California End the Death Penalty
Initiative (2012)
California voters will have an opportunity this November 2012 to decide
whether to pass the “SAFE California Act” and abolish the death penalty in that
state. The arguments in support of the ballot measure are exaggerated at best
and, in most cases, misleading and erroneous.
Double-Speak
The very acronym “SAFE” bemoans the double-speak introduced in George
Orwell’s novel “1984.” First, SAFE claims that abandoning the death penalty
will “save” money. SAFE claims that “California taxpayers will save well over
$100 million every year without releasing a single prisoner.” In making this claim,
proponents ignore that it is the actions of the very individuals involved with
SAFE that have greatly increased the costs of the death penalty. Moreover, SAFE
exaggerates the costs of the death penalty while ignoring the horrendous costs
of life sentences with the ever-increasing medical costs of elderly inmates. In
the long run, the Act would cost taxpayers significantly more because the
alleged savings are mostly illusory and the increased costs are huge.
No Accountability Under Act
The second letter in SAFE’s acronym is one of “accountability,”
asserting that “convicted killers will be held accountable and pay for their
crimes. The SAFE Act requires persons convicted of murder to work and pay
restitution into a victim’s compensation fund.” As detailed below,
this claim is a farce added to the ballot measure for no other purpose than to
misleadingly garner the votes of those otherwise favorable to the death
penalty. The work requirement would also cause the costs of incarcerating these
inmates more expensive than current costs, entirely eliminating any alleged
savings from comparing incarceration costs between life sentences and death
sentences.
SAFE fails to explain that the Thirteenth Amendment precludes
involuntary servitude except “as a punishment for a crime.” Every person on
death row has already been sentenced without any requirements to work for the
benefit of his or her victims. The SAFE Act cannot retroactively add to any
prisoner’s sentence and does not attempt to do so. The work requirement is
solely prospective as it applies only to those defendants “found guilty of
murder and sentenced pursuant to this section.” Consequently, there is no
“accountability” for those sentenced to death between 1978 and 2012.
Moreover, if the Act was passed, these same proponents would continue to
attack sentences of life without parole as cruel and unusual punishment
prohibited under the Eighth Amendment. Efforts to release older inmates have
already been advocated, generally by the same groups and individuals attacking
the death penalty.
SAFE also ignores the fact that few inmates are going to volunteer to
work if the earnings from that work are given to the victims of their crime.
There is little incentive to work for free. Consequently, inmates would have to
be compelled to work, receiving further punishment should they refuse to do so.
A common punishment is to place them in isolation cells with reduced
privileges. It cannot be expected that such forced labor would provide
meaningful compensation to victims.
Also, the SAFE Act fails to include any provisions explaining what forms
of work these inmates would be expected to perform, whether taxpayers would be
paying for that labor, and how placing these violent inmates together in a
working environment would save taxpayers money.
Consistent with current policies at San Quentin, death row inmates are
generally unsuitable for work because of their violent and uncontrolled
behavior. For this reason, most of these inmates’ time is spent locked in a
one-person cell except for limited time in one of the recreational yards, which
are highly controlled to avoid contact with opposing gang members, enemies,
etc. Maintaining limited contact between inmates and staff provides greater
control, maintains safety, and is much less expensive than attempting to
sustain that same control and safety with significantly greater contacts
between inmates and prison officials. Thus, providing sufficient control of the
inmates in a working environment and maintaining the safety of other inmates
and prison staff would be both extremely expensive and impractical.
If prisons are compelled to force inmates to work, the result would be
more costs to the prison, deaths, and injuries. Any such work programs would
likely have to be limited to one or two prisons specifically designed for
inmates having been sentenced to prison for life and require significantly
greater security procedures to accommodate the requirements that the inmates
work. As a consequence, the prison costs for life-without-parole sentences
would be much greater than those existing under the death penalty and would
continue for the life of the inmate. As a result of the work requirement,
SAFE’s comparison of costs attempting to show that incarcerating death-row
inmates is higher is made meaningless. Under the SAFE Act, the costs of
incarcerating these inmates would be well above the existing incarceration
costs on death row.
