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Q: Doesn't the Death Penalty deter crime, especially murder?
A: No, there is no credible evidence that the death penalty deters crime more effectively than long terms of imprisonment. States that have death penalty laws do not have lower crime rates or murder rates than states without such laws. And states that have abolished capital punishment show no significant changes in either crime or murder rates.
The death penalty has no deterrent effect. Claims that each execution deters a certain number of murders have been thoroughly discredited by social science research. People commit murders largely in the heat of passion, under the influence of alcohol or drugs, or because they are mentally ill, giving little or no thought to the possible consequences of their acts. The few murderers who plan their crimes beforehand -- for example, professional executioners -- intend and expect to avoid punishment altogether by not getting caught. Some self-destructive individuals may even hope they will be caught and executed.
Death penalty laws falsely convince the public that government has taken effective measures to combat crime and homicide. In reality, such laws do nothing to protect us or our communities from the acts of dangerous criminals.
If you take the death penalty off the table, there is nothing to keep a predatory prisoner from killing guards, staff, other prisoners, etc., other than 24 hour complete restraint in the presence of others.
I am saying that once you have a predatory prisoner who has already killed other prisoners and/or guards, other than 24-hour restraint, there is one and only one guaranteed method to keep it from happening again. Not the threat of death. Actual death.
For me, I focus those of us who are not criminals. Who do we want to be? I want us to be better than criminals.
did not say "once you take the threat of the death penalty off the table." I did not say anything about persuading prisoners to behave. I am saying that once you have a predatory prisoner who has already killed other prisoners and/or guards, other than 24-hour restraint, there is one and only one guaranteed method to keep it from happening again. Not the threat of death. Actual death
Rehabilitation be damned - prisons more or less never rehabilitate any one and, more often than not, make them worse.
The law isn't justice. It's a very imperfect mechanism. If you press exactly the right buttons and are also lucky, justice may show up in the answer. A mechanism is all the law was ever intended to be.
Are you saying that a prisoner who kills guards should get the death penalty so they're unable to kill guards?
Even then, the death penalty as we know it is not going to be effective. How many prison riots associated with murder are led by capital criminals only?
Why is the death penalty okay if someone else does the killing?
Why don't we all just vote to have legal citizenship include yearly participation in murdering convicted rapists with our bare hands?
Or make it part of getting a driver's license? Or a gun license? Or the right to vote in this country?
It's always okay to think murderous thoughts and approve them legally when it ain't never gonna be you that pulls the lever/administers the injections/fires the gun into the wall.
Since the evidence seems to indicate that net lives lost are fewer without than with the death penalty
the New York State Department of Corrections determined that New York State could hire an additional 250 police officers and build prison space for an additional 6,000 more inmates for the amount that it would cost the state to reimpose the death penalty in a similar five-year period.