The problem is when the jury convicts and the prosecution gets their death sentence when reasonable doubt exists. I've seen at least one case that I can think of off the top of my head, where doubt existed as to the person's guilt. They were convicted, anyway. (At least the one case I can think of, the convicted were not however, sentenced to death)
THAT is a problem. My problem is not with the punishment itself, only in the .8% of cases where it is inappropriately used. Give me a few to peruse those links. But my thought is that none of those people were accused of being repeat offenders. I will read them, and amend myself if necessary.
Which is why I think the death penalty needs to be reserved for only the most heinous, and repeat offenders at that.
It seems unlikely to me that someone linked to 3 separate deaths at 3 separate crime scenes would be innocent.
While I don't support the use of the death penalty in the case of most mentally ill people, I do believe that if they are murderously ill, like, they have no sense of morality at all and their broken wiring causes them to kill for the sake of killing, put them down. That kind of person will never be able to be integrated into society. Why do we put our prison guards and health care workers at risk by exposing THEM to people like that, let alone their fellow inmates, let alone *thinking* we fixed them and releasing them and having them go on another killing spree. I'm sure that case is extremely rare. Maybe it doesn't even exist, but is one of the few where I'd be ok with giving them the death penalty. Again, repeat offender. Not necessarily in a one time instance, although they should be incarcerated for life, and ideally would have NO opportunity for parole.
Ever see the movie Backdraft? With the pyro (who killed people in multiple fires) coming up for parole and the fireman has to go before the board every so often and show them that his remorse is all an act, so he stays behind bars?
Shouldn't have to happen.
THAT is a problem. My problem is not with the punishment itself, only in the .8% of cases where it is inappropriately used. Give me a few to peruse those links. But my thought is that none of those people were accused of being repeat offenders. I will read them, and amend myself if necessary.
Which is why I think the death penalty needs to be reserved for only the most heinous, and repeat offenders at that.
It seems unlikely to me that someone linked to 3 separate deaths at 3 separate crime scenes would be innocent.
While I don't support the use of the death penalty in the case of most mentally ill people, I do believe that if they are murderously ill, like, they have no sense of morality at all and their broken wiring causes them to kill for the sake of killing, put them down. That kind of person will never be able to be integrated into society. Why do we put our prison guards and health care workers at risk by exposing THEM to people like that, let alone their fellow inmates, let alone *thinking* we fixed them and releasing them and having them go on another killing spree. I'm sure that case is extremely rare. Maybe it doesn't even exist, but is one of the few where I'd be ok with giving them the death penalty. Again, repeat offender. Not necessarily in a one time instance, although they should be incarcerated for life, and ideally would have NO opportunity for parole.
Ever see the movie Backdraft? With the pyro (who killed people in multiple fires) coming up for parole and the fireman has to go before the board every so often and show them that his remorse is all an act, so he stays behind bars?
Shouldn't have to happen.
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