.p. (Gallup
    poll last year), and 50 support when option of
    life sentence w/o parole given

9
Court Cases
  • Trop v. Dulles (1958) Supreme Court ruled that
    interpretation of Constitution called for
    evolving standard of decency that marked the
    progress of a maturing society (was not a death
    penalty case, but provided fuel for
    abolishionists fire in ending d.p.)
  • U.S. v. Jackson (1968) S.C. ruled practice of
    handing fate of prisoner to jury unconstitutional
    b/c defendants could waive right to jury trial to
    avoid sentence
  • Furman v. Georgia (1972) Furman argued that
    capital cases resulted in arbitrary sentences
    S.C. agreed, ruled in favor of abolishing d.p.
  • Gregg v. Georgia, Jurek v. Texas, Proffitt v.
    Georgia all state cases dealing with reforms to
    system S.C. allowed states to begin sentencing
    again (1977)
  • (1989) S.C. ruled that retardation only a
    factor in ruling
  • Atkins v. Virginia (2002) unconstitutional to
    kill mentally retarted
  • Ropert v. Simmons (2005) criminals who were
    minors at time of arrest cannot be killed

10
Capital Offences Around the World
  • China has strike hard campaigns, where extreme
    measures (death) are used to crack down on
    problems like drugs and corruption in big
    business
  • Middle East adultery, pedophilia,
    homosexuality, conversion to other religion,
    drinking alcohol, other sins associated w/
    religion criminals can be killed, tortured,
    etc. legally under Islamic code
  • Germany was one of the 1st countries to end
    capital punishment in 1949 (currently only
    Belarus in Europe practices d.p.)

11
Current Situation in the U.S. states
  • Capital punishment is legal in 38 American states
    Texas, California, and Florida have highest
    death row populations
  • More than 3,500 offenders on death row in U.S.
  • In Texas, 412 offenders are on death row, 349
    dead from 82-05 most in US
  • It costs 61.58 a day per offender currently on
    Texas death row
  • California spends 90 million per year on death
    penalty
  • CA has 645 inmates on death row (executed 11
    since reinstatement of d.p.)

12
Pro Death Penalty
  • Some crimes are unforgivable
  • If used, some people may feel that there will be
    potential deterrence from future crime (scare
    factor)
  • If criminals are dead, no potential for escape
  • Murder violates humanity once committed, the
    criminal ceases to be a rational human being
  • Fulfillment of justice
  • Support in Bible
  • Self-defense

13
Con side
  • Violates a criminals right to life
  • Eye for an eye makes whole world blind
  • Society has changed views on issues like slavery
    and torture should do same with death penalty
  • Playing God (taking others lives) is immoral
  • Criminals sometimes found innocent after
    sentenced to death when cases are reexamined
    (more than 23 since 1900)
  • Murder (including self defense) is always wrong
  • Death penalty sets bad example for society
  • 3 Sellin studies showed that d.p. doesnt deter
    crime
  • Can sentence to life in prison

14
Application in California
  • a study conducted by the Santa Clara Law Review
    found that a defendant in CA who murders a white
    is
  • 4 times more likely to be sentenced to death than
    those who kill Latinos
  • 3 times more likely to be killed by the state
    than those who murder blacks
  • There are more black and Latino murder victims
    than whites

15
Does Race Contribute to Death
  • Eighty percent of the executions carried out in
    California (1990-99) were for the murders of
    white people when whites made up 28 of the
    homicide victims in CA
  • Tests proven that death doesnt deter crimein
    some cases encourages it
  • From 1995-2000. Federal Prosecutors sought the
    death penalty for 183 defendants, 74 were
    minorities
  • Of the 21 people on federal death row, as of
    2001-JUN, 81 percent were black or Hispanic.

16
Vengeful v. Merciful God
  • Genesis 96, Whoever sheds mans blood, shall
    die for his sin for God made man in his own
    image
  • Mosaic Code in the Pentateuch (613 Israeli laws
    some punishable by death - Bible requires death
    penalty for many crimes
  • And God said to Noah, "The end of all flesh has
    come before Me, for the earth is filled with
    violence through them and behold, I will destroy
    them..." (Gen. 612-13)
  • Jesus preached in NT to turn the other cheek
    (Mt. 538-39)
  • Saved Mary Magdalene from death by calling out
    others sins (John 87)
  • forgive those who trespass against you (Mt.
    615)
  • "Thou shalt not kill" (Exodus 2013)
  • Paul wrote that judgment should be reserved for
    God bless the ones who harm you, their fate is
    not in your hands (Rom. 1214, 17, 19)

17
The Churchs Stance
  • The Catholic Church has made it quite clear that
    they are against murder of any sort save
    extreme circumstances, a category they believe
    that capital punishment doesnt fall under
  • Pope John Paul capital punishment leads to a
    culture of death
  • Newly-elected Pope Benedict XVI played a lead
    role in developing the Catechism of the Catholic
    Church, which reflected a dramatic shift away
    from the Churchs acceptance of the death penalty
    during most of its 2,000-year history

18
History of the Churchs position
  • Early Church (first centuries A.D.) opposed death
    penalty
  • Have not always opposed death penalty
  • In 1980 Church declared opposition to c.p. b/c of
    improvements to retaining criminals in prison
    w/ those facilities, c.p. is unnecessary
  • Consistent ethic of life major point of
    catechism of the Catholic Church all life
    should be respected and valued, and only taken
    under extreme circumstances since we have
    prisons, there should be no executions (if there
    were no places to keep criminals the church might
    classify d.p. as legal due to extreme
    circumstance

19
More Reasons Behind Churchs Views
  • Catholicism was founded upon the death of Christ
    why practice the same methods as those who
    killed our Creators son?
  • God is the Lord of Life only He can judge who
    shall die and who shall live

20
Restatement of Ethical Questions
  • How does/can a state determine when to take a
    human life?
  • What actions can society justify in taking to
    protect itself from harmful criminals?
  • How does society determine which crimes are
    unforgivable?

21
Bibliography
  • http//www.tdcj.state.tx.us/stat/drowfacts.htm
  • http//teacher.deathpenaltyinfo.msu.edu/c/about/hi
    story/history-8.htm
  • http//www.americancatholic.org/Newsletters/CU/ac0
    195.asp
  • http//www.religioustolerance.org/executd.htm
  • http//www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/cp.htm
  • http//www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/article.php?did54
    3scid45
  • http//www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/lo
    cal/states/california/the_valley/12710933.htm
    (Santa Clara study)
  • http//sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f/c/a/2005/
    09/22/BAGVCERSJ81.DTL
  • http//www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Penalty
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