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The Death Penalty
An analysis of the death penalty: it's history, the pros and cons of using the death penalty and possible alternatives. -- 2,073 words; MLA

Death Penalty
An argument against the death penalty. -- 2,304 words; MLA

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This paper discusses issues around the death penalty and concludes that there is little suggestion that the debate surrounding the death penalty will ever be resolved. -- 2,815 words; APA

The Death Penalty
This paper presents the pros and cons of the death penalty. -- 2,070 words; APA

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This paper discusses that the death penalty is not an effective deterrent. -- 2,265 words;

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THE PRICE FOR DEATH PENALTY

Costs of the Death Penalty. 
James Wheeler 3/6/00 Government 400.3 The Costs of the Death Penalty in the United States
Capital punishment has existed in the US since colonial times. Since then, more than
13,000 people have been legally executed. Today, there are only twelve states which do
not have the death penalty: Alaska, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan,
Minnesota, North Dakota, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia and Wisconsin, as well as
Washington D.C. The locations of these states are important because they illustrate the
lack of ideological homogeneity usually associated with geographical regions of the US.
The methods of execution are as varied as their locations. The word "capital" in capital
punishment refers to a person's head, as, historically, execution was performed by
cutting off the head. Today, there are generally five methods of execution used in the
US. Hanging, the gas chamber, lethal injection, the electric chair and the firing squad
are all used, some notably less than others. In 1930, the Bureau of Justice Statistics
began keeping stats on capital punishment nationwide. From 1930 until 1967, 3859 people
were executed in the US, 3334 for murder (www. uaa). That's an average of almost 105
people per year, three out of five of which were executed in the South. By 1967, all but
ten states had laws for capital punishment. Nationally, strong pressure was steadily
placed on the federal government by those opposed to capital punishment which resulted in
an unofficial moratorium on executions until 1976. Officially, the Supreme Court ruled
capital punishment unconstitutional in 1972. In Furman v. Georgia,408 U.S. 238 (1972), a
5-4 Supreme Court decision ruled that CP laws in their present form were "arbitrary and
capricious" and constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth
Amendment as well as due process of the Fourteenth Amendment (www.aclu). In its decision,
the Court voted that the death penalty statutes were vague and ambiguous, providing
little guidance to juries in deciding whether to apply the death penalty. This caused
states which still wanted the death penalty to revise their legislation to satisfy the
Supreme Court's objection to the arbitrary nature of execution. State governments tried
two new strategies to be more specific and direct in death penalty trials: guided
discretion and the mandatory death penalty. In Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153 (1976)
among others, the Supreme Court gave sentencing courts the right to impose sentences of
death for specific crimes and allowed a two-stage ("bifurcated") trial (www.cpa). In the
first stage, the guilt or innocence of the defendant is established, while in the second
stage, the jury or the judge (depending on the state) determines the sentence. Mandatory
death penalty for specific crimes, on the other hand, was deemed unconstitutional because
of cases such as Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. 280 (1976). These rulings lead to
the modification of each state's statutes regarding the death penalty (www.uaa). The
moratorium ended and executions resumed in January 1977. Capital punishment remains, as
it ahs always been, controversial and heavily debated on both philosophical (moral)
grounds as well as on a strictly financial basis. Both sides, however, seem to be able to
crunch the numbers and make their arguments in a way which supports their claims. Today,
one of the major points of debate about the death penalty is that of cost. Some of those
who support the death penalty defend it as a cost-effective alternative to life in
prison. Those who oppose capital punishment conversely say that it costs a significant
amount more to kill someone than to incarcerate them for life. What tends to occur is
that advocates of the death penalty focus the debate on post trial costs, particularly
incarceration, while opponents focus on the trial cost itself. Time Magazine (as of
12/95) found that, nationwide, the average cell cost is $24,000 per year and the average
maximum-security cell cost is $75,000 per year (www.prodeathpenalty). Illustrating how
statistics are made to fit the agendas, the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), a
leading anti- death penalty organization, claims that, in Texas, a state known for its
liberal use of the death penalty, it would cost three times as much to execute someone
than to incarcerate them for forty years at the maximum cell cost (www.essential). The
DPIC cites a cost of $2.3 million to execute in Texas. $75,000 per year for
maximum-security costs multiplied by forty years equals $3.0 million. This use of numbers
and math add to the controversy by enabling both sides to give strong, if somewhat wrong,
arguments. Capital trials are much larger, more tedious, and much more expensive at every
step than other murder trials. Pretrial motions, expert witness fees, jury selection and
the necessity of two trials per Gregg v. Georgia make capital trials extremely costly,
even before the appeals process begins. Also, if the person is given a sentence of life
in prison, the state pays the cost of the incarceration on top of the expensive trial. A
single trial can mean near bankruptcy, tax increases, and the laying off of personnel
such as police officers. New Jersey, for example, laid off more than 500 police officers
in 1991 (www.essential). At the same time, it was implementing a death penalty which
would cost an estimated $16 million per year, more than enough to have the same number of
officers at a salary of $30,000 per year. The irreversibility of the death sentence
requires courts to follow heightened due process in the preparation and course of the
