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Bang on, yammit.
Bane said:I don't agree with the death penalty at all. Captial trials are expensive and I'm not buying the 'we hardly ever make mistakes' hubris.
But were it to come back, I'd throw in with the 'wheel of death' as long as it has 'death by science' on it.
Bane said:I don't agree with the death penalty at all. Captial trials are expensive and I'm not buying the 'we hardly ever make mistakes' hubris.
Bane said:"Death Penalty has Cost New Jersey Taxpayers $253 Million"
Jersey Policy Perspectives report concluded that the state's death penalty has cost taxpayers $253 million since 1983, a figure that is over and above the costs that would have been incurred had the state utilized a sentence of life without parole instead of death. The study examined the costs of death penalty cases to prosecutor offices, public defender offices, courts, and correctional facilities. The report's authors said that the cost estimate is "very conservative" because other significant costs uniquely associated with the death penalty were not available. "From a strictly financial perspective, it is hard to reach a conclusion other than this: New Jersey taxpayers over the last 23 years have paid more than a quarter billion dollars on a capital punishment system that has executed no one," the report concluded. Since 1982, there have been 197 capital trials in New Jersey and 60 death sentences, of which 50 were reversed. There have been no executions, and 10 men are housed on the state's death row. Michael Murphy, former Morris County prosecutor, remarked: "If you were to ask me how $11 million a year could best protect the people of New Jersey, I would tell you by giving the law enforcement community more resources. I'm not interested in hypotheticals or abstractions, I want the tools for law enforcement to do their job, and $11 million can buy a lot of tools." (See Newsday, Nov. 21, 2005; also Press Release, New Jerseyans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, Nov. 21, 2005). Read the Executive Summary. Read the full report. Read the NJADP Press Release.
I take your point. However, the person I was replying to had cited the cases of Pickton, Bernardo et al. They didn't kill police officers either. They did however, commit what we now call First Degree Murder, or murder that is planned and pre-meditated.marshall sl said:Milgaard--Jan. 31, 1969
Marshall--sentenced in 1971
Morin-October 3, 1984
Mullins-Johnson-1993 Even if the Death penalty was in effect these men would not have been executed as they did not commit Capital MURDER( Killing of Police Officer ,Prison Guard etc)
Rayman said:All I have to say is what about that guy who killed Holly Jones? Michael Briere or what not. Hes supposedly able to get parole in 25 years. Karla Hamolka? Isnt she a free woman today WHILE Paul Bernardo still rots behind bars? If they dont want to bring back capital punishment they need to at least give life sententances to these people and stick with them. No chance for parole. Lots of people may claim the death penalty is harsh, savage, and out dated. Though im sure those SAME people will agree that s***heads who do these severe offences should just be locked up and the key lost down a floor drain. Not allowed back out sometime later.
Bane said:
tonykeene said:I'm quite prepared to pay my taxes and have these guys rot in prison for the rest of their lives. Let's give more resources to the police and the courts, and let's make the law stick (ie no more automatic bail, parole etc without very strict criteria).
tonykeene said:In the United States decades ago, white mobs who lynched negroes were absolutely convinced they had got the rapist, murderer etc. I've seen footage of the mobs at those lynchings, and believe me, the sound and the look was no different from what was waiting for Guy Paul Morin when he made his court appearances.
Roy Harding said:Karla Holmolka cut a deal - perhaps a bad deal (from the point of view of the public) - but nevertheless, a deal (which, despite my personal misgivings, I think the government needs to honour).
Paul remains in custody. What the eventual disposition of his case may be is pure speculation.
As a proponent for the death penalty - I find your self inclusion on my side of the debate disturbing.
We aren't talking about lunatic reaction here. The ill-informed, fanatical lynchings you appear to support aren't welcomed by me - we're discussing the extremely (perhaps ultimately) serious subject of a state abrogating to itself the right to take the life of one of its' citizens - hardly a subject for uninformed rhetoric.
Rayman said:Since not all people are for the death penalty, and it may very well be decided that it may not be re-instated, that at least life sentancing should not carry the option of parole at a later date.
zipperhead_cop said:You are a journalist, and you still use that word? A PAFFO no less?
Bane said:it certainly has little affect as a deterrent.
tank recce said:(getting just a little off topic)