What Crimes Should Be Punishable By the Death Penalty

You didn’t actually answer any of my questions.

I used to be pro death penalty. I always thought of the people who did these “horrible crimes” as nothing more than rabid dogs. Then a friend of mine challenged me to research a person called Joyce Gilchrist.

Sometimes what appears to be a rabid dog is just a cute puppy someone had fun photo-shopping.

I no longer support the death penalty, so I have to join the ‘none’ crowd, although it took me a while to get there.

If I were a fellow inmate, there would probably be scores of others I would probably be less comfortable with. He’s just never been that much of a threat to other inmates.

Now that would depend on their individual cases, wouldn’t it? Put some in prison, put some in prison for life, and put those that need it in solitary confinement. “Killer” isn’t a separate race with standard characteristics, y’know.

Do all of them need to be isolated from the rest of the prison population? Again I ask, are there any stats that show that those convicted of murder are more prone to violence against other inmates than the rest ofthe general population?

Might I suggest that y’all go with an example other than Chucklin’ Charlie? He is notorious, but apparently not for the reason some of you think he is.

I guess I’m just a bigger fraidy cat than you. If 39 years ago you’d have told me that I was going to be sharing a cell with Manson, I would have been scared to death. Justifiable or not, I think that would have been a fairly understandable position.

I don’t know if there are or aren’t. I do know that if I were headed to prison that a lack of statistics wouldn’t keep me from preferring a check kiter to a murderer as a cellmate. YMMV.

One of the rotating ads at the top of the page is a message to try to stop the execution of Troy Davis.
http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/cases/usa-troy-davis

See the what the witnesses say now here:http://www.amnestyusa.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/affadavits.pdf

This is the “evidence” the State of Georgia uses to execute a person.

None of them.

The death penalty is wrong, always and everywhere (I could have sworn I’ve already pointed that out to you, several times. Did you forget, or have you just not been paying attention?).

I simply disagree.

Considering the amount of rape, assault, disease and poor TV programming, given the choice, I would much rather be executed than spend the rest of my life in prison.

The problem your quote addresses is wrongful conviction, not the punishment after conviction.

But if you DO have a wrongful conviction, and it’s overturned, what then? Someone has life in prison, they can be released. If the’re executed…well? You really can’t do anything there, can you?

If I were wrongly convicted of murder, I don’t know that I would rather spend 5 (or 10 or 20) years fighting the conviction as opposed to getting a needle in my arm.

The issue that really needs to be addressed is the legal system and it’s wrongful conviction rate. Currently the Innocence Project touts 273 post-conviction DNA exonerations since 1989. That seems like a lot, but when you consider that there are more than 1.4 million people in prison today (and that’s not even close to the number of criminal court cases since '89 that were either correct verdicts or the person walked free) that still a statistically insignificant number.

Does that make those peoples ordeal any less awful? Absolutely not. Should we strive for perfection? Of course. Will we ever achieve it? Unfortunately, no.

There will always be a rate of failure, just as there is for everything else in the world.

I find it deplorable that anyone would be punished (in any way) for a crime they didn’t commit, but that’s not a reason to oppose the death penalty.

Not quite there (anti) yet, but I concede that my knowlege is incomplete.
It also helped that my son came and read over my shoulder while I was in the throes of outrage over this thread, and said, “Mom, an eye for an eye leaves everyone blind. I have to agree with the other posters.”
I asked my SO whether he supported the death penalty, and first he said, “Oh, I don’t know.” Then he said, “No, because they can screw up court cases too much.”
(Am finding what I came here (SDMB) for.)