Nick Gillespie | December 13, 2004
Scott Peterson gets the death penalty for the brutal murder of his pregnant wife Laci two years ago on Christmas Eve. If anyone deserves to be executed, surely it is Scott Peterson, who acted in a completely premeditated fashion, showed no remorse, and on and on.
And I guess that's the question: If anyone deserves to be executed...
What say ye, Hit & Run regulars, are you in favor of the death penalty or not, in a case that offers almost absolute clarity on all the important issues (that is, no serious question of guilt and/or extenuating circumstances)?
I'm an anti-death-penalty pansy myself, believing that the state should use as little force as needed to protect its citizens (and punish its malefactors). But cases such as this one certainly give occasion for reconsideration of that POV.
Recent Reason Online death penalty cols here, here, and here.
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Con. The reason why has less to do with my Catholic background
than my belief that the death penalty does this disservice of
letting the guilty suffer less than if they were in the general
prison population.
Someone (Blue Comedy Tour Member Ron White) recently opined that
some people are prepared to die, but aren't prepared to like "grape
jelly from Thundernuts' ass crack until Thundernuts c***s."
Peterson does not deserve to avoid this type of extrajudicial
punishment.
imho, a big problem with execution is that it's non-reversible.
if someone's wrongly imprisoned, at least they can be compensated.
while those who have been proven innocent by dna are few, it
worries me. how many more are innocent? i'd rather have 100
criminals free than 1 innocent behind bars. (many see it the other
way, though.) i'd like to see a higher level of proof required for
execution.
i do think life in prison is certainly worse than execution.
I don't trust the government. Why should I trust it (and it is
an "it") with my life?
I think all people convicted to life sentences (or sentences any
reasonable person knows are equal to life sentences) should have
execution as an option. And before anyone says it's unfair that
convicts get that right: I think suicide should be a right for all
of us. (And I can't imagine how that statement could possibly
derail this thread.)
There are scum who are wastes of skin, but I'm willing to let them
stew in a prison on the off chance that they aren't guilty of what
they were convicted for. I say "off chance" because I have trust in
the justice system. But to support the death penalty, I'd need
faith. I have no reason to have faith in the system.
And by the way: Mumia did it, but I'm still against the death
penalty.
I was pretty heavily against the death penalty until I saw
The Life of David Gale and decided it's not such a bad
idea after all.
No, I'm still against it. But mostly for practical reasons like the
racial spread, the expense, and most importantly the negation of
any possiblity of being freed by DNA evidence and/or thawed out by
Wesley Snipes.
I'm all for seeing him burn. The man's a monster and the world
is better off without him. Moreover, he's not worth the cost it
would take to keep him alive.
And, for what it's worth (I don't know if it's only California),
but the jury's death penalty sentence was technically a
recommendation and the judge still has the discretion to sentence
him to something less than death.
if someone's wrongly imprisoned, at least they can be
compensated.
Unless they live in England, in which case they can be charged for
room and board.
Peterson as a poster-boy for proper application of the death
penalty? Is this some dark humor I'm missing?
It seems to me that there was hardly any evidence linking him to
the crime, other than him being an all-around jerk and adulterer.
But that leaves a lot of room for reasonable doubt.
I have not followed the trial closely, but this hardly seems an
open-and-shut case. Can anyone correct me?
My position is sortof like Clinton on abortion: painless, legal,
and rare. I would tend to reserve death penalty only for those who
have already earned life and then commit some other heinous crime.
For example, murdered someone, then killed a cop who came to arrest
him. Or, already in prison for life and then killed a prison
guard.
I think that the death penalty should be rare. IF nothing else, it
tends to hurt a persons right to appeal or to bring forward new
evidence if they are already dead. However, if it did not exist,
there would be no disincentive for people who had already earned
life not to just keep killing to try to save themselves from
jail.
Sorry, CJP, I can't disagree with you at all. No physical
evidence, no witness, no real motive (the Texans will rip me for
that last one). Remind me not to cheat on my wife, for
chrissakes.
You know what death penalty sentencing really made me reflect was
the O.J. conviction. Oh wait! Silly me....
Opposed. Morally and practically, and beyond.
Morally: I am opposed to killing except in self defense. When a
government of the people kills, then I am contributing to that
death. (And no, I do not accept the rubbish that St. Paul used
(possibly as code) that government derives its moral authority from
God -- I can't see either Bush or Clinton as God's appointed ones).
So, morally, every time the government kills, it's a stain on my
soul.
Practically: The government screws everything up. It's like a child
that can't be trusted with a match or they'll burn the house down.
And you want them to go out and kill lots of people, but only if
they're guilty. Right.
Conspiratorially: The U.S. has something like 5% of the world's
population and 25% of the world's prison population. Now my
preference is for this to be solved by the government realizing
that some criminal laws need to be scrapped. But what if some idiot
legislators decide they can reduce prison population by just adding
to the death penalty categories? Death penalty for smuggling pot,
maybe? (Newt Gingrich actually proposed that one once).
This is one of the few issues I waver back and forth on. I have
recently leaned con, swayed by the number of people freed by DNA
evidence. But at the same time the death penalty is a very
effective deterrent of recidivism in the individual executed. I
know there are more than a few families who would sleep easier at
night knowing there was no possibility outside of a Jerry
Brookheimer film that the murderer of their loved one would get
free.
As to the "life in prison is a worse punishment" crowd--think for a
moment if you were unjustly imprisoned and you had to face that.
Sure I make jokes about "pound you in the ass prison", but at the
same time, it's not a way to encourage those with less than life
sentences to do well--rather, it encourages them to commit crimes
out of self defense and gets them in the habit, so to speak.
Can you really be compensated if you get AIDS in prison?
are you in favor of the death penalty or not
I'm against it where citizens are concerned, due to concerns about
the execution of innocents and a feeling that it sets a bad
precident when governments start killing their own people. I'm for
it in cases where the suspect confesses, since it's just a form of
suicide at that point.
Where non-citizens are concerned I view death penalty cases as
extremely small-scale defensive wars against hostile outside
forces.
I don't see how this changes much. The problem is that there is
never any pressing reason to take someone's life: all the other
justifications for killing people are because it's necessary:
there's no other way (such as in war, and so forth). With CP,
there's no urgency, no necessity. We kill people out of choice
because we believe they deserve to die even though there are other
viable options... well that's exactly what murderers do. People
have all sorts of opinions on who deserves to live and who deserves
to die: apparently if you stick a feather on your cap and call
yourself a nation-state that makes you more qualified to decide, or
something?
And I have to agree: for someone to get the DP in a case with no
physical evidence or witnesses is a little scary.
"Moreover, he's not worth the cost it would take to keep him
alive."
A life in prison in many cases costs less than death penalties
because of all the public expense legal fees.
I have always been pro-death penalty. But I usually reserve that for those who would harm children. Nothing gets my blood boiling like hearing another child has been molested/tortured/killed. Those that would harm someone so innocent doesnt' deserve to have another breath.
i have to recommend this dvd: mr. death. interesting tale of how
a guy ended up an expert on execution and then a holocaust
denier.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0192335/
Nick may be a pansy, but he's pretty sadistic to get this group going on an issue like this. Though it's not too bad yet. Wait till the day shift gets in.
