Friday, November 8, 2019

Death Penalty Essays (551 words) - Capital Punishment, Law, Penology

Death Penalty Essays (551 words) - Capital Punishment, Law, Penology Death Penalty The United states is the only western democracy that still practices capital punishment. There have been over 4050 executions since 1930. In 1994 alone, there were 257 executions in the United States. People who believe in capital punishment say that this dehumanizing process deters crime. This is false because the death penalty has been proven NOT to deter crime. In fact, during the 1980s, states practicing the death penalty averaged an annual rate of 7.5 criminal homicides per 100,000, while abolition states averaged a rate of 7.4 per 100,000. That means murder was actually MORE common in states that use the death penalty. Criminals irrationally perform crimes, therefore, life imprisonment ought to deter a rational person itself. Besides, no criminal commits a crime if he believes he will be caught. The death penalty is morally incorrect. Why do governments kill people to show other people that killing is wrong? Would society allow rape as the penalty for rape or the burning of arsonists homes as the penalty for arson. Every time we execute someone, we sink to the same level as the common killer. What is the difference between the state killing and an individual killing? The end result is the same....one more dead body, one more set of grieving parents, and one more cemetery slot. Every time we execute someone, we are desensitizing the value of human life. The death penalty is not now, nor has it ever been a more economical alternative to life imprisonment. A study by the New York State Defenders Association showed that the cost of a capital trial ALONE is more than double the cost of life imprisonment. They also concluded that a death penalty case costs approximately 42 percent more than a case resulting in a non-death sentence. Since 1976 the United States has spent 700 million dollars in it. Another reason to get rid of the death penalty is the possibility of error. Sometimes a person might be put to death who is innocent. At least 23 people have been executed who did not commit the crime they were accused of. And that is only those that we know of. When we execute an innocent person, the real killer is still on the streets, ready to victimize someone else. If the innocent person is executed then the case is closed forever. Or, at least until someone else gets killed by the real perpetrator. If the death penalty is not an effective way to deter crime, then what is? The only way is to prevent it from happening rather that enforce harsh punishment to scare off potential crimes. New York lowered crime rates by putting more police officers on the street, not by longer jail terms or death penalty. This was effective because if you think about it, if I was to rob a store, first I would look to see if any police officers were around. If I would see one riding around the block and another patrolling the streets, I would think twice about it. Also, the availability of handguns plays a major role in murder rates. It is a lot easier to kill someone by putting one bullet in their head rather than stabbing or strangling someone. If we decrease the availability of handguns then I guarantee there will be less murders. There are many ways to do it, but it is definitely time to, once and for all, EXECUTE the death penalty.

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