Should
Capital Punishment be abolished?
Capital
punishment, also known as death penalty or execution, is the judicial mechanism
which is legally institutionalized with the intent of depriving an individual
the right to live as a method of the highest possible authorized punishment.
However, Canada and 16 American states have already abolished death penalty,
while Californians were given a chance to vote on April 2012, Election day if
whether lifetime imprisonment without parole was an appropriate replacement for
it. According to May 2006 Gallup Poll, public opinion expressed more support
towards lifetime sentence without parole at 48% compared to death penalty at
47%. If capital punishment was initially established to serve the civil
society, what is the reason behind recent trend towards its abolishment? The
answer lies in the simple fact that capital punishment is inherently flawed in
terms of flexibility and it is both financially and economically taxing.
The death
sentence is an unjust legal procedure, both irreversible once ruled and
incapable of accounting for considerations when handed down to a possibly
undeserving or underprivileged criminal. The system does make provision for all
the unique circumstances and different factors that have driven the crime
before handing down the ultimatum of execution onto the offenders. Oftentimes,
a blind eye is turned towards criminals on death row over crimes that should
not have warranted a death penalty for law is held as the absolute. In the
documentary of “The Condemned: Bali Nine”, we were shown how nine young
Australians arrested on the charges of drug smuggling turned over a new leaf
and lead productive lives despite being confined to a prison. From their
efforts in seeking education, hosting language classes and art galleries, we
are able to sense their sincerity in repenting for a naïve mistake and also see
that they are trying to earn a well-deserved second chance in life. Regardless,
the law does not make provision for a second opportunity they all deserve,
which in turn is a direct transgression of human rights. Prejudice also plays a role in deciding between life and death of a convict
in court, according to Santa Clara Law Review (2005) that revealed offenders to
be over 3 times more likely to be sentenced to death if they killed whites
instead of blacks or Latinos. The worse that can happen is when an executed
offender that is found innocent after his sentence is carried out. Since death
is not reversible, the deaths of the wrongly accused remains as a permanent
scar on the records of the legislation and serves as an awful reminder to the society that
even deadly mistakes can be made in court. It is reported that the House Judiciary
Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights (1993) proved the innocence of over
130 people on death row with evidence. Hence, we can infer that the court
passes judgment more recklessly than people would like to believe. The basis of
capital punishment has thus became a gamble of one’s life, with the cards being
the flawed system, lack of competency in the assigned attorney, any form of
prejudice against the accused, a meticulous investigation or the lack of
thereof, and collection and the timing of the evidence.
From the
utilitarian standpoint, capital punishment is a major financial burden with its
hefty costs incurred during the administration and proceedings in the court. As taken from Los Angeles Times (2005), "the California death penalty system costs taxpayers $114 million per year beyond the costs of keeping convicts locked up for life. Taxpayers have paid more than $250 million for each of the state's execution." Despite the age-old argument of life not having a price tag, a monetary value can be indeed assigned to individual
life in the modern capitalistic society. The absolute and irrefutable evidence supporting this fact is the very
existence of the multi-billion dollar industry thriving even during recession
providing a service that is so vague in its terms: the life insurance.
Nonetheless, this is a debate for another day. Capital punishment is in many
aspects similar to a suicide if you exclude the cause of death. In sociological
point of view, a suicide is a form of avoidance of responsibilities towards the
society, as all humans are responsible in some way to their peers and people
around them, not to mention his country. Suicide from Death Row as written by Lester and Tartaro (2002) revealed that the suicide rates among inmates with an impending capital punishment is 113 per 100,000 from the year 1976 to 1999, ten times more than the rate of suicides in the whole prison population within United States. By choosing to take one's own life,
freedom from all burdens is achieved with complete disregard towards the
consequences or the effects it may bring. Death Penalty Info (2011) also provided the information of having 137 prisoners waiving their appeals and asking for an execution instead. In a financial perspective, suicide could
be regarded as a loss of productivity and potential financial loss, as people
are capable of generating wealth during their lifetime. If these two aspects
are fused together to examine capital punishment on a slightly different angle,
death sentence is lost labour and avoidance of social responsibility for the
committed crime. Combined together, there is hardly anything more ineffective
and inefficient, not to mention uneconomical, as the capital punishment.
References
To be added soon.
Another excellent essay. I'm not sure if using the topic/focus technique (as it is, the content paragraphs anchor largely on topic only) would have brought the discussion to a deeper level.
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