The Witchita Eagle recent­ly called on Kansas law­mak­ers to recon­sid­er the death penal­ty, stat­ing: At some point, giv­en the legal prob­lems and the lack of exe­cu­tions, a death penal­ty stops mak­ing sense for Kansas.” The paper said the law has cost tax­pay­ers mil­lions of dol­lars with­out the ben­e­fit of deter­ring crime. Moreover, the state has not had a sin­gle exe­cu­tion since cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was rein­stat­ed in 1994, and the care and cau­tion” war­rant­ed to pro­tect against wrong­ful con­vic­tions could mean the state’s first exe­cu­tion is more than a decade away. 

The edi­to­r­i­al follows:

It’s hard to imag­ine that any of the 89 Kansas law­mak­ers who vot­ed in 1994 to revive the death penal­ty for the the worst of the worst” crim­i­nals antic­i­pat­ed it would still be unused come 2007. Each year sends more men to Kansas’ death row, nine in all cur­rent­ly, but the legal chal­lenges to their sen­tences con­tin­ue at a glacial pace. Then there is the cost to tax­pay­ers, aver­ag­ing $1.2 mil­lion each by one tal­ly. At some point, giv­en the legal prob­lems and the lack of exe­cu­tions, a death penal­ty stops mak­ing sense for Kansas.

In the ear­ly 90s, the aver­age time between sen­tenc­ing to exe­cu­tion nation­al­ly was eight years; now, it’s 16 years. And Jeff Jackson, a law pro­fes­sor at Washburn University, recent­ly pre­dict­ed that Kansas’ first exe­cu­tion since rein­state­ment of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment could be anoth­er dozen years away. If that killer ends up being Gary Kleypas — the first man so sen­tenced in Kansas since ser­i­al killers James Latham and George York were hanged on June 22, 1965 — 23 years could have passed since his 1996 rape and mur­der of a Pittsburg State University student.

That would hard­ly seem to count as swift pun­ish­ment, or ful­fill legislative intent. 

Supporters will point to Texas’ eight-year aver­age gap and 402 exe­cu­tion­ss­ince 1974 and ask of Kansas: What’s the holdup?

First Kleypas must be resen­tenced, as ordered by the Kansas Supreme Court. Another denizen of death row must be retried entire­ly — Michael Marsh of Wichita, whose 1996 case was involved in the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2006 deci­sion uphold­ing Kansas’ death penal­ty. The appeal of Gavin Scott, sen­tenced to die for killing a rur­al Goddard cou­ple in 1996, was heard last week by the state’s Supreme Court, where the defense argued that the word or” in the phrase cru­el or unusu­al” pun­ish­ment allows the court to strike down the death penal­ty law again. Meanwhile, the appeals of some of the best-known killers — includ­ing Jonathan and Reginald Carr, Douglas Belt and John E. Robinson Sr. –are still to come.

The pro­lif­er­a­tion of mur­ders in Wichita this year — 37 and count­ing, com­pared with 26 for all of 2006 — casts increas­ing doubt on the death penal­ty’s val­ue as a deter­rent. So do the state’s pend­ing cap­i­tal cas­es against Edwin R. Hall, charged with killing Olathe teen Kelsey Smith; Justin Thurber, charged in the Cowley County death of 19-year-old Jodi Sanderholm; and Elgin Ray Robinson Jr., fac­ing cap­i­tal mur­der charges in the death of 14-year-old Wichitan Chelsea Brooks.

Plus, more com­pli­ca­tions lie ahead: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that killers sen­tenced to die by lethal injec­tion, the pre­ferred method in Kansas and 37 oth­er states, can chal­lenge the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of that method of execution.

There are many oth­er good rea­sons for a rethink­ing, includ­ing the recent prin­ci­pled argu­ment of Sen. Sam Brownback, R‑Kan., that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is only apt in a very few cas­es where we can­not pro­tect the soci­ety from the individual.”

Care and cau­tion are war­rant­ed to ensure that only the guilty are sub­ject­ed to the ulti­mate pun­ish­ment. But as dif­fi­cult as the 1994 leg­isla­tive debate was, it should lead to anoth­er any day now — about whether the death penal­ty, giv­en its com­plex­i­ties and cost, is still worth hav­ing in Kansas.

(Wichita Eagle, September 13, 2007). See Editorials, Costs, and Deterrence.

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