The "New Case" Against the Death Penalty

rockin'robin

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Richmond, Va. – This year, state budgetary crises have given death penalty opponents their most successful argument yet – money.

Just two states have abolished the death penalty in the past 40 years, New Jersey in 2007 and New Mexico in March. The cost of capital punishment played a key role in both decisions, and is driving current legislative attempts to repeal the death penalty in a number of other states.

The bittersweet reality is that money, rather than morality, has become the tipping point for saving lives. Why?

Administering the death penalty is breathtakingly expensive. Contrary to popular opinion, it costs substantially more to execute people than to send them to prison for the rest of their lives.

In California, which houses the nation's largest death row, it costs about $137 million annually to maintain the state's death penalty system. The state has conducted only 11 executions since reinstating the death penalty in 1978, bringing the average cost per execution to $250 million. That's right – a quarter of a billion dollars per execution.

California's estimated cost of administering a system without capital punishment (imposing instead a maximum sentence of life without the possibility of parole) is $11 million annually, which means the state could save $126 million per year if it rescinded a penalty that it almost never uses. That's big money – money that could be allocated to healthcare and to education, money that could put more police officers on the streets and take more killers off them.

California's costs are on the high side nationally, but the phenomenon is not unique. Maryland recently estimated that the death penalty has cost the state $186 million since it was reinstated in 1978 – an average of $37.2 million for each of the state's five executions during that same period.

Two years ago, New Jersey calculated that the death penalty had cost over $250 million since its reinstatement in 1983 – and for all the money invested, the state had not a single execution to show for it. Little wonder New Jersey decided to cut its losses and close death row.

And why is the death penalty so expensive?

When the stakes are life and death, everything costs more.

It costs more to investigate – three times more, one study concludes, because in the post-trial penalty phase, the defendant's entire life will be put before the jury.

When the stakes are life and death, everything costs more.

It costs more to investigate – three times more, one study concludes, because in the post-trial penalty phase, the defendant's entire life will be put before the jury.

It costs more to litigate – up to 16 times more, the same study concludes, because jury selection is painstakingly slow and capital cases are complicated, so they take longer to try. That, in turn, requires courts to bring in additional judges to handle the overflow from already overcrowded dockets.

And it costs more to carry out death sentences – an estimated 21 times more – because lengthy appeals follow a death sentence, and death row incarceration is expensive.

Sure, we could cut the lengthy appeals, as many death penalty proponents advocate.

But the last major study on death penalty appeals found that 2 of every 3 death sentences were reversed for serious error, with prosecutorial misconduct and ineffective assistance of counsel topping the list. These aren't technicalities. These are cases where prosecutors concealed evidence favorable to the defense – cases where people with their lives at stake were defended by grossly incompetent lawyers. The better answer is to have better trials, and that brings us back to money.

Vengeance comes at a high price. In these austere times, that price is changing the script of the death penalty debate. In the past, a vote against capital punishment left politicians vulnerable to the charge of being "soft on crime." Now the same vote is couched in terms of fiscal responsibility. Because it saves taxpayers money, it has become the right thing to do.

Money is the new morality.

The turn itself is significant. In the United States, we have now exonerated some 130 people on death row. We have dozens of studies proving racial discrimination in the administration of death, and case after case showing the persistence of woefully inadequate defense counsel. On their own, these issues have not moved us.

Abolishing the death penalty didn't make sense until it made dollars and cents.

In the drive to eliminate capital punishment, I suppose a money argument that works is better than a moral argument that doesn't. But there is a larger cost to monetizing the death penalty debate, a cost to sparing an individual's life simply because it is not worth taking. We have reason enough to make the right call on the death penalty without it.

The new case against the death penalty
 
Then change police into "Judge Dredd", it save heck of money.
 
Ms.Lain is dead wrong

Ms.Lain is dead wrong within her op/ed "The new case against the death penalty" (Corinna Barrett Lain, CSM, May 11, 2009)

The cost of the death penalty played no role in either the New Jersey or New Mexico repeal.

In New Jersey, the cost Ms. Lain used was calculated by an anti death penalty group and the NJ death penalty commission concluded they couldn't confirm cost differentials between the death penalty and a life sentence. (1)

In New Mexico, the Legislative Finance Committee used a North Carolina study, which they misinterpreted. It really found that the death penalty was less expensive than a true life sentence. Of course, a North Carolina study has no relevance in New Mexico. The legislature was made aware of those facts prior to voting for repeal. (2)

A review of the entire repeal process showed that both repeals occurred only because a majority of anti death penalty legislators wanted to end the death penalty. This was clear in New Jersey, where the adamantly anti death penalty Governor, Corzine, stacked a death penalty commission with 14 people, only one of whom was confirm ably pro death penalty. Predictably, the final vote on the commission was 13-1, for repeal. (1)

From The (Santa Fe) New Mexican newspaper: "Friday's decisive state Senate vote to repeal the death penalty in New Mexico was a direct result of November's election of several new lawmakers." The repeal bill's sponsor, Rep. Gail Chase said she was able to get the bill through because the 2008 election added three more senators to the Democratic majority" "District Attorney Lem Martinez, who spoken against the repeal bill, said "the Senate vote was the result of Obama's coattails." ("Senate backs death-penalty repeal", Steve Terrell, 3/13/09)

Ms. Lain blindly accepted the ACLU's California death penalty cost evaluations, which no objective party would do. California refused to fund a full review of costs.

Ms. Lain, again, blindly, states: "the last major study on death penalty appeals found that two of every three death sentences were reversed for serious error, with prosecutorial misconduct and ineffective assistance of counsel topping the list."

Ms. Lain's assessment is based on an inaccurate, misleading study (3) and, again, shows a lack of fact checking.

The rate of overturning death penalty cases because of error is 20%-25% (4), not 67%. 35% of all death penalty cases are overturned because of problems with the legal statute, the conviction or the sentencing. In 512 cases, or 6.7%, they overturned because of the legal statute, not because of case error, serious or otherwise, in the conviction or sentencing phase. Meaning that the "error rate", because of trial error is 28%. However, it is even lower than 28%, because a number of cases are overturned because of new law, law not in effect at the time of trial. Therefore, when looking at true error, in overturning of death penalty cases, we are looking at 20%-25%, not the absurd 67%.

Ms. Lain cited the 130 exonerated from death row, Again, she didn't fact check. These "exoneration" numbers are based on the deceptive claims of an anti death penalty group,
The Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), that redefined "exonerated" and "innocent" and shoehorned a bunch of cases into their perverse definitions.

Depending upon reviews, by the New York Times, a federal judge and many others, there is a 60-83% error rate in those 130 "exonerated" claims. I conclude that around 25 actual innocents have been identified and released from death row in the modern era (5), or about 0.3% of the 8000 so sentenced.

Ms Lain, yes, there are many studies which allegedly show racial discrimination in the imposition of the death penalty, but you avoided all of those that say there is none (6). Not surprising, based upon you record of other claims within your op/ed.

No, Ms. Lain, money is not the new morality in the death penalty debate. It is but the latest issue, misused by anti death penalty folks, and parroted by others, like you, who either don't fact check or hope to push the deceptive anti death penalty agenda forward.

Maybe the new morality should involve fact checking.

1) See my 4 responses, a thorough review and rebuke of the NJ repeal, after the article by anti death penalty New Jersey Assembly Speaker Roberts.
http://hallnj.blogspot.com/2007/12/case-for-repealing-death-penalty.htmle

Third response is "Based Upon Budget Report, LWOP may increase costs in New Jersey"

2) a) "Rebuttal to Governor Richardson - Repeal of the Death Penalty in New Mexico"
Death Penalty Articles

b) "Why did Gov. Richardson repeal the death penalty? His legacy"
Death Penalty Articles

3) read all the links at
Leibman Responses

4) Capital Punishment, 2005, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Appendix table 2, page 13, 1973-2005, http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/cp05.pdf

5) "The death row 130 "innocence" scam,
Death Penalty Articles

6) RACE: A Death Penalty Primer - No bias in death penalty sentencing
Death Penalty Articles
 
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