Another irony is that the state has no further penalty for these inmates
for killing another inmate, guard, or prison official. There would be no death
penalty. Thus, while the dangers of violence are seriously increased because of
the increased contacts between inmates and other inmates and other inmates and
prison officials, the penalty for committing another murder would be no greater
than the sentence they already have. In addition to the former death-row
inmates, the loss of the deterrent value of the death penalty as a disincentive
for murder would apply to every prisoner already sentenced to life in prison
without the opportunity for parole, as well as those whose chance of parole are
negligible such as Charles Manson.
Finally, the rate of pay for these workers would be negligible–providing
very little money for their victims. Again, the SAFE Act makes hollow promises
of aiding victims while increasing risks of violence and increasing the overall
costs of incarcerating these inmates.
“Full Enforcement” or Bribing Voters with More Hollow Promises?
The last acronym claims “full enforcement,” arguing that the Act “takes
$30 million a year for three years in budget savings and puts it into the
investigation of unsolved rape and murder cases.”
(How this applies to
“full-enforcement” is not explained.) Again, this very short-term incentive
with very little overall impact, particularly relative to the repercussions of
removing the most significant disincentive and ultimate accountability for
committing murder.
For example, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department operates a
budget of $2.4 billion, which funds “nearly 18,000 budgeted sworn and
professional staff.” Thus, if the entire
$30 million was given to that single law enforcement department, it would
increase their budget by only 1.5 percent. If this money is spread throughout
California to various city police departments and county sheriff’s departments,
the amount would amount to nothing but a token contribution. Consequently, the
negligible amount of money would have absolutely no affect on solving rape and
murder cases.
Treating California Voters Like Sheep, SAFE Proponents Misrepresent or
Ignore Polling Data
Proponents of the ballot measure wish voters to feel that they are on
the “winning side” if they vote for it. Then, like sheep, the voters are
expected to follow each other and approve the ballot measure. In order to make
this claim, however, it is necessary to misrepresent and ignore the critical
evidence against there claim.
Many of these misrepresentations are premised from a poll conducted by
the Field Research Corporation, “The Independent and Non-Partisan Survey of
Public Opinion,” located in San Francisco. Based upon that
survey, the ballot proponents argue that “A clear majority of U.S. voters – 61
percent – would choose a punishment other than death for murder if given a
choice.” The statement is
erroneous on two counts. First, the poll results were for California registered
voters only, not all of U.S. voters. Second, the 61% figure was for party
registered Democrats. Only 37% of party registered Republicans and only 43% of
“non-partisans/others” would “personally prefer” life in prison without parole.
More importantly, the
report from this poll explained:
Over the course of
more than five decades The Field Poll has consistently found substantial
public support in California for keeping the death penalty as a form of
punishment for certain capital crimes.
At present, 68% of
voters favor retaining the death penalty for serious crimes, 27% favor doing
away with it, while 5% have no opinion. There has been no appreciable change in
this division of sentiment over the past fifteen years.
In fact, in September 2011, the voter opinion toward keeping the death
penalty was higher than it was in 2000 (63%) and the percentage since then has
ranged between 63% and 72% for registered California voters. In addition, “very
large majorities of both Republicans (81%) and non-partisans (70%) support
keeping the death penalty as a punishment alternative. But, a smaller majority
of Democrats (57%) also favors its continuation.” Clearly, those in
favor of abolishing the death penalty are not in the majority and their efforts
to convince voters to join their “winning side” are based upon false statements.
Unsurprising, the efforts to abolish the death penalty remain a liberal
agenda:
Conservatives are
overwhelming in their support of the death penalty (84% to 12%). Those who
identify as middle-of-the-road in politics also favor keeping it two and one-half
to one (69% to 27%). Liberals are the only voting subgroup in which the
proportion who want to do away with the death penalty (49%) is greater than the
proportion who want it maintained (46%).