As to my opposition to the death penalty; what tom vier at 10:38
PM said in his first paragraph.
As to the Peterson Case; were I on the jury, I would have voted for
2nd degree murder, but not 1st. I think that he probably did
pre-meditate the murder, but there is no proof beyond a reasonable
doubt. So I say, confine him for life.
Even if the execution of the mentally ill, the mentally retarded, child offenders, and the innocent were not practised in parts of the US, I would oppose capital punishment, for I have assented to the notion that all men are endowed with the unalienable right to Life and that the only valid role of the State is to secure our rights.
Opposed.
As others above have stated, the government is utterly
untrustworthy.
While there are a few completely evil wastes of life where I could
argue that death is appropriate, I'm not willing to confer that
level of moral authority to what are essentially bureaucrats.
Additionally, until the violations that one can be imprisoned for
are reduced to the absolute minimum necessary (those violations
that are limited to actions that directly abrogate anothers' rights
to life and property), the system doesn't have any ethical leg to
stand on, especially as regards the death penalty.
I'm opposed. Death row is just another government program -
unreliable and expensive.
Oh, and to the person that said "it's not worth paying to keep him
alive," it sounds like you're assuming that the bailiff will now
take him out back and show him the business end of his
sidearm.
I'm pretty sure that the death penalty is actually more expensive,
what with all the appeals.
Support. For premediated, first-degree murder, death should be
the expected result. Then, and only then, will we know for sure if
the death penalty has a significant deterrent effect. We already
know that a half-assed one (or, more precisely, a
one-sixteenth-assed one) doesn't.
Pro or con, I don't understand Nick's question as to "if anyone
deserves to be executed." Of course they do. The real question is
when, and under what circumstances, it is appropriate for the state
to give its thugs what they deserve. Sometimes, it's clearly not
(raping rapists, for example).
Let this be the first day-shifter to say that Amber
whats-her-name was pretty hot. NPR had no coverage of this case
thank god, so my knowledge is limited to what I saw on airport CNN,
but she seemed the perfect combination of skeevy physical therapist
meets swingers club closet BDSM type. In other words probably the
exact opposite of his goody two shoes can't be bothered for sex
pregnant wife.
As for CP, I'm morally opposed on the principle of too much gov't
power. However, I always thought that a good sound bite would be
that "I'm against the death penalty but in favor of the 'dungeon
penalty'". Al Sharpton, are you listening?
I'm against it based solely on the fact that supposedly it costs
more to execute someone than to put them in free room and board for
the rest of their natural life. I say if we can save all the time
and money then why bother?
There's a bunch of cost analysis junk on Google...
I'm confused. Either "The man's a monster and the world is better off without him." (Justin, 10:44PM) or "No physical evidence, no witness, no real motive" (The Juice Is Loose, 11:01PM). I have never given a s--t about this case--and I don't care to wade through the reams of overblown fluff surely streaming forth from the major media right now--but now with the death penalty involved, I am slightly curious as to how the state can put a man to death on no evidence. Is there any evidence or not?
Opposed. For several of the reasons listed above, as well as for the fact that it never seems to be applied evenly. There's no real evidence that shows Scott Peterson had anything other than motive to kill her, and he gets the needle, while a guy like Charles Manson gets a prison cell after having a much stronger link to several worse crimes.
In theory I do not oppose the death penality, but in practice there appears to be far too much error for me to support it (though obviously if the practice were to improve significantly I would stop being opposed to it).
Rhywun -- it appears from all the news I've read (which is
little, but more than zero) that there is essentially no physical
evidence linking him to the killing(s), nor a confession. The
motive appears to be "he was having an affair," and at least one
juror was convinced by the fact that he said he was fishing near
the place where the bodies were eventually found.
If I'm not missing some huge facts here, I find it appalling that
he may be put to death on such a flimsy case. The jurors, when
interviewed, seemed pretty foolish about their reasoning -- talking
about how he seemed emotionally unaffected and so forth.
For the record, it seems to me that he's more likely guilty than
innocent. But I'm told we have a higher standard of guilt here in
this country...
If you can't justify the death penalty, how can you ever justify
war? Does anyone, ever, have the right to kill someone else in self
defense?
I'm definitely pro DP. As nebulous as the term is, "society" (or
"the nation" or whatever) has "rights" and "interests", such as the
right of self defense and an interest in not being murdered. Ending
the life of premeditated murderers is, in my view, a form of
justified self defense.
The only way out of this conclusion that I can see is to become an
anarchist, which I'm not.
I agree there should be a higher standard of proof for the DP. The
case must be solid (and I don't see that it is for Mr. Scott -- I'd
lock him up instead). With a rigorous standard of proof required,
the instance of innocent convictions will be statistically tiny.
Sure, gov't makes mistakes just like each of us. But wander just
about 1/2 a step further down this road, and you find yourself
entirely paralyzed, unable to make any decisions about anything.
"Gee, I dunno, I'm not sure....gee......" People who live by that
philosophy do not carve out great civilizations.
But if the postings here are at all representative of the US at
large, I can fully understand why we Americans are so squeemish
about the DP.
Squeemish -- that's a good word to describe what I see the US
intellectual climate becoming general. Slam me for it if you will,
but I increasingly think that We the People do not believe in our
own vision anymore. This, more than anything else, shall be our
ultimate undoing.
Like Gary, I tend to support the death penalty in theory
(there's nothing inherently wrong with killing a vicious
criminal--it's no more an initiation of force than imprisoning him
is) but oppose it in practice, because we seem to be killing
innocent people.
However, there are circumstances for which I think it's
appropriate. For instance, I suspect that if we captured and
imprisoned Osama Bin Laden he would present a major security risk,
with terrorists trying to free him and some such. In those cases,
where we both have effective certainty that the individual is
guilty and see a significant security risk in keeping him alive and
in prison, the death penalty makes sense.
Terry: you say "Ending the life of premeditated murderers is, in
my view, a form of justified self defense."
But the DP isn't shooting a guy who just pulled a gun on you (which
I believe everyone has the right to do). We don't have to pick
between killing a criminal and letting him roam the streets. We can
afford to be methodical, careful, and -- dare I say it --
reasoned.
If you want to "defend society," there's lots of room for creative
solutions. For starters, here's a no-brainer: lifelong lock-up with
no chance of parole, for starters. Is that decisional paralysis? If
we go with that, have We the People Lost our Vision?
I've been against the death penalty ever since the Bush I speech endorsing "death penalty for drug kingpins"...whe the state talks about death for something you don't even think should be a crime, it's time to shut it down. Who wants to cede the government that kind of power anyway?
Terry the difference between the death penalty and killing in self defense is that the later is calculated to preserve an innocent person's life (your own or someone you are defending) at the expense of an intended murderer. The former does not protect anyone but merely punishes someone who is already a murderer. So the case for self-defense is stronger than the case for imposing the death penalty.
I like the Mass Gov. Romney's standard. You make the bar high
and hard to hit. This is mostly because I don't trust the crim
justice system rather than squeamishness. The problem is there are
too many innocents and guys get the death penalty on emotional
crap, like what happened to Peterson. He's obviously a shitbag, but
did he do it? I can't say that I know.