trial. The death penalty costs California $90 million annually beyond the ordinary costs
of the justice system- $78 million of that is incurred at the trial level
(www.essential). The high price of execution is most deeply felt in the counties
responsible for both prosecution and defense of capital defendants. For example, Okanogan
County Commissioners in Washington delayed pay raises for the county's 350 employees,
decided not to replace 2 of 4 public- health nurses and put a hold on updating computers
across the county because of anticipated death penalty trial costs (www.essential). In
Imperial County, California, as well as Lincoln County, Georgia, the county commissioners
refused to pay the bill for defense costs of men facing the death penalty, citing that
the costs would bankrupt the county. Commissioners are more and more frequently sent to
jail for failure to pay. Similar to what occurred in New Jersey, in Sierra County,
California, authorities had to cut police services to pursue death penalty prosecutions
(www.religioustolerance). Right now, there are more people on death row than at any time
in the nation's history. The number of states having death penalty as an option continues
to increase, while the list of states actually carrying out executions has grown to over
twenty with four new states added each year. With the enormous costs to try, convict,
incarcerate, handle appeals and execute these inmates, many people are searching for
alternate means of dealing with these criminals. There are several possible alternatives
to the death penalty. Some are taken from current state practices, some from practices
used in the international community, and even those once deemed unconstitutional, which
may deserve a second look. The first of those alternatives is community policing.
Community policing is a strategy for utilizing police officers not just as people who
react to crime, but as people who solve problems by becoming an integral part of the
neighborhoods they protect. Opponents of capital punishment say that such programs area a
cost- effective way to deter crime. The programs work best when governments can afford to
add officers, rather than taking from existing numbers, leaving other areas unattended.
Another alternative would be to reinstate the mandatory death sentences for specific
crimes, which was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1976. If mandatory
minimums and "3 strikes" are constitutional and are used for offenses such as drugs,
which are relatively minor to crimes such as murder, than maybe mandatory death sentences
should be given a second look. Imposition of the death penalty is extremely rare. Since
1967, there has been one execution for every 1600 murders, or .006%. As the New York
Times noted in 1994, even if U. S. executions were multiplied by a factor of 10, the
would still constitute an infintesimal element of criminal justice (www.cpa). There have
been approximately 500,000 murders and 358 executions from 1967- 1996. Mandatory death
sentences would cut down severely on crime and cost. Mandatory death sentences would be
more effective if there was also a limit on the number of appeals which someone on death
row was entitled to. The average inmate on death row is there for approximately 10 years
(www.prodeathpenalty), racking up countless appeals, which are extremely expensive. These
appeals, on top of incarceration costs, make the death penalty as expensive as it is.
Although appeals are a mandate for those on death row in order to cut down on the risk of
executing the innocent, a limit of perhaps 6 or 7 years should probably do the trick. The
most popular alternative is, morally and financially, is life without parole. This is
shown to be cheaper than execution. Although, as previously mentioned, the numbers can be
fudged somewhat to attain a certain favorable appearance. In a 1993 survey, it was
reported that most Americans would oppose the death penalty if convicted murderers were
sentenced to life without the possibility of parole under any conditions. Life without
parole is the alternative which is most accepted internationally. Today, either by law or
in practice, all of Western Europe and most of the entire world has abolished the death
penalty. The United Nations General Assembly wrote a formal resolution calling for the
abolition of capital punishment worldwide. Some countries, such as Italy, refuse to
extradite accused murderers to the US because of the possibility that they might be
executed. Canada's homicide rate has dropped 27% since they abolished the death penalty
in 1976. The international community opposes the United States' use of execution,
especially of those under the age of 18. Only Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia,
Yemen, and the US execute people for crimes committed as a minor. Of these nations, the
US has executed more juveniles (9) since 1990 than all the others combined
(www.religioustolerance). At the end of 1997, there were about 3222 prisoners on death
row in 34 states (www.essential). Although alternatives for capital punishment are there
or could be implemented into legislation, recent laws have expanded the number of crimes
for which capital punishment can be applied. Public approval of the death penalty remains
high nationwide. The public tends to view execution as a deterrent to crime, whether or
not it actually is. This is important because politicians use the death penalty as a
symbolic stance for being tough on crime. Capital punishment will continue to be
controversial as long as it exists because the very nature of the policy polarizes
people's views and allows for wide interpretation of its legal, moral and financial
legitimacy. As public policy, it is constantly being revised, updated and legislated. As
is any piece of public policy in the US, there will be no radical change to the process,
just slow incremental changes to this controversial issue. 
Bibliography 
Bibliography 1. American Civil Liberties Union Freedom Network
www.aclu.org/library/case_against_death.html 2. Capital Punishment: Arguments for Life
and Death www.cpa.ca/cjbs/1996/ful_ogloff.html 3. Capital Punishment; the Death Penalty
www.religioustolerance.org/execute.html 4. Death Penalty Information Center
www.essential.org/dpic/dpic.r08.html 5. Death Penalty and Sentencing Information
www.prodeathpenalty.com/DP.html 6. Justice Center Web Site
www.uaa.alaska.edu/just/death/history.html 

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