A more recent poll further establishes California voter’s firm
conviction and support for the death penalty. A Survey USA News Poll was
conducted in March 2012. The results of this poll concluded:
By 2:1, CA Voters
Back Death Penalty: 61% of registered voters from the state of California say
they would vote to keep the death penalty, should a death penalty initiative
appear on the November 2012 ballot, according to this latest SurveyUSA poll
conducted exclusively for KGTV-TV San Diego, KPIX-TV San Francisco, KFSN-TV
Fresno, and KABC-TV Los Angeles. 29% say they would vote to eliminate the death
penalty. Keeping the death penalty law in California is supported by a majority
among all groups except liberals, who are divided.
This most recent poll which directly refutes what the proponents of SAFE
would have voters believe has received no attention from the liberal media.
The simple fact is that most California voters support the death
penalty. Even those who would personally have a hard time sentencing someone to
death, as they should, they still believe that the death penalty option should
be available as a deterrent and as an appropriate penalty for the worst
murders. A good example of this is a recent murder in San Francisco, the
bastion of liberalism and anti-death penalty attitudes. As revealed in a March
2012 poll:
SAN FRANCISCO (CBS 5)
— A majority of San Franciscans want prosecutors to seek the death penalty
against Binh Thai Luc, a Vietnam native accused of murdering five people inside
a home in the city’s Ingleside neighborhood near City College, according to a
KPIX-TV CBS 5 poll released Wednesday night.
While District
Attorney George Gascon has said he is “unlikely” to seek the death penalty in
the case, the CBS 5 poll found 56 percent of San Francisco residents surveyed
believed that he should pursue the death penalty against the 35-year-old Luc.
Only 33 percent didn’t want to see the death penalty sought; 11 percent were
unsure.
Democrats Responsible for Increased Number of Inmates on Death Row
The existing death penalty law was passed in California in 1977. Part of
that law required that certain “special circumstances” exist which made the
murder particularly heinous before a killer could be considered for the death
penalty. While initially there were five special circumstances, that number
slowly increased to nineteen. Ballot proponents argue that since 1977, “the
number of ‘special circumstances’ that allow the death penalty has increased,
largely because it is politically expedient to author a bill enlarging the
number of ‘special circumstances’ that would justify the death penalty.” Once again, the
liberals complain about the results of their own actions to justify the need to
abolish the death penalty. “Both chambers of the California legislature have
been dominated by the Democratic Party since 1959 except in 1969 to 1971 when
the Republican Party held both chambers and from 1994 to 1996, when they
briefly held a majority in the Assembly.” They created the
special circumstances. They have the political power to limit them. If there is
a problem, as complained about by SAFE, then the same liberals who caused it
should fix it.
Claims of Executing the Innocent Untrue Under California’s Death Penalty
Ballot proponents also argue, “The tipping point that has finally
changed public opinion[ ] is that recent
accounts have shown that innocent people have died and will continue to die . .
..” (As detailed above,
there has been no change in public opinion.)
Moreover, “A small majority of Californians (52%) maintains innocent
people are executed so rarely that it is unimportant consideration to them when
weighing the issue. This compares to 39% who say this happens too often and
that there is no way to correct these mistakes.”
The examples cited by SAFE proponents of convictions of innocent people
sentenced to death are not California cases. The “Findings and Declarations”
for the SAFE Act claim “More than 100 innocent people have been sentenced to
death in this country and some innocent people have actually been executed.
They cannot provide any examples for California. Instead, their only example is
that of Cameron Todd Willingham. This was a Texas case. More importantly, it
was never established that Willingham was innocent and claims of his innocence
are highly contentious. This does not prevent
SAFE, however, from making the allegation.
SAFE has failed to allege that even one person on California’s death row
is innocent. In fact, the brochure prepared to convince voters to abandon the
death penalty, “A Taxpayer’s Guide to the California Death Penalty,” goes into
excruciating detail to explain the lengthy process that goes into ensuring that
the innocent people are not sentenced to death.