Guys like McVeigh and OBL, give them the chair (though those guys,
I wouldn't mind them getting reamed). If beyond a reasonable doubt
was true in practice, I'd be cool with the way it's currently
arranged. However, it's not, so I'd want a highedr bar.
I could give all sorts of principled reasons to oppose the death
penalty, but most people will say that they are rubbish. So I'll
stick to an eminently practical one:
The state shouldn't administer an irreversible sanction except when
absolutely necessary to defend somebody else from an irreversible
harm (hence the distinction between war and criminal justice, and
the distinction between death sentences handed down by the courts
and a cop shooting a suspect in self defense). Otherwise you're
letting an entity with a LONG track record of mistakes do something
that can't be reversed.
It's easy to point to Tim McVeigh and Ted Bundy and say sure, go
ahead. And if somebody could write a law that only covered those
guys, that set a burden of proof high enough to never get an
innocent guy, then I'd have to trot out my wimpy liberal arguments.
But due to the state's incompetence, and the impossibility of
writing a law that works exactly as intended, I don't have to trot
out my wimpy, squishy lefty arguments. All I have to point out is
that the state should, whenever possible, make sure that it's
possible to reverse one of its decisions since it has a LONG track
record of screwing up.
So, basically, I get to hinge my argument on the one principle that
all real libertarians agree on: The state can always be counted on
to screw up.
Opposed. For both idealistic (limiting power of the state) and practical reasons. But still, perhaps it should be kept for serial killers and such. Unfortunately there is no practical legal way to differentiate between the ones that make one go "aha! That's obviously someone who should be executed" and the more run of the mill cases.
Opposed.
A moral state has no powers or rights that the people do not
inherently have. I.e., the people transfer to the state certain
powers from their own inventory of powers. In the absence of a
state, these powers return to the people, so that they may
rightfully exercise said powers.
So, in the absence of the state, do people have the right to
execute others for wrongdoing? I say no. The only legitimate use of
force is for self-protection, and execution is NOT self-protection;
the threat is already neutralized. Execution is for punishment, and
therefore an illegitimate use of force.
Since the people do not have the right of execution, neither can
the state.
I'm all for sending him straight to hell. (That is if hell
existed.)
Therefore, I'm disappointed he got the "death penalty". He's going
to be stuck in solitary confinement on death row attending appeal
hearing the rest of his life. If he was were given life in prison
amongst the general population, I don't think it would be long
before somebody went "Jeffrey Dahmer" on his ass. Prisoners don't
like baby killers.
cip -- you come close to swaying me, but not quite. Sure, we can
afford to be methodical and even reasoned. But "ethics", as a
theory and in operative practice, depends on a particular context.
Pre-meditated murder does away with that context. My reasoning is
that the Pre-Meditated Murderer has chosen to go outside civilized
ethics. I don't see any rationale for saying the Pre-Meditated
Murder is any different from, say, the PRC invading the US
homeland. It's just a question of 1 murderer vs. half a billion
Chinese soldiers.
btw, as I said *I* wouldn't give Peterson the DP -- DP is reserved
for clear cut cases (like, the presence of half a billion Chinese
soldiers would be a clear cut case). I do not see the DP being used
very often, in practice.
I should clarify what I meant by "loosing our vision". It's along
the lines of -- ethics, in theory and practice, can only exist and
be practiced in a certain context, one of which is "whatever our
disagreements, we agree not to shoot at each other".
I think we in the civilized First World have lost sight of the
context of ethics. Outside that context is The Jungle. Sure, I'd
rather live in here (in the context of ethics) that out there in
The Jungle. But our civilization has boundaries, and lots of jagged
edges. To protect "in here" (ethical society) from the non-ethical
elements "out there", you must (I think) deal with the outside on
its own terms -- for The Jungle is not part of our ethical "in
here" and will not obey our rules. It's suicide on our part if we
expect The Jungle to obey our rules.
We "loose our vision" when we are no longer able to make this
distinction....
Bruce -- so are you saying, if half a billion Chinese soldiers
invaded the US, we should try to round up and lock up rather than
shoot at them? I see no reason why I should be under such an
obligation, from any moral standpoint. As I said to cip above, I
see no moral distinction between a Pre-Meditated Murderer (one
person), and an invading army (many many persons), other than
numbers.
The murderer and the invading soldiers are both guilty. Why does
the Pre-Meditated murderer deserve anything different from the
invaders? They're both knocking down the walls of the ethical world
we've decided we want to live in.
thoreau -- I agree that the state is inherently untrustworthy.
So are the people who make it up. To a very large extent the best
state is well hog tied. However.....
At some very basic level I think we have to draw some clear lines
in the sand, and pre-meditated murder (with conclusive evidence) is
one of those places. Here's why (aside from the fact that murder is
knocking down the walls of civilization).
I'm a design engineer. I design things that lots of people's lives
depend on. In my profession we peer review our work thoroughly. But
in my entire career, I don't think I've designed anything, that
someone couldn't think of some possible failure mode for, in some
remote corner of the universe. ANYTHING can fail under some set of
conditions.
If we engineers never built and tried anything, because nobody
could come up with The Perfect Design, we'd all still be rubbing
sticks together in caves. You put your best into, but sooner or
later you gotta just try it. Sometimes we fail. Lots of train
bridges collapsed in the 1800's.
Civlization is no different. Rome was not built by men and women
who were afraid to take on risks. And the history books show that
sometimes their bridges came down on them. Well, you learn to build
better bridges from your mistakes.
If we want to achieve anything approaching greatness, we have to
take some risks. Minimize them, sure. But they cannot be 100%
avoided.
Scott Peterson had anything other than motive to kill her,
and he gets the needle, while a guy like Charles Manson gets a
prison cell after having a much stronger link to several worse
crimes.
For the record, Charles Manson (and all his co-conspirators) were
sentenced to death. Their sentences were commuted to life during
the period when the Supreme Court declared that the death penalty
as it was then applied was unconstitutional. Upon readoption of the
death penalty, I don't believe there was a legal mechanism for
switching the sentences back.
Incidentally, this has always been the best argument for me. Look at the number of guys placed on death row who turned out to be innocent. Sorry, but as forgiving as I can be, this is not an area where I can allow the government even the tiniest chance of a fuckup.
The death penalty has to do with the place that society accords
to the voice of the victim, a voice which is now missing.
It is not retributive and it is not preventative. In fact either
one detracts from its point.
Let him fry. The only good argument I can see for being against
the death penalty is that it has tended to be applied
disproportionately against members of whatever group has the
misfortune of being the underclass of its day. A Kennedy would
never fry for murder but his chauffeur might very well.
