"Contemplate that if Hitler
falls into our hands we shall certainly put him to death. Not a Sovereign who
could be said to be in hands of Ministers, like Kaiser. This man is the
mainspring of evil. Instrument - electric chair, for gangsters no doubt
available on lend-lease."
- Winston Churchill, 6 July 1942
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INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/death-732687-penalty-life.html
The morality of
preserving the death penalty
Oct. 20, 2016
Updated 12:00 a.m.
On election
day, California voters will decide whether or not the death penalty stays or
goes as the ultimate form of punishment for the state’s most heinous killers.
Capital
punishment abolitionists are heralding Proposition 62, which would replace the
death penalty with life in prison without the possibility of parole, as the
rightful sunset of a barbaric practice. To them, it’s a waste of taxpayer money
and an immoral practice.
I couldn’t
disagree more. Not only do I think it’s a good use of public resources, I
believe it’s the moral answer to society’s most immoral people.
On October 1,
1993, 12-year-old Polly Klaas was kidnapped at knife point from her Petaluma
home and was subsequently sexually molested and strangled to death. Her killer,
Richard Allen Davis, was convicted of first-degree murder and four special
circumstances – robbery, burglary, kidnapping and a lewd act on a child. He was
subsequently sentenced to death.
Davis, who
admitted to the murder, remains on death row at San Quentin State Prison while
his attorneys continue to appeal his conviction.
Marc Klaas, Polly’s father and the founder of the Klaas Kids Foundation, told me
that if Prop. 62 passes, he and his family will continue to be victimized by
Davis. “The killer [Davis] told psychiatrist Llewelen
Jones that he ‘Masturbates twice daily and thinks of tying up female victims of
past crimes.’ From my perspective that means that he not only sits in his cell
on death row violating my daughter twice a day, but he will continue to do that
until the day that he is put down. Polly deserves better than that. She, or her
memory, will never truly have peace until the killer’s vile thoughts and deeds
cease to exist,” he said.
Supporters of
Prop. 62 have also admitted that if this initiative were to pass, banning life
in prison without the possibility of parole would be next on their list.
Kent
Scheidegger, the legal director of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, told
the Sacramento Bee, “If the death penalty is abolished
on Tuesday, the drive to abolish life without parole begins on Wednesday.”
This would
mean that the family members of murdered people would be forced to relive their
trauma every time their loved one’s killer comes up for a parole hearing.
That’s
exactly what has happened to Debra Tate, whose sister Sharon and her unborn
child were brutally murdered by the Manson Family in 1969.
Manson, and
other members of his “family” were sentenced to death for these brutal murders.
However, their sentence was reduced to life in prison because the death penalty
was abolished by the state Supreme Court in the early 1970s.
Now, Tate
spends her life trying to keep the Manson killers behind bars. Tate told me, “There must be penalties for taking a life. If you’re willing
to take a life you should be willing to forfeit your own. ... The ever changing
legal system has made it a monumental task to keep up with the amount of parole
hearings and subsequent appeals by these predatory killers. Parole hearings are
falling only a few months apart, followed by subsequent appeals.”
There are
also two stats that are important to the conversation and are completely
irrefutable – the state of California has never executed an innocent person and
the recidivism rate among those executed is zero.
In other
words, the death penalty works. We are executing the right people and are
preventing them from ever hurting anyone else again.
Marc Klaas
believes it’s incumbent on those of us who support the death penalty to make
sure the process works. “Death penalty abolitionists crave the execution of an
innocent man so that their indignation can run amok, while those who favor the
death penalty pray that an innocent is never executed so that the fragile
system of ultimate justice can be preserved,” he said.
I’m voting no
on Prop. 62 and I’m doing it because the death penalty is moral.
John Phillips
is a CNN political commentator and can be heard weekdays at 3 p.m. on “The
Drive Home with Jillian Barberie and John Phillips” on KABC/AM 790.
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