SAFE proponents attempt to confuse voters by listing several individuals
who were “established” innocent after having been convicted. The courts did not “establish”
innocence, however. Instead, the convictions were overturned because of legal
errors. More importantly, none of these examples are applicable to those on
California’s death row because they were either not California convictions or,
in most cases, the death penalty was never pursued against them so they were
never at risk of being executed while “innocent.” They serve only as examples
of the benefits of the appellate process to ensure innocent people are
released.
The first person listed by SAFE is Maurice Caldwell. He was sentenced on
second degree murder charges and obviously never sentenced to death. Those who
are sentenced to death have significantly greater opportunities to have their
convictions reviewed to ensure they are not innocent. Those sentenced to life
without the opportunity for parole will never have those safeguards. However,
Caldwell was not “proved . . . actually innocent,” nor was the prosecution’s
witness determined to have been lying. These were the allegations of the defense
attorneys. Instead, the court overturned Caldwell’s convictions on grounds of
ineffective assistance of counsel, i.e., his attorney didn’t defend Caldwell as
diligently as he was required to do so under the law. The prosecution refiled
the murder charges, but was unable to pursue a second trial because of the
death of the primary witness and the destruction of evidence by the court.
Obie Anothony, another person listed on SAFE’s website, was never
sentenced to death because the prosecutor did not pursue it. He was not
provided with the extra protections of a death penalty trial. Moreover, he was
not determined to have been “innocent” as claimed by SAFE. Instead, his
conviction was reversed because “the prosecution’s key witness, a pimp, lied to
the jury.” He could still be retried for the murder.
Nor was Franky Carrillo sentenced to death. His “innocence” was never
established. In fact, the judge overturning his murder conviction “did not
address whether Carrillo was innocent but concluded that the recantations and
other evidence undermined confidence in the jury's verdict.”
Similarly, Gloria Killian’s murder conviction was overturned because of
legal errors committed in her prosecution. As the district attorney maintained,
Killian “is not actually innocent of the crimes for which she was convicted.”
Finally, Arthur Carmona wasn’t even convicted of murder, but received a
sentence of twelve years for a string of robberies. He was killed after being
released from prison.
SAFE is unable to point to California cases where a death-row inmate has
been proved innocent. Instead, they admit, “Death penalty trials require a
long, deliberate process to guard
Furthermore, one of the liberal’s icon, California’s Governor Jerry
Brown, does not believe that innocent people are on death row in California. He
explained in a debate in 2010, that the death penalty is “working according to
the Constitution to the United States, I can tell you that. That requires
highly competent counsel and expert witnesses to be hired and all the rest of
it.” Governor Brown added,
“As Attorney General, I think the representation was good. I think people have
gotten exquisite due process in the state of California. It goes on for 20 or
25 years and to think that they’ve missed anything like they have in some other
states, I have not seen any evidence of it. None. I know people say, ‘Oh, there
have been all these innocent people,’ Well, I have not seen one name on death
row that’s been told to me.”
Costs of Incarceration of Prisoner’s For Life Far Exceed That of Death
Row
Those against the death penalty erroneously claim that the death penalty
costs “more than a lifetime of incarceration in any prison in America.”
“According to the California Commission on the Fair Administration of
Justice, expenses related to the death penalty costs the state $137 million per
year.” SAFE argues that “by
replacing the death penalty with life in prison without the possibility of
parole, California taxpayers would save well over $100 million every year.” From that number,
they jump to the conclusion that by replacing the death penalty, “we would save
the state $1 billion in five years.” Even assuming the
accuracy of the $137 million, in five years that adds to $675 million, not a
billion. Using SAFE’s $100 million per year, they have doubled the annual cost
to derive the one billion dollars.
Subsequently, SAFE has derived another set of numbers, for which it
provides no support, arguing that the true cost is $184 million. Almost half of
this amount, $72 million, is the alleged additional cost for “death row
housing.” As detailed above, if
inmates are forced to work, this cost would only increase, not be reduced to
the cost of life-sentence inmates.