I can't think of what oppressed group Scott Peterson would belong
to, unless you want to count the incorrigibly poker-faced, if
indeed they are oppressed.
great, even though the state can't be trusted to mete out just
punishment, we still let it guard the pit in which we hope he dies
more cruelly?! at least you can feel superior to the bloodthirsty
natives
btw, i don't mind which way peterson dies, but its laughable to
pretend that it makes you a good libertarian to oppose effective
justice that would obviate vigilanteism
perhaps we should plow under all the defective highways that cause
so many accidents and fire all the cops (read 'ineffective
counsel') that fail to prevent us from killing ourselves
as for evidence of premeditation, before he killed laci scott was
1) telling his new girlfriend that his wife had recently died and
2) buying a boat and making anchors--then they find her pregnant
body in exactly the spot where it was to be expected had it been
dumped with such anchors from the location where scott was on his
boat
in exchange for swift and certain justice applied to criminal
threats that would dominate our society as sure as fallujah, i'll
gladly take the chance that i'll never be as 'unlucky' as poor mr.
peterson
I am in favor of the death penalty.
But I am opposed to life in prison.
Furthermore, those of you who would not kill a prisoner, but
celebrate another prisoner killing or raping a prisoner, I think
that is chickenshit.
Take responsibility for the punishment that you impart. If you
place a prisoner in a situation where he will be raped or killed,
then you are in effect raping or killing that person.
If you think that a man deserves death, then man up, and kill him
yourself. Don't pretend to be humanitarian, and place the prisoner
in a situation where others will kill him.
Pro, for your more outstanding cases like Tim McVeigh, and I don't mind the citizenry getting together and condemning a crime like premeditated first-degree (redundant, sorry) murder committed in especially heinous ways by providing for the death penalty as punishment. I'm surprised that there's been so much discussion about how a guy like Peterson would get killed in prison anyway but none (unless I missed it) about how without a death penalty we'd arguably have a lot more vigilanteism going on before the verdict even came down, while the guy was out on bond.
Unless there is some foolproof way of determining guit, I'm
opposed. Even if some people clearly deserve it, there is not way
to write a law so comprehensive that it draws the line between
those that are guilty beyond all doubt and those that are very
likely guilty. The law is a blunt instrument.
There is clearly a lot of emotion invested in seeing the guilty
suffer for their crimes, but the purpose of justice is not to
satisfy our emotions, it's to protect society. Society is just as
well protected by putting criminals in prison for life as by
executing them (if they commit crimes while in prison, then I would
make an exception to the rule).
I'm also puzzled by the "gov't is too inept to administer the death
penalty" argument. I thought the death penalty was largely in the
hands of citizen juries, not the gov't?
I'm with kwais on this one. The (apparently common) notion that
rape is somehow an unofficial, and possibly even morally just, part
of the sentence is unconscionable. Can you imagine the moral
outrage that would ensue if we were talking about it being
perfectly okay for *female* prisoners to be routinely raped? Heck,
we might even get a few serial rapists off the streets and away
from more innocent victims, eh?
Also, the arguments about putting execution power in the hands of
the "state" seem misdirected to me. That's why there's a jury
involved here. We're not talking about some elected blowhard being
able to impose the sentence (although we'll let a blowhard COMMUTE
the sentence, which seems an OK arrangement to me). Now, you might
argue that you aren't willing to trust the average jury with this
power either and I'd concede that you have a pretty defensible
position there, but at least point the finger where it
belongs...
Con- I'll grant that Peterson isn't worth supporting for the rest of his life, but when you give the government a power, it's generally abused. Now, we have special laws to make certain groups (cops, FBIs, etc) 'more equal' than the rest of us citizens, so the death penalty's inequality is enshrined in the law... we ought to be ashamed.
"I can't think of what oppressed group Scott Peterson would
belong to, unless you want to count the incorrigibly poker-faced,
if indeed they are oppressed."
Well, actually, he does belong to an oppressed group that
traditionally does not get a fair trial. That group would be
"defendents in murder cases where there is no evidence, but
the victim is an attractive young white girl, so the media gets
onvolved, and everyone wants to see him fry". I don't like
to bring race into this, because I fuckin hate it when people
indiscriminantly pull the race card; but, the fact is, within a
couple weeks of Laci Petersen disappearing, another young girl and
her baby were found murdered in the SF Bay, along with suspects and
evidence. The girl was black and not particularly attractive.
Before her body turned up, her family was forced to go door to door
passing out missing persons flyers...while an entire town had
mobilized to help find Laci. And so, this case hardly made the
local papers, much less the national media, because everyone was
focused on the beautiful white girl. If anyone can explain why Laci
Petersen's case turned into a national media circus, while this
other case barely registered on a local level (other than race and
attractiveness), I'd love to hear it.
Otherwise, the fact is, Scott had the cards stacked against him,
even if he's not a member of any traditionally oppressed social
sector.
"So, basically, I get to hinge my argument on the one principle
that all real libertarians agree on: The state can always be
counted on to screw up." I have very little to add. Opposed.
Terry, I work for design engineers who are held accountable if they
screw up. Too bad the government and you aren't.
The death penalty is best applied during the commission of a
crime, by the intended victim. If the crime succeeds and the victim
is killed, and the criminal is later caught, then by all means, let
the victim's next of kin pull the trigger.
I don't particularly want to be responsible for the penalty being
applied to a person, and having the state do it is simply trying to
spread the blame.
kwais has it right, we need to take responsibility for the
punishments we mete out as a society. The picture of Laci's
stepfather holding up a newspaper that reads "DEATH" above a
picture of Scott Peterson and smiling would be a lot more
appropriate if he was the guy who had to do the dirty work.
Pro, for your more outstanding cases like Tim McVeigh, and I
don't mind the citizenry getting together and condemning a crime
like premeditated first-degree (redundant, sorry) murder committed
in especially heinous ways by providing for the death penalty as
punishment.
I'm with you here. My example was to be the D.C. area snipers from
two years ago. These were not crimes of passion and there was
absolutely overwhelming physical evidence pointing to the guilt of
the accused.
For cases like these I support the death penalty. I think, though,
like many others, that death should be a very difficult sentence
for a prosecution to get.
While I don't like giving the State any more power than necessary, if someone is UNDOUBTEDLY guilty, they should be fried. And fuck the appeals, they're a waste of money.
I'm against the death penalty in all cases but treason.
...and even then there can be extenuating circumstances.
"If you can't justify the death penalty, how can you ever
justify war? Does anyone, ever, have the right to kill someone else
in self defense?"
Of course: did you even read any of the posts before starting your
diatribe?
Self-defense is justified when there are no good alternatives or
the situation is such that a person under threat cannot possibly
bear the burden of trying to figure them out. Even aggressive war
is justified in the sense that other lives might be saved. But the
DP affords nothing over life in prison without parole in terms of
saving anyone anything.
"I'm definitely pro DP. As nebulous as the term is, "society" (or
"the nation" or whatever) has "rights" and "interests", such as the
right of self defense and an interest in not being murdered."
So... the state should try to prevent murder. Once it's happened,
it's late for such an interest to be fulfilled. What to do with the
murderer is an entirely different question.
"Ending the life of premeditated murderers is, in my view, a form
of justified self defense."
But we have absolutely none of the factors that make self-defense
killings justified. There is no urgency. There is no necessity.
It's just another pre-meditated killing of choice. The message is:
if I decide that someone isn't worthy to live, or has offended me
in some way, they can put me to death. Once you send that message,
the only quibble is why the state can claim a monopoly on handing
down such judgements.
