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Susan Estrich
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A Second Look at the Death Penalty

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I still remember back in 1988 sitting in a Chinese restaurant when then-Governor Bill Clinton took a napkin and listed on one side the Democratic governors who were against the death penalty and, on the other, those who were for it. In its time, the issue was the third rail in American politics — the line that divided those who could win because they were considered tough on crime and those who would face electoral problems. A few years later, my friend Kathleen Brown was trounced in the governor's race in California in large part because she opposed the death penalty.

Things have changed. Kathleen's brother, Jerry, is now California's governor. Barack Obama is now president. And last week, California's new and very conservative chief justice, Tani Cantil-Sakauye, told a reporter that she had come to question the death penalty not because she thought it immoral for the state to take a life, and not even because she thought it might be administered to those who were in truth not guilty, but because it's too expensive and ineffective.

"I don't think it is working," the Republican appointee said. "I don't know if the question is whether you believe in it anymore (and she said she did.) I think the greater question is its effectiveness, and given the choices we face in California, should we have a merit-based discussion on its effectiveness and costs?"

In California, as in many states with large numbers of people on death row, more inmates are likely to die of old age than to meet death for their crimes. Appeals are guaranteed as a matter of right in death penalty cases, but there is a dire shortage of lawyers willing to handle them. The average waiting time for lawyers to handle the first appeal is five years.

Litigation has put a halt to executions until the courts and the state can agree on an effective procedure for executions, further increasing the cost of what has become more of a symbol than anything else.

For years, proponents and opponents of the death penalty have been divided over whether the death penalty actually deters murders. But both sides have to agree that deterrence requires that any penalty be swift and certain, or at least reasonably so. The death penalty just isn't.

And don't blame the lawyers. Any lawyer representing an inmate facing death should take his work particularly seriously. But most of these inmates are indigent, meaning the state must pay the costs of representation. While lawyers will tell you that if they do their jobs right, what they get reimbursed is far less than the cost of the time spent, it still costs taxpayers a bundle.

In the old days, when the penalty was imposed more sparingly, it was far easier to recruit lawyers who regardless of their own point of view saw this kind of representation as a high calling. But that's no longer true. So today you have longer waits and often less-able lawyers (in one case that went to the Supreme Court, the lawyer fell asleep and the Court nevertheless upheld the penalty) and, in turn, even more litigation about the efficacy of counsel.

In short, the system is a mess — less because of reasonable doubt than of costs and delays.

A new ballot measure has been proposed in California that would replace the death penalty with life without possibility of parole. Other states are considering similar measures. Twenty-four years after Bill Clinton marked up that napkin, the time has come for a reasoned debate about the death penalty that focuses not on symbolism — not on whether a candidate is "tough on crime" — but on cost and effectiveness.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
Dear Ms. Estrich,

While I agree with your column, and I do favor the death penalty, I take issue that it doesn't work.

If the death penalty was applied properly, say no more than five years after receiving it, which is plenty of time for appeals, it would be shown to be effective.

Let me add, as a retired sgt. at a maximum security prison the fear of being killed by another inmate is one reason for less violence against another inmate creating 'some' stability. Futhermore, for the most part the mafia's death penalty keeps organized crime members and victims from violating mafia codes. That it takes the Witness Protection plan to get co-operation, is a good sign the death penalty does in fact work.

Nuff Said...Dennis
Comment: #1
Posted by: Dennis
Tue Dec 27, 2011 2:01 PM
I have to disagree with Dennis.

States with the death penalty do not have lower crime rates than states without.

Dennis, since you have experience with the prison system, do you know why some prisoners spend years and years on death row while others spend only a few? How does that work?

The way we apply the death penalty is absolutely shocking.
Comment: #2
Posted by: capiscan
Wed Dec 28, 2011 4:56 AM
I'll bet if we had mandatory castration while someone waits for their death penalty to be appealed, we would have even more deterence.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Lesley Barnard
Wed Dec 28, 2011 7:22 AM
Whoa, Lesley, a fairer usage may be "genital mutilation", but you still aren't going to get anywhere with over the top rage. Estrich is full of it, she just presents it on a platter of such innocence that few people notice they are being served the same old it. Let someone actually head to the gallows and the media bandwagon cranks it up to 11 and yells until the cadaver has cooled 5 degrees. Then they return us to the regular schedule of Obama adoration. Even Estrich admits that litigation has put a halt to executions, so what is the problem? Just this: I keep thinking of Richard Speck, killer of 8 nurses in Chicago around 1966. Tape of him in prison, smoking jays and adorned with government issued breasts, more demeaned on the inside than out. The last phrase applies in a dual sense, so hang there for a moment. I think a steady diet of solitude and books would have provided punishment early and salvation late. Instead he was provided with all of the temporal tools needed to make a total mockery of human dignity. The sad thing is that some might prefer death to a long life of abuse by prison systemics and at the hands of other prisoners. Speck's eyes said as much to me. He was a mouse, not a man, and it is pointless to punish a mouse. The system diminished his capacity for manhood, and enhanced his weaker nature. Is this what we should expect from the legal system? The plate really is not clean at all, it's broken and unfit before we even apply the ultimate solution. This is no arena for feigned innocence. Turn it up to 11 and stay there before a man makes that final walk; until the ultimate solution becomes an unnecessary solution.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Tom
Wed Dec 28, 2011 8:55 AM
Justices on the California Supreme Court have a conflict of interest concerning the death penalty because death penalty appeals make up a disproportionate amount of their work load. By California law all death penalty sentences go directly to the California Supreme Court for review, and the justices spent much of their time dealing with these cases. Eliminating the death penalty could reduce the court's work load by as much as a third. While people might argue the deterrence issue, nobody disputes incapacitation: putting a criminal to death prevents him from killing again. Talk to families who have lost a member killed by a convicted murderer.
Forty thousand people are killed a year in traffic accidents. None of these victims were convicted by a jury or sentenced by a court. Enforcing traffic safety would save more lives than ending the death penalty.
But people really don't care about the death of innocents as much as they do about forcing society to comply with their beliefs. Whenever they get a chance California voters vote for the death penalty. Opponents must convince them. Otherwise, being against the death penalty is in some way to be undemocratic.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Cowboy Jay
Wed Dec 28, 2011 12:06 PM
Susan:
What nonsense.
Virginia executes in 7.1 years on average and has executed 75% of those so sentenced.
All jurisdictions, inclusive of the notoriously irresponsible California, can duplicate that protocol and save money over using LWOP.
Comment: #6
Posted by: dudleysharp
Mon Jan 2, 2012 7:49 AM
Of course the death penalty deters.

All prospects of a negative outcome deter some and death is feared more than life, life is preferred over death - all trusims.

Based upon the recent 28 studies finding for death penalty deterrence, swift executions have little to do with it - it is the occurrence of the execution that deters, but as swifter executions would also mean more executions, that would also be a benefit.
Comment: #7
Posted by: dudleysharp
Mon Jan 2, 2012 8:02 AM
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