SAFE explains that “death row inmates [are] housed alone instead of 2-3
to a cell” and require “a higher level of security.” Implied therein is
the argument that these men serving on death row could be housed 2-3 in a cell
once the death penalty has been removed. Additional security measures could be
disregarded. What a slap in the face to the jurors who do not take sentencing a
person to death lightly. Despite the hardship in making such a finding, these
jurors have found those sentenced to death too dangerous and too undeserving to
live the rest of their lives in prison. Now, SAFE wants to save money by having
them share cells with other inmates and reduce the security requirements for
them. Either prisons will recognize the absurdity of making these changes and
there will be no cost savings, or there will be cost-saving changes made that
will only lead to more violence and death in our prisons. It must be
remembered, under SAFE, these men are already sentenced to the maximum sentence
they can received. No matter how many inmates or guards they kill, they cannot
be executed and will still spend the identical amount of time in prison.
The total taxpayer cost of prisons in California for 2010 was
$7,932,388,000. The average taxpayer
costs per inmate is $47,421. Most of these inmates
are young and not serving life sentences. SAFE ignores the fact that these
costs increase significantly as an inmate ages and begins to have significant
mental and physical health problems. “In California, . . . one-third of the
annual per capita cost of each inmate is for medical, mental health, and dental
care.” These additional
costs over the lifetime of an inmate will far exceed the costs on death row
from the time of sentence until the time of execution, particularly once these
executions resume.
In 2001 it was reported that “Current estimates are that it will cost
$1.5 million to incarcerate an elderly prisoner for the minimum 25 years, in
part due to the fact that elderly inmates will require more expenditures for
health care and other needs than a younger prisoner.”
Another report indicates:
From 1998 to 2001,
state corrections budgets grew an average of eight percent annually, outpacing
overall state budgets by 3.7 percent. During that same three-year period,
corrections health care costs grew by ten percent annually and comprised ten
percent of all corrections expenditures. Alarmingly, recent spikes in
corrections health care costs are a leading factor driving growth in
corrections. Unchecked, these costs will surely plague cash-strapped states for
years to come.”
“Inmate lifestyles prior to and during their terms of incarceration make
them one of the unhealthiest populations in the nation. . . . [T]here are a
host of factors identified as the main contributors to the rise in corrections
health care costs:
• Communicable and
Chronic Diseases;
•
Mental Illnesses;
•
Elderly Inmates;
•
Substance Abuse and Treatment; and
Mental illnesses and prescription drug costs will obviously only
increase as inmates grow older. As explained in one study, “Elderly inmates,
those who are 50 years of age or older, . . . represents a significant expense
when compared to younger inmates because of their susceptibility to chronic
physical and mental conditions. In fact, according to a report by the Bureau of
Justice Statistics in 1997, inmates 45 years and older were almost twice as
likely to suffer from medical problems other than injury and physical or mental
impairment.”
Furthermore:
Older prisoners, even
if they are not suffering illness, can find the ordinary rigors of prison
particularly difficult because of a general decline in physical and often
mental functioning which affects how they live in their environments and what
they need to be healthy, safe, and have a sense of well-being. In addition to
the memory loss and other ordinary cognitive impairments that can come with
aging, older prisoners sooner or later will develop:
[D]ecreased sensory
acuity, muscle mass loss, intolerance of adverse environmental conditions,
dietary intolerance and general vulnerability [which] precipitate collateral
emotional and mental health problems. As a senior official with the California
Prison Health Care Services explained to Human Rights Watch:
Age by itself is not
the same as disability, but the end result of an accumulation of diseases and
injuries, causing decreased ability to safely interact with our surroundings.
In elders, hearing, vision and balance progressively decrease; foot speed
slows; and muscle loss occurs. All of which make climbing up stairs or into
upper bunks difficult if not dangerous.
Older persons are
more likely to develop disabilities that require the use of assistive devices
such as glasses, hearing aids, wheelchairs, walkers, and canes. As in the
community, the elderly in prison suffer from falls, which contribute to hip
fractures and high health costs. One California study found that 51 percent of
geriatric women prisoners age 55 or over reported a fall in the past year. In
the community, falls are associated with poor lighting, uneven or icy pavement,
loose rugs, and lack of handrails. In prison, there are additional potential
hazards, including top bunk assignments and crowds of quickly moving young
inmates oblivious to the slower, more fragile older inmates among them.