"The murderer and the invading soldiers are both guilty. Why does
the Pre-Meditated murderer deserve anything different from the
invaders?"
Because there is no urgency in the case of the murderer. Of course
if the murderer is threatening someone's life at the moment of
pursuit then of course we are not required to take any chances just
to avoid killing them to save others. But once the crime has been
comitted its a sort of sunk cost: nothing we do is going to undo
the crime. With an invading army, the harm that they still can do
is NOT yet a sunk cost. And of course if they surrender to our
authorities, we do NOT kill them, by the laws of war.
"The death penalty has to do with the place that society accords to
the voice of the victim, a voice which is now missing."
Another exceedingly weak and illogical argument. Why assume that
the victim is just as vengeful as the murderer? There are numerous
real-life stories of murderers who not only get out through some
legal snafu, but reform and make amends with the families:
something that the families appreciate. There are plenty of
families that do not want vengence, who know that the victim would
not want their killer killed, etc., and plenty who think that an
execution will bring them peace only to find that it does not.
Killers clearly ARE able to pay back some form of restitution that
killing them often precludes. The breadth of human experience
simply doesn't coincide with neat, discrete principles on the life
or death of anyone.
Indeed, while I wouldn't expect it to convince anyone, that's what
I find personally to be most bizarre: people pretending that
punishment is somehow an exciting or meaningful solution to a
crime. Deterrance is an important end to a point, but once a crime
has been committed and the alternative is life in prison, executing
someone is basically just using them as a show for others, which is
a barbaric use of ANY human life (and shares far too much in common
with the logic of civilian-directed terrorism and other
"demonstrative" statements using real human life as message). The
logic behind it is: I declare you guilty of some offense, and by
that guilt your rights and life are _devalued_ and hence now
available for use for my own ends. That's just a terrible message
to declare acceptable.
The punishment of imprisonment is necessary because people who
violate the codes of society need to be, for all sorts of practical
reasons INCLUDING THEIR OWN SAFETY, isolated from that society:
break the social contract, and you don't get to play in our sandbox
anymore. People get deprived of only those rights that make sense
to achieve this end: not just all rights willy-nilly to pay them
back.
I don't accept Nick's premise. If the death penalty is to be
reserved for the "worst of the worst," I don't think Peterson
qualifies. No evidence of torture. No mass murder. No serial
murders. No kids. No previous violence. No murder for higher, or to
further a criminal enterprise. Virtually no chance that he poses a
threat to other inmates or staff. Whenever a politician wants to
reinstate executions, he swears up and down that it will only be
applied to the most horrific offenders. But then, it inevitably
gets dumbed down like this. All murders are terrible, and the DA
has a self-interest in pushing to the jury towards counting each
accused murderer as part of "the worst of the worst." This sentence
looks to me like a clear case of inflation.
I'm against the death penalty for practical reasons having to do
with error and public policy. But on the moral question, I don't
feel that Ted Bundy was wronged at all by his execution.
Pro DP, more comfortably so with the advance of DNA and other
forensic testing. Guess that's one of the reasons I'll never get my
libertarian card?
I prefer a higher standard of proof as a previous poster says. It
also makes me sick that DP inmates often cost me more in taxes than
life-without-parole inmates and their 3 square a day. But
pre-meditated murderers made their choice, and their removal is a
benefit to society. I wouldn't even mind seeing the DP extended to
those who commit heinous non-lethal crimes against children (I
believe Louisiana has this on their books, but it's never used). If
this makes me a cold hearted bastard, so be it.
I didn't really follow the Peterson case closely, but what appears
to be an entire lack of sadness or remorse (and memories of him
racing to Mexico with dyed hair) leaves me unable to conjure much
sympathy for the sumbitch.
Just so y'all know;
'DP' more commonly stands for 'Double Penetration'. And is an
activity known in the porn industry.
Just so you know what you are saying when you say you are in favor
of 'DP'.
Pro, but I would like to see higher standards for a verdict of
death. If I remember correctly from the Talmud, the jewish standard
was two witnesses who saw the murder and two witnesses who heard
the killer say, "I'm going to kill that guy." If we had rules like
that, then I say, "Off with his head." Otherwise, life in
prison.
Additionally, loss of liberty is bad enough. The prisoners who
abuse other prisoners and the guards who allow it ought to be
severely punished.
That being said, I'd rather see the guilty go free than the
innocent be imprisoned (although I know that the innocent will be
imprisoned anyway).
QFMC cos. V
I'm in favor of the death penalty, in principle. However, in
practice it's too expensive. My primary goal is to make sure the
convict never threatens society again. I don't believe that
criminals are smart enough to benefit from any deterrent
effect.
So, if the death penalty were cheap, I'd be all for it, but the
legal costs would cover many years in prison. This is because of
both the automatic appeals generated by the state, and the fact
that the convict is much more motivated.
The advantage of the death penalty is that it motivates felons to
cop a lesser plea, and this saves everyone money.
I have no expectation that any mortal effort will ever be perfect,
so I'm not moved by arguments of wrongful conviction. The numbers
are low, and we should work to lower them.
So what if he may be innocent? Society demands that someone pay for the crime. The public demands DEATH!
So what if he may be innocent? Society demands that someone pay for the crime. The public demands DEATH! The supreme court has ruled that it is not unconstitutional to execute an innocent person so long as they received a fair trial.
"the death penalty does this disservice of letting the guilty
suffer less than if they were in the general prison
population"
If I understand this argument correctly, it's that some criminals
are so bad that death is too lenient for them, and that they
deserve the more severe punishment of being stuck in prison for
life, so they can be tortured by their fellow criminals.
Assuming this is true, then it follows logically that there must be
some crimes that are slightly less heinous, for which death *would*
be an appropriate sentence.
I am very concerned that the jury had Scott Peterson confused with the lookalike Ben Affleck.
I am not even convinced Peterson was guilty. As far as I have
heard the police had no real evidence against him, just a
compelling story.
I fear the jury was just a bunch of morons who voted based on their
emotions and not their rational thinking.
But yeah, the death penalty needs to go. One inooncent executed is
one too many.
Anti-death penalty and anti-abortion.
I have learned that the concept "love your enemy" is very powerful,
and applies to first degree murderers.
Life in prison is a proper punishment, although not for the
barbaric aspects discussed above. Prisons should be reformed to
minimize rape, violence, et al.
Adam: "Since 1973, 117 people have been exonerated from
death row."
andy: "" . . . fuck the appeals, they're a waste of
money."
Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you . . . Cognitive Dissonance!!
"the death penalty does this disservice of letting the guilty
suffer less than if they were in the general prison
population"
Proper punishment would be death by a painful method, perhaps being
lit on fire with gasoline, stuck with thousands of pins, or being
tortured slowly. The family of Laci should administer the
punishment.
I'm a criminal defense attorney. I'm against the death penalty
for the same reasons that most of the people here are -- not
because I think that it's morally wrong, but because the chance of
executing someone innocent is just too high. The death penalty is
more expensive and I don't see a deterrent effect. I've defended
several murderers and helped with the appeal on one capital case,
and the potential consequences just didn't come into play for these
guys. Your average murderer either thinks that he's going to get
away with it or just doesn't care. This doesn't negate the need for
punishment, but deterrence (IMHO) just isn't a realistic
consideration.
