News44 mins ago
Time To End The Death Penalty On America?
For some reason I thought most Americans supported it but it seems not.
The president elect has vowed to try to end it officially and from this it would appear that the current administration thinks he has a good chance of success.
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/w orld-us -canada -552362 60
The president elect has vowed to try to end it officially and from this it would appear that the current administration thinks he has a good chance of success.
https:/
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Regardless of the horrific nature of the crimes you survey support the death penalty or you dint and to my mind anyone, apparently rushing through people’s deaths when they banged up for life anyway feels ... well I’m not sure what it feels. The same feeling I get when I see Trump purse his lips in that hideous O perhaps ...
Interesting read about the financial costs of the death penalty in America
https:/ /www.cr iminalj usticed egreehu b.com/h ow-much -does-i t-cost- to-exec ute-a-d eath-ro w-inmat e/
Another consideration is that many juries are more likely to file a 'not guilty' verdict in the case of murder where there is a death penalty, not necessarily because they are against the death penalty in itself but because they want to be even more sure that the accused is guilty - just in case they could be wrong
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Another consideration is that many juries are more likely to file a 'not guilty' verdict in the case of murder where there is a death penalty, not necessarily because they are against the death penalty in itself but because they want to be even more sure that the accused is guilty - just in case they could be wrong
By coincidence, I watched a film last night call Just Mercy about a wrongly convicted man on death row who was released when proven innocent https:/ /www.im db.com/ title/t t491663 0/?ref_ =nm_flm g_act_3 (great film by the way).
It's based on a true story, and being a true story at the end of the film they give a little narrative about what happened to the people involved, and there was a statistic that I found quite shocking...
1 in 9 people on death row are subsequently proven to be innocent.
Even for those that agree with the death penalty, surely an 11% 'mistake' rate is far too high, isn't it?
It's based on a true story, and being a true story at the end of the film they give a little narrative about what happened to the people involved, and there was a statistic that I found quite shocking...
1 in 9 people on death row are subsequently proven to be innocent.
Even for those that agree with the death penalty, surely an 11% 'mistake' rate is far too high, isn't it?
// Interesting read about the financial costs of the death penalty in America//
awful charade
they stopped producing one anaesthetic drug here( erm thiopentone possibly ) to prevent its sale to the Land of the Free so they cd send men to heaven with it - -
and so the Rep Governors (men, bag carriers) tried to buy direct from Hospitals ( no)
so some of the prison doctors tried to buy as physicians
( what putting on a monstrous thin voice - "hello I am doctor lindy loo and I need thiopentone for my sleepless patients. In fact I will send a military aircraft to pick it up as I need it so badly ....")
yeah sort of
awful charade
they stopped producing one anaesthetic drug here( erm thiopentone possibly ) to prevent its sale to the Land of the Free so they cd send men to heaven with it - -
and so the Rep Governors (men, bag carriers) tried to buy direct from Hospitals ( no)
so some of the prison doctors tried to buy as physicians
( what putting on a monstrous thin voice - "hello I am doctor lindy loo and I need thiopentone for my sleepless patients. In fact I will send a military aircraft to pick it up as I need it so badly ....")
yeah sort of
Viscount Kilmuir - not one of england's greatest jurists - said he liked the death penalty because - - - there was no appeal from it
judges really got off on their right to take a mans life by filling out a form ( er death warrant that is!). Justice Melford Stevenson ( no 2 in dead loss judges list carried his around for the rest of his life)
judges really got off on their right to take a mans life by filling out a form ( er death warrant that is!). Justice Melford Stevenson ( no 2 in dead loss judges list carried his around for the rest of his life)
I mentioned here previously that the average time spent on death row in the US is just over 20 years. The appeals process takes decades to complete an in that time a death sentence is estimated to cost 18x that of a lifer without parole in prison. And it doesn't really appear to work as a deterrent, them that will kill will kill regardless, its just the tariff they gamble with.
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