The obvious implication of these problems is that “Health care costs for
older inmates are much higher than for younger inmates. Current estimates
[2004] suggest that it costs about $70,000 annually to incarcerate an inmate
over the age of 60, whereas younger inmates cost $22,000.” While these are
national statistics, they indicate a more than three-fold increase in costs per
year from the ages of sixty until the time of death. Another report concluded
that “Older prisoners are at least two to three times as expensive to
incarcerate as younger prisoners, primarily because of their greater medical
needs. Our research shows prison medical expenditures for older inmates range
from three to nine times higher than those for the average inmate.”
In 2004, it was reported that problems in California with “annual costs
for elderly inmates costing upwards of $70,000 and care for some elderly and
terminally ill inmates costing hundreds of thousands of dollars annually.” “In California,
inmates age 55 or older, who are 7 percent of the prison population, consume 38
percent of prison medical beds.”
One study provided an example of the significant increase in costs:
To illustrate the
cost disparity, the SCI-Laurel Highlands facility in Pennsylvania, a facility
specifically designed for elderly inmates, reported an average health care cost
of $16,362 per inmate for 1999. The average cost per inmate in other
correctional facilities in Pennsylvania was $3,000. At North Carolina’s McCain
Correctional Facility, the state spent $200,000 in one year for just one
elderly inmate. This inmate received open-heart bypass surgery, angioplasty and
treatment for a stroke. There were also daily costs associated with treating
the inmate’s heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure.
“Older inmates not only have more infirmities than younger, but the
nature of their diseases and the responses required tend to be different.” As David Runnels, of
California’s Correctional Health Care Services, explained to Human Rights
Watch:
In young people,
disease tends to be an acute, single episode to be treated [and which once
treated] requires little further care. In older individuals, disease is often a
chronic, progressive process. Recovery is slower and the care of these
illnesses must be over years or even a lifetime. Surgery, medications, therapy,
and multiple types of medical providers and specialists are involved.
Hospitalizations, nursing home stays, and procedures are needed. All this must
be coordinated to provide good care. . . . We have seen the elderly population
grow from 2% to a projected 10% by 2013. This growth requires that we
reconfigure the existing system and make both physical plant and clinical
services delivery changes to accommodate the specialized needs of the elderly
population.
A more recent study published by the California State Auditory, titled
“California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation: Inmates Sentenced
Under the Three Strikes Law and a Small Number of Inmates Receiving Specialty
Health Care Represent Significant Costs,” reported the following:
Our review of
California's increasing prison cost as a proportion of the state budget and
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation's (Corrections)
operations revealed the following:
● Inmates
incarcerated under the three strikes law (striker inmates):
● Make
up 25 percent of the inmate population as of April 2009.
● Receive
sentences that are, on average, nine years longer-resulting in about $19.2
billion in additional costs over the duration of their incarceration.
● Include
many individuals currently convicted for an offense that is not a strike, were
convicted of committing multiple serious or violent offenses on the same day,
and some that committed strikeable offenses as a juvenile.
● Inmate
health care costs are significant to the cost of housing inmates. In fiscal
year 2007-08, $529 million was incurred for contracted services by specialty
health care providers. Additionally:
● 30
percent of the inmates receiving such care cost more than $427 million.
● The
costs for the remaining 70 percent averaged just over $1,000 per inmate.
● The
costs for those inmates who died during the last quarter ranged from $150 for
one inmate to more than $1 million for another.
● A
significant portion of the increased workload due to medical guarding and
transportation is covered through overtime.
● The
large leave balances of custody staff, to which the furlough program has
contributed a significant amount, will eventually cost the State from $546
million to more than $1 billion.