Several people have commented that they don't think that Peterson
got a fair trial. I didn't follow it other than catching snippets
of reports in bars, but I don't think he got screwed. The jurors in
his case were reasonably intelligent and educated people (more so
than in any murder trial that I've seen). They saw all of the
evidence and concluded that he was guilty. In my experience, the
jurors more often get it right than not. People get convicted on
the basis of circumstantial evidence everyday. The biggest
challenge to prosecutors today is the proliferation of shows like
CSI -- jurors (and members of the public) want incontrovertible
physical evidence and/or a videotaped confession. In real life,
however, it rarely works out that way. Beyond a reasonable doubt
means just that -- a reasonable doubt, not any shadow of a
doubt.
Finally, in my experience, people do sometimes get screwed by the
justice system. In almost all of those cases, however, it tends to
be poor, uneducated defendants that have court-appointed counsel
who are 1)overworked; 2)undercompensated; and 3)ocassionally
incompetent. Prosecutorial or police misconduct is sometimes
involved as well. Peterson is a college graduate, solidly
middle-class, and had an experienced and high-priced defense team.
His trial was heavily scrutinized and any misconduct on the part of
the prosecutors or police would have been widely known.
P.S. Didn't Geragos make a couple of suggestions that this crime
could have been the work of Satanists (fetal sacrifice?) or that
Peterson was framed by the real killer? Usually, when you are
reduced to making those kinds of arguments, your client is so
guilty as to preclude any kind of real defense. I think the guy
probably got what he had coming.
DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!! DEATH!!!
If we cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt, how can we
continue to use the death penalty? There has to be some reasonable
standard upon which death is acceptable because we have to have a
death penalty.
How can Bush support the death penalty and not abortion? Aren't
they both the same, I fail to see the difference.
A lot of people seem to be confusing the implementation of the idea with the idea itself. Capitol punishment is self defense. It's Laci Peterson borrowing the force of the state to kill her attacker, the same as she'd have borrowed the force of the state in the form of cops if he'd abused her. Laci's timing sucks, but one hopes the next guy will give a bit more consideration to the quickie divorce option, as opposed to murdering his wife and child and having his life become forfeit. Executing murderers disincentivizes murder more than simple long term imprisonment, especially if it's swiftly and uniformly applied. The fact that it's not swiftly and/or uniformly applied at current doesn't make the idea in and of itself a bad one, it simply makes it an idea that's often implemented badly. Again, it's confusing process with product. If the question was 'Would you want to stand trial for a capitol crime in Texas as a minority with a public defender as counsel?' the answer's 'Hell no.' All evidence of that situation points to a process tilted against me for reasons beyond guilt or innocence. But every trial isn't a chance for the government to fuck up. A guy caught on security cam shooting a conveniance store clerk in the face has an uphill battle to prove that he's only there because of a government screwup. So if the question is a simple 'If guilt could be determined with a very high degree of certainty, would execution be an appropriate and/or optimal punishment' then the answer is yes.
How can Bush support the death penalty and not abortion?
Aren't they both the same, I fail to see the difference.
The difference I believe, is between killing what he believes to be
a person based on that person's criminal actions versus killing
what he believes to be a person based upon that person's
inconveniance.
The difference I believe, is between killing what he
believes to be a person based on that person's criminal actions
versus killing what he believes to be a person based upon that
person's inconveniance.
Yes, but one is alive, the other isn't alive unless it is
wanted.
Also, aren't the pro-abortion folks are hypocrital for not
supporting the death penalty because they are both death.
I used to be for the death penalty, but the error rate is too
high (too many innocent people getting convicted) for me to
continue to support it.
Personally, I would rather see outlawing brought back, and have
convicted murderers sent to some remote place and declared
outlaws.
I used to be for the death penalty, but the error rate is
too high (too many innocent people getting convicted) for me to
continue to support it.
That is pure BS.
The public demands DEATH!!!
That is pure BS.
Nonsense, I wouldn't go that far, but we need some reasonable
standard in which to implement the death penalty. An occasional
mistake is the price we pay in a free society in order to be kept
safe.
Give me liberty, or give me DEATH!!!
Your out of you're f**king mind. Still and all he had a fair trial
and now he has to die.
I agree that no system is perfect. That's why it's nice to be
able to correct mistakes whenever possible.
It nice to say that we should have a law that allows the execution
of Ted Bundy and Tim McVeigh but not in cases where there's more
doubt. Now, just write that law and show me how it works.
The fact is that once the guy is in custody and under control there
is no self-defense rationale for killing him. There may be a
deterrence argument, or a cosmic justice argument, but those are
countered by the very real possibility of error.
As to Scott Peterson, if he's guilty of that murder then he's
obviously an evil guy. But worst of the worst? There's some stiff
competition for that title.
It's Laci Peterson borrowing the force of the state to kill
her attacker, the same as she'd have borrowed the force of the
state in the form of cops if he'd abused her.
The state acts of its own accord. We do not "borrow" authority or
justice of any kind from it. We are coincidentally empowered
neither by the attorney general who wants to be governor nor by the
celebrity lawyer looking for a book advance.
But every trial isn't a chance for the government to fuck
up.
Isn't the opposite implicit in "innocent until proven guilty"? Any
trial in that setting would be a prime opportunity to watch an
agent of the government fall on its face.
A guy caught on security cam...
As opposed to the purely circumstantial evidence that convicted
Peterson.
This won't be popular around these parts, but I am for it in all cases. I think we should even apply it to rape and molestation. I know that it is not a proven deterrent, but I don't care. If you messed up on that scale you no longer deserve your life. Many people have pointed to the high number of overturned convictions in recent years. Great. That's why you have DNA testing and an appeals process. Am I willing to sacrifice one innocent for 100 guilty dead? Sure. I guess that make me a monster. I just want to know how many of you saints of reason have ever been affected by the actions of a true human monster? And trust me, they do exist.
Adultery. Homosexual activity. Blasphemy. Apostasy.
There are many cultures in which these acts are considered as bad
as or worse than murder.
An argument in favour of capital punishment in the US is an
argument in favour of the stoning of adultresses in Nigeria, of
burying homosexuals under walls in Afghanistan, of the execution of
Salman Rushdie.
I could care less if he lives or dies just get him and the whole
story off of the fucking TV.
It wouldn't hurt if one of the smaller cable news networks (MSNBC
maybe) offered some alternative news to this overcovered
story...
Once you've been on a murder trial, or spent significant time
with someone you believe to be a murderer, you might be in favor of
the death penalty. It isn't about punishment, but about prevention
of recidivism.
Now I haven't sifted through the evidence and court transcripts, so
I don't really have an opinion on Mr. Peterson's guilt or
innocence. I will say that he was a very unsympathetic defendant,
and being caught while attempting to flee the country doesn't help
his case. But as for the death penalty as a concept, I believe it
is appropriate. After all, the state can take away our liberty
indefinately, and it can take the fruits of our labor without
proportionally giving back. I for one would rather have a society
where one could die on his feet, even if the state was doing the
killing, than be forced to live on his knees.
I for one would rather have a society where one could die on
his feet, even if the state was doing the killing, than be forced
to live on his knees.
Lovely rhetoric, but how does that address the issue of the state
killing people who were wrongly convicted?
I for one would rather have a society...
...where the state unjustly taking our liberty and property would
be met with outright bloody revolt. I'd rather kill the state than
be forced to live on my knees.
Many people would be content to give murderers a life sentence
if we were assured that it really meant a life sentence.
William Suff moved to my town and killed about 60 hookers leaving
their bodies littering the landscape as he went. That couldn't have
happened if Texas hadn't paroled him after his conviction for
murdering his infant son in a manner the local DA described as the
most brutal murder he'd ever prosecuted.
IMO, if you kill someone (except in self defense) you're done. You
have forfeited your right to life as we know it. I'm not saying
'kill em' but that is an attractive option if you can't guarantee
they'll stay locked up.
Suff was a model prisoner and 10 years into his sentence he was cut
loose, after which he came to Ca and killed and tortured a whole
bunch of unlucky women. If he was dead that wouldn't have happened
and as far as I'm concerned the Texas parole board is complicit in
the murders of those hooks.
Am I willing to sacrifice one innocent for 100 guilty
dead?
I say so what? It is the price we pay in order to be kept
safe.
I think we should even apply it to rape and
molestation.
Agreed, and also any other serious violent crime such as large
scale drug importation. These people bring in poison for the
purpose of killing our children.
Mr. Mond. Mr. Ray Mond. You said:
"An argument in favour of capital punishment in the US is an
argument in favour of the stoning of adultresses in Nigeria, of
burying homosexuals under walls in Afghanistan, of the execution of
Salman Rushdie."
Not so. An argument in favor of cap punishment in the US is simply
that. Like or not we don't live in a libertarian world and if the
US governed Nigeria adultresess wouldn't be stoned to death.
as far as I'm concerned the Texas parole board is complicit
in the murders of those hooks.
So what, they were a bunch of whores who deserved to die anyway for
intentionally spreading AIDS every time they spread their legs.
No way Suff was paroled in Texas, TWC. Everybody knows that Texas executes everybody.
Fred, actually most of those hookers were pretty pathetic, even
outdoing the worst stereotypes of losers turning tricks for drugs
and booze.
It was depressing to drive down Main St in Lake Elsinore to the
freeway and see them soliciting when they KNEW there was a serial
killer on the loose whose speciality was prostitutes. It was like a
death wish of something.
But it's still murder. And if nothing else, I doubt if you would
appreciate finding dead hookers on your lawn in the morning. Wait,
is it your house that has that sign out front that says "Dead
Hooker Storage"?
I'm anti-death-penalty.
But I'm also disturbed by conditions in the prison system.
"It isn't about punishment, but about prevention of
recidivism."
Which can be prevented just as easily through prison, given the
proper laws.
"Also, aren't the pro-abortion folks are hypocrital for not
supporting the death penalty because they are both death."
But not the death of a person. That's the debate. If you do not
recognize that there is such a debate, then you are still being
dishonest by pretending there isn't one.
"Capitol punishment is self defense. It's Laci Peterson borrowing
the force of the state to kill her attacker, the same as she'd have
borrowed the force of the state in the form of cops if he'd abused
her."
Laci Peterson died. It's too late for self-defense (which implies
some sort of, you-know, defense of her life?), only revenge. This
is not bizarro-world.
To Thoreau:
No system is perfect. Just like the song goes "you take the good,
you take the bad, you take them both, and there you have...Tutti in
a size 28 dress." Flippant remarks aside, is is an unreasonable and
self-defeating expectation to think that the system will treat
anyone fairly. Everyone has to game and chisel to seek their
optimal outcome. The state does as well; we cannot expect the state
to be a disinterested party. Theoretically, this would be great,
but the profit motive cuts both ways. Maximal return for minimum
input will include killing someone rather than spend $100K+ a year
on incarceration, not to mention legal fees for the multiple
appeals.
To RST:
I've got the cat litter and gasoline--can we use your bathtub? The
state has it's uses; if nothing else it makes public our societal
shortcomings. Whether or not Scott Peterson truly murdered his wife
and her unborn child, he appears guilty enough. The reasonable
doubt clause is just that. We aren't trying to show that he
concretely did the deed, but that there is no other reasonable
explanation. A jury of his peers convicted him, and recommended the
punishment. This wasn't a case of a secret tribunal meeting and
deciding his fate. He had plenty of opportunity to prove his case,
and to create reasonable doubt. He failed to do this. The jury
agreed that he was not innocent of 1st degree murder, and therefore
the equasion left them no other choice than guilty of 1st degree
murder. The jury recommended the penalty of death, one of the
choices offered by the state.
We can hem and haw all day about the possibilities and a more
appropriate course of action, but the veteran institution of trial
by a jury of one's peers seems like the best solution to the
problem of what to do with citizens who commit crimes. People are
bloodthirsty, and people want vengeance. It looks like the people
will have their way. I don't see a problem with that, even if the
outcome is distasteful to a majority.
Erik-
Exactly, no system is perfect. Especially the government!
So why do you want an imperfect system to electively impose an
irreversible sanction when it could just as easily (and arguably
less expensively) impose a punishment that can be at least
partially remediated if new evidence comes out?
As to the costs of incarceration, it's always worth noting that (at
least in California) the most influential public employee union is
the prison guards. Those defenders of law and order and banes of
wimpy liberals are the most powerful public employee union in the
state.
BTW, I do like the notion that somebody put forward earlier: If
we absolutely must have the death penalty, let's at least stipulate
a burden of proof even higher than "beyond reasonable doubt." We
can debate the details of it, but eyewitnesses or videotapes of the
actual crime would certainly be a step in the right direction.
Finding the dead body in the custody of the defendant would be
another good step.
Whatever one might think of the Peterson case (I'm prepared to
accept the jury's guilty verdict, FWIW), it certainly wasn't as
clear as some murder cases. There was no eyewitness. There was no
murder weapon. There was little or no physical evidence actually
tying him to the murder. I'm willing to believe the jury when they
say that the prosecutors cleared the burden of "beyond a reasonable
doubt", because they've examined it more closely than me. But I
have real doubts about whether they could clear a higher burden in
this case.
Even if I supported the death penalty, I still wouldn't say that
it's appropriate in this case.
The verdict is as is because everyone allways gets what they
deserve. It deserves to be that way because that is the way that it
deserves to be.
So what if he is innocent, society wants
DEATH!!!
If we absolutely must have the death penalty, let's at least
stipulate a burden of proof even higher than "beyond reasonable
doubt."
Good idea, but perhaps impractical and not constitutionally
required. I say so what kill him, someone has to pay for this.
What murder constitutionally Christmas remediated evidence deserves occasion regulars important extrajudicial trust justice in the system?
TWC,
You're right, that is horrific. However, couldn't that have been
prevented with life without parole. It seems like the parole was
the issue, not the fact that he wasn't killed.
thoreau,
Here's a CS Monitor article
on the model death penalty from Gov. Romney.
It has a limited scope: "Only a narrow subset of the 'worst of the
worst' killings - those involving terrorism or torture, serial
murder, the murder of police, the murder of witnesses, or murder
while serving a life sentence for murder - would be considered
capital cases.
Harder hurdle: "Instead of proving a defendant's guilt only 'beyond
a reasonable doubt,' prosecutors would need to leave 'no doubt' in
jurors' minds. Juries would get special instructions about the
unreliability of eyewitness testimony, statements made by
defendants in police custody, and the word of accomplices who have
agreed to testify in exchange for lighter sentences. Defendants
would also be able to choose whether the same jury that found them
guilty would determine their sentence.
Improved consel: "The state attorney general would review all
district attorneys' decisions to seek the death penalty to ensure
consistency in its application. Each defendant would be represented
by two lawyers, and defense attorneys would have to meet rigorous
standards of experience, capital-case training, and 'exemplary
performance' to be assigned potential death penalty cases.
This I could support.
One thing I didn't like that I heard was one of the jurors
saying they were instructed to not take something into
consideration in their deliberations (sorry, I'm drawing a blank on
what that was). That bothers me...if it was allowed into the court
and not stricken, they should be allowed to consider it.
(I remember what it was now - it was the testimony of Scott's
family [and friends?] in the penalty phase.)
BTW, ah do like th' noshun thet somebody put fo'ward earlier: Eff'n we absolutely muss haf th' death penalty, less at least stipulate a burden of proof even higher than "beyond reasonable doubt." We kin debate th' details of it, but eyewitnesses o' videotapes of th' acshul crime'd sartinly be a step in th' right direckshun. Findin' th' daid hide in th' cestody of th' defendant'd be t'other fine step.Ole Jeb Peterson gits th' death penalty fo' th' brutal murder of his pregnant wife Laci two years ago on Jedtmas Eve. Eff'n ennyone desarves t'be executed, sho'ly it is Ole Jeb Peterson, who acked in a completely premeditated fashion, showed no remo'se, an' on an' on, as enny fool kin plainly see. An' ah guess thass th' quesshun: Eff'n ennyone desarves t'be executed, cuss it all t' tarnation... Whut in tarnation say ye, Hit & Helter-skelter regulars, is yo' in favo' of th' death penalty o' not, in a case thet offers almost absolute clarity on all th' impo'tant issues (thet is, no serious quesshun of guilt an'/o' extenuatin' circumstances)? ah's an anti-death-penalty pansy mahse'f, believin' thet th' state sh'd use as li'l fo'ce as needed t'proteck its citizens (an' punish its malefacko's). But cases sech as this hyar one sartinly give occashun fo' reconsiderashun of thet POV. Recent Reason Online death penalty cols hyar, hyar, an' hyar.
Mo, (not my sister). I'm just pointing out that if he was dead
or on death row he wouldn't have been able to get out of prison to
kill again. I also agree that life without possibility of parole is
an answer but I also want to point out that in practice that
doesn't always happen.
Rosemary LaBianca and Sharon Tate are still dead but those Manson
Girls keep on asking to be released because they aren't a threat to
society any longer. Truth is, they probably aren't a threat any
more and the odds are that one of these days the parole board is
going to see it that way too. Therein lies the rub. If you stab
somebody 47 times you shouldn't leave prison except in a body bag.
I personaly don't care if that happens as a result of old age or
the gas chamber.
But, of course, that is a pragmatic response to a modern problem
wherein killers reside on death row for 18-20 years before being
hung. Or, they are sentenced to life but get out early because they
paid attention during devotions. Although it probably sounds like I
am, I'm actually not really big on the death penalty although I'll
admit to a certain sense of satisfaction at watching the smoke curl
outta their ears when the not-so-divine retribution takes a holt of
them.
I guess the entire point of beating this dead horse is this:
If you ain't going to throw the switch you at least got to throw
the key.
What do we do if we cannot find beyond a reasonable doubt that they are guilty, but society wants someone to be punished? Someone has to die.
What difference does it make whether he was sentenced to death
or not?
It's California.
He's never actually going to be executed anyway.
You filthy liberals!
Snotty Scotty must rot in the flames of hell! He cheated on his
wife! He had a mistress! He didn't cry a lot! He is guilty you
smelly fuckheads!
And, let's face it: life isn't fair. So if a few wankers die, wot
is the problem? As long as scum gets scared from dieing, let a few
innocent people burn!
DEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEATH!!!
Do any Reason residents think it is less serious if people who
are a) stupid b) mental c) old d) fucked-up are murdered?
Frankly, there is a big difference to me between killing Laci, and
some hooker slut or some old fogey who is staring death in the
cock.
I woz speaking to a loony recently and he said that this guy was
his hero:
http://www.crimelibrary.com/ serial_killers/ predators/
bittaker_norris/ 1.html
Wot do you think of this. And this guy has been on death row for
over 20 years.
Seriously, he has had enough pain. Let him be released.
We must also punish people who smoke! It is bad for theiur heath
and their penises!
DEATH TO THE SMOKERS, YOU MOMMAFOKKA!!!
I amtpuong now with my eues closhed. Nuit wjay I want to sau is
this:
Scptt {euersemn is innocent. And whjo cares anunjow if je did
it?>
At the wend of the day, do we tea;llt have the righnt to send him
to the mohrwerduckjunf chjair>
Con, but only very barely. Remove the blatant racial/economic
bias in application of the death penalty, and take measures to make
very sure that people get fair trials, and I switch to for
it.
Sometimes people through their actions simply beg you to void their
Human Being card. I think that people who claim a libertarian
reason to spare these people take too lightly that they violated
every single individual right their victim had in one fell swoop.
By all means make damn sure that the person in the chair is guilty
& the trial was fairly conducted, but once that's solidified
give them what they earned.
As for the "I don't trust government to decide" view, it's the jury
that decides whether to apply capital punishment, and those are
regular citizens. If the death penalty decision were made not by
the jury but solely by the judge or some 3rd party then I'd see the
point and denounce it compleltely, but I'm not seeing how the next
door neighbor of ours that wasn't clever enough to get out of jury
duty suddenly becomes Stalin.
"Sometimes people through their actions simply beg you to void
their Human Being card."
That's a pretty dangerous thing to start doing, because once you
hold that it's acceptable, everyone is going to want to start doing
it for all sorts of reasons on their own iniative.
"I think that people who claim a libertarian reason to spare these
people take too lightly that they violated every single individual
right their victim had in one fell swoop."
I don't take it lightly, I just don't see what punishment, in and
of itself, does about it. It's too late to protect those lost
rights anymore: that's a done deal. What remains is to figure out
how best to protect society from the killer, and in a certain
sense, the killer from a vengeful society.
"By all means make damn sure that the person in the chair is guilty
& the trial was fairly conducted, but once that's solidified
give them what they earned."
The problem is the logic: why have they "earned" anything? How did
you come to that conclusion? They've done something horrible, and
it's up to society to figure out where to go from here.
fyodor at December 13, 11:18 PM:
...he's pretty sadistic to get this group going on an issue
like this. Though it's not too bad yet. Wait till the day shift
gets in.
fyodor gets the accurate prediction award for this thread.
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