Statistically, Britain does not have a major problem
with murder. In fact it has just about the lowest incidence of murder in the civilised world. Murder is not, typically,
the British method of resolving problems, unlike
S. Africa or the USA.
In the UK, murder is usually 'domestic'; man kills
wife, etc. - a crime of a 'one-off' nature.
Even prior to 1965, capital punishment was a rarity, and
rightly so, as Timothy Evans would testify. God forbid
that our laws ever make that ghastly mistake again.
Some states in the USA maintain the death penalty, but
the sentence is not death; typically it is death preceded
by 10 or 12 years on 'Death-Row'. This is justice,
American style. Does it reduce the incidence of
murder in the USA ? Ask our American friends.