Abolition of Juvenile Death Penalty is a Good Start

On March 1, 2005, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution forbids the execution of killers who were under 18 when they committed their crimes, ending a practice used in 19 states. This is a good start. Next, we need to abolish the death penalty completely, for people of all ages.

The United States is the only Western democracy that still claims for itself the right to execute its citizens. Each year since 1976, three more nations have added their names to the list of countries that have abolished the death penalty. This worldwide trend towards abolition of the death penalty reflects the growing awareness that there are alternative punishments that are effective and which do not involve state-sponsored killing.

Amnesty International describes the death penalty as “the ultimate, irreversible denial of human rights.” By retaining the death penalty, the United States finds itself increasingly out of step with the rest of the world, aligned on this issue only with such backward nations as Afghanistan, Botswana, Cameroon, Chad, Cuba, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, and Mongolia. Furthermore, as a moral litmus test, it is interesting to note that most major religious denominations in the United States have statements opposing the death penalty.

Logically, it makes little sense for execution to be used to condemn killing. Such an act by the state is the mirror image of the criminal’s willingness to use physical violence against a victim. It is the premeditated and cold-blooded killing of a human being by the state in the name of “justice.” When someone is convicted of rape, we do not turn that person over to an official State Rapist to be treated in kind as punishment. Therefore, it is difficult to understand why some people find it appropriate to kill in order to show that killing is wrong. It offers society not further protection but further brutalization.

From a more practical perspective, studies have shown that the death penalty is applied in a discriminatory, arbitrary, and uneven manner, and is used disproportionately against racial minorities and the poor. For example, a recent study of death sentences in Philadelphia found that African-American defendants were almost four times more likely to receive the death penalty than were people of other ethnic origins who committed similar crimes. Where is the justice in that?

Some proponents of the death penalty mistakenly believe that it serves as a deterrent. However, it is incorrect to assume that people who commit such serious crimes as murder do so after rationally calculating the consequences. Often murders are committed in moments when emotion overcomes reason, or under the influence of drugs, alcohol or mental illness. Moreover, those who do commit premeditated serious crimes may decide to proceed despite the risks in the belief that they will not be caught. The key to deterrence in such cases is to increase the likelihood of detection, arrest and conviction. The death penalty is a harsh punishment, but it is not harsh on crime.

A striking example of the growing worldwide public support against the death penalty is the illumination of the Colosseum in Rome whenever a death sentence is suspended or commuted anywhere in the world. It is also illuminated whenever a country establishes a moratorium on executions or abolishes the death penalty. Perhaps someday the Colosseum with light up to celebrate the abolition of the death penalty in the United States, thereby symbolizing American society’s newly enlightened approach to criminal justice. In the meantime, we must work to promote justice, not revenge, one case at a time.

Murder is always a despicable act and a terrible tragedy. But killing the murderer will not bring the victim back.

Perhaps Mahatma Ghandi said it best: “An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind.”

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