|
Time
Magazine: "This weighty moral issue. . . involves a lot of winging
it.
January 11, 2008
A recent article in Time
Magazine by Editor-at-large David Von Drehle examines the current
state of the death penalty in the United States at a time when the
Supreme Court is considering the constitutionality of the most widely
used method of execution--lethal injection. Von Drehle writes, In a
perfect world, perhaps, the government wouldn't wait 30 years and
several hundred executions to determine whether an execution method
makes sense. But the world of capital punishment has never been that
sort of place. This weighty moral issue, expressive of some of our
society's deeply held values, involves a lot of winging it.
Von Drehle says that the death penalty debate often comes down to the
question of whether to "fix it or end it." But that
debate, he says, misses the reality. "One government budget
contains millions of dollars for prosecutions, while another department
spends more millions to defend against them. Indeed, the very essence of
ambiguity is our vain search for a bloodless, odorless, motionless,
painless, foolproof mode of killing healthy people."
He compares the death penalty to a "Rube Goldberg machine"
that we are constantly tinkering with:
Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun
aptly described this endless activity as "tinker[ing] with the
machinery of death." He spoke as a veteran tinkerer, having
helped cook up an abstruse set of requirements for calculating the
aggravating and mitigating factors in a prisoner's life and crimes--a
concept that continues to bog down juries and judges a generation
later. Other veterans of the Supreme Court's long struggle with
capital punishment have also soured on the experiment. Justice Lewis
Powell told a biographer that the vote he most regretted was the one
he cast in 1987 to save capital punishment. Another member of the
five-Justice majority in that case, Sandra Day O'Connor, told a group
of Minnesotans not long ago that they should "breathe a big sigh
of relief every day" that their state doesn't have the death
penalty. Justice John Paul Stevens, who as a new Justice in 1976 voted
to restore capital punishment, now speaks of the "serious
flaws" in the system he helped devise.
However, attempts to end capital
punishment must overcome inertia and the weight of public sentiment.
This isn't easy. In the U.S., support for the death penalty has fallen
from a high of about 80% at the peak of the murder epidemic of the
1980s and '90s to somewhere between half and two-thirds, depending on
the poll. But politicians know that a 69% approval rating is nothing
to sneeze at. Only one state has abolished capital punishment since
the Supreme Court reinstated it in 1976: New Jersey, last month.
Legislatures in New Mexico, Montana, Nebraska and Maryland appear to
be within one or a few key votes of following suit. New York's high
court struck down that state's death penalty without stirring up much
protest. But while that means 14 states now have no death-penalty law
in effect, the majority of states are a long, long way from giving up.
Instead, the death penalty is being
hollowed out. Nearly all the states have adopted the alternative of
life-without-parole sentences, and prosecutors and juries are
embracing the option. Life without parole doesn't trigger the separate
sentencing trials and automatic appeals that can make death sentences
so financially and emotionally costly. As a result, prosecutors are
seeking and juries are delivering far fewer death sentences: last
year's total of 110 was the lowest since the introduction of the
modern death-penalty system. Nationwide, the number of death sentences
has fallen almost two-thirds, and the trend extends even to Texas, the
heart of the death-penalty machine. There, 14 prisoners were sentenced
to death in 2006, compared with 40 a decade earlier.
. . .
We now have a situation in which a
majority of the states that authorize the death penalty seldom if ever
use it. Last year only 10 states carried out an execution. And even
that number overstates the vigor of the system. If you don't count
executions of inmates who voluntarily dropped their appeals and asked
to be killed--essentially government-assisted suicides--the state
count falls to eight.
Our Rube Goldberg contraption is
being dismantled the same way it was built--not straightforwardly but
in uncoordinated and even inconsistent steps. The ungainly, ambivalent
collapse of the death penalty seems unfitting for a punishment whose
very existence is largely symbolic. But the trend is unmistakable.
. . .
The discussion itself is another sign
of the nation's ambivalence about the ultimate, irreversible
punishment. And as long as we're ambivalent, we'll continue to have
the system we have made for ourselves--inefficient, beyond repair and
increasingly empty.

(Death
Penalty Walking, by David Von Drehle, Time
Magazine, January 3, 2008).
Source: Death
Penalty Information Center
Back
to Home
|