This study is now being used to support another liberal ballot measure
to weaken the three strikes law in California. Accordingly, the
liberals wish to release convicts earlier who having been convicted of two
violent felonies and a third non-violent felony to save money from having to
care for all of the elderly inmates, and then increase that same population
with individuals who have been sentenced to death, or who later commit crimes
that would have led to a death sentence. (Meanwhile they want to take away
everyone’s guns.) It’s getting downright scary in California.
Cost of Appeals Ensures Accuracy of Convictions
SAFE also asserts that in 2010 California “spent $58 million total on
reviewing death penalty cases” from using the resources of the Office of the
State Public Defender, the Habeas Corpus Resource Center, the California
Appellate Project, the Office of the Attorney General, and the California Supreme
Court. “The California
Legislature created the Office of the State Public Defender in 1976 to
represent indigent criminal defendants on appeal.” Over the years the agency
has focused its resources on post-conviction death penalty cases. Should the death
penalty be eliminated, there is no indication that the funds of the Office of
the State Public Defender would simply be diverted back to appeals in non-death
penalty cases. Thus, there would be no savings.
The Habeas Corpus Resource Center and the California Appellate Project
are paid from funds from the California Supreme Court. The budget for the
California Judiciary was $3.6 billion in fiscal year 2012. Where the court and
it’s related entities account for approximately $29 million of the $58 million,
this $29 million
accounts for about eight-tenths of one percent of the court’s $3.6 billion
budget. Overall, the $58 million dollars is inexpensive to the extent it
ensures that California does not execute an innocent person, the death penalty
serves as a strong deterrent to murder, particularly once it is used as
intended, and the elimination of the death penalty would not provide
significant savings, particularly in light of the state’s $10-12 billion budget
deficit for 2012.
Some Delay is Necessary to Ensure Accuracy and Existing Delay Will be
Removed
“The average delay in California between the time someone is given a
death penalty sentence and when an execution actually takes place is now
averaging more than 25 years.” Some of this delay is
due to California’s efforts to ensure that innocent individuals are not
executed, something SAFE admits would not be a good thing.
Importantly, it is the exact same individuals who brag about having
caused legislative and judicial delays in the executions who now attempt to use
those delays and costs as an excuse to abandon the death penalty in California.
The best answer is, of course, to follow the clear wishes of California voters
and follow the law. The last set of delays were contrived in that the defense
argued that the three-drug cocktail that was part of the execution protocol was
cruel and unusual. Jerry Brown, as Attorney General and then as Governor, chose
to fight for the existing protocol rather than simply change it to a one-drug
protocol as used in other states. The obvious intent was that both the defense
and the state officials were colluding to delay executions.
Unexpectedly in April 2012, Gov. Brown ordered prison officials to
consider a single-drug method of execution, explaining “My administration is
working to ensure that California’s laws on capital punishment are upheld.” Accordingly, efforts
are being pursued to remove the final cog in the wheel of justice so that
executions can resume without the delay that has occurred since the 2006 issue
with the drugs used arose.
Deterrence Value is Real
Ballot proponents also claim “The death penalty does not deter crime.” This bald claim is
not only unprovable, but defies common sense. As the poet Hyman Barshay adeptly
explained, “The death penalty is a warning, just like a lighthouse throwing its
beams out to sea. We hear about shipwrecks, but we do not hear about the ships
the lighthouse guides safely on their way. We do not have proof of the number
of ships it saves, but we do not tear the lighthouse down.”
Liberals assert that the death penalty is not effective because it isn’t
used. Once again, the liberals setup the system whereby the process takes time,
challenge the death penalty at each stage, and then argue that the delays make
it ineffective. The answer is not abolition but enforcement of the law. Under
the same argument, the “green” movement would place stop signs on our streets
every ten feet and then propose banning cars because no one could reasonably
drive anywhere anymore.
One professor has noted, “If we execute murderers and there is in fact
no deterrent effect, we have killed a bunch of murderers. If we fail to execute
murderers, and doing so would in fact have deterred other murders, we have
allowed the killing of a bunch of innocent victims. I would much rather risk
the former. This, to me, is not a tough call.”
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