The Sacramento Bee announced in an edi­to­r­i­al that it is revers­ing its his­toric 150-year sup­port of the death penal­ty and endors­ing the repeal of Californias cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment law. The edi­to­r­i­al called the state’s death penal­ty an illu­sion,” which is rarely car­ried out, despite the large num­ber of death sen­tences. It cit­ed the high cost of the death penal­ty as one of the rea­sons for sup­port­ing repeal, not­ing, California has already spent bil­lions of dol­lars – one recent study pegged the fig­ure at $4 bil­lion – admin­is­ter­ing the death penal­ty since 1978, with lit­tle to show for it.…In a state pre­pared to fur­ther cut pub­lic edu­ca­tion, uni­ver­si­ties and pub­lic safe­ty, do we real­ly want to invest in accel­er­at­ed exe­cu­tions?” The Bee also spoke to the needs of vic­tims’ fam­i­lies, who, rather than get­ting clo­sure from the death penal­ty, are being tor­ment­ed by the inflat­ed expec­ta­tions that California’s judi­cial sys­tem has foist­ed on them.” It con­clud­ed, The state’s death penal­ty is an out­dat­ed, flawed and expen­sive sys­tem of pun­ish­ment that needs to be replaced with a rock-sol­id sen­tence of life impris­on­ment with no chance of parole.” Read full editorial below.

Editorial: Time to end the fiction of California’s death penalty

For most of its 162 years as a state, California has had laws on the books autho­riz­ing the death penal­ty. And for near­ly all of its 155 years as a news­pa­per, The Bee has lent its sup­port to those laws and use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment to deter vio­lence and pun­ish those con­vict­ed of the most hor­ri­ble of crimes.

That changes today. The death penal­ty in California has become an illu­sion, and we need to end the fic­tion – the soon­er the bet­ter. The state’s death penal­ty is an out­dat­ed, flawed and expen­sive sys­tem of pun­ish­ment that needs to be replaced with a rock-sol­id sen­tence of life impris­on­ment with no chance of parole.

We take this posi­tion not because we sym­pa­thize with death row inmates or feel any sense of mer­cy toward them. They were con­vict­ed of com­mit­ting heinous crimes, and bar­ring any new evi­dence of their inno­cence or pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct, they are deserv­ing of the harsh­est of sentences.

Yet the real­i­ty is, no mat­ter how you feel about these pris­on­ers and the crimes they com­mit­ted, they won’t be exe­cut­ed in any expe­di­tious way. They will like­ly die in prison, as have 84 death row inmates since the California Legislature rein­stat­ed the death penal­ty in 1977.

California has 729 pris­on­ers await­ing exe­cu­tions. It has car­ried out only 13 exe­cu­tions since 1992, when exe­cu­tions resumed after the rein­state­ment of the death penal­ty. Each year, juries add about 20 con­vict­ed mur­der­ers to death row at San Quentin, where they will add to finan­cial and emo­tion­al bur­dens of a state that can’t come to grips with the brutal truth.

Many fam­i­lies who lost loved ones to mur­der­ers have hoped that, fol­low­ing the sen­tenc­ing process, they would have clo­sure” when the per­son or per­sons con­vict­ed of the crimes were exe­cut­ed. They are not get­ting clo­sure. Instead, many are being tor­ment­ed by the inflat­ed expec­ta­tions that California’s judi­cial sys­tem has foist­ed on them.

Supporters of the death penal­ty say the sys­tem could be fixed to ensure that those sen­tenced to death were exe­cut­ed in a time­ly way. Perhaps. Perhaps California could change state law so the auto­mat­ic review of death sen­tences was con­duct­ed by appeals court judges instead of the back­logged California Supreme Court. Perhaps the state could relax its stan­dards for defense attor­neys who defend death row inmates, while still com­ply­ing with con­sti­tu­tion­al rights to a fair tri­al and appeal.

Yet we’ve heard this sto­ry so many times before – that we can fix” a bro­ken death penal­ty sys­tem. We heard it back in 1998, when the Legislature cre­at­ed the Habeas Corpus Resource Center to pro­vide train­ing and sup­port for pri­vate attor­neys who take on death penal­ty cas­es. The cre­ation of the cen­ter was sup­posed to speed up legal review of death penal­ty appeals, but there is no evi­dence it has done so, despite a cost to California tax­pay­ers of rough­ly $14 million annually.

California has already spent bil­lions of dol­lars – one recent study pegged the fig­ure at $4 bil­lion – admin­is­ter­ing the death penal­ty since 1978, with lit­tle to show for it. If Californians want to speed up exe­cu­tions, they’d like­ly have to spend more mon­ey – on judges, court staff and defense attor­neys to clear out the cur­rent back­log. In a state pre­pared to fur­ther cut pub­lic edu­ca­tion, uni­ver­si­ties and pub­lic safe­ty, do we real­ly want to invest in accel­er­at­ed exe­cu­tions? And what would we give up to be more like, say, Texas?

Unlike California, Texas is extreme­ly effi­cient at car­ry­ing out the death penal­ty. Since 1982, the Lone Star State has exe­cut­ed 484 peo­ple – more than any oth­er state, and more than four times the num­ber of the num­ber in the sec­ond state, Virginia.

Yet the exe­cu­tion effi­cien­cy of Texas has come at a cost, with few or no discernible benefits.

In its lat­est issue, the Columbia Human Rights Law Review makes a con­vinc­ing case that Texas exe­cut­ed an inno­cent man in 1989. The exe­cut­ed man was Carlos DeLuna. The crime for which he was con­vict­ed and exe­cut­ed – fatal­ly stab­bing a con­ve­nience store clerk named Wanda Lopez with a buck knife dur­ing a rob­bery in Corpus Christi in 1983 – was more like­ly com­mit­ted by a man named Carlos Hernandez, the Columbia law review con­cludes. Suspected but not charged, Hernandez lat­er went on to com­mit a string of vio­lent crimes, even as DeLuna pro­claimed his innocence.

There are sev­er­al cas­es of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment being car­ried out on peo­ple lat­er exon­er­at­ed or sus­pect­ed of being inno­cent in Illinois, Georgia and oth­er states. In California, no one has yet demon­strat­ed that an inno­cent per­son has been put to death, but there have been cas­es of per­sons con­vict­ed of mur­der and lat­er cleared. Overall, our jus­tice sys­tem is strong. Judges, pros­e­cu­tors and defense attor­neys take their jobs seri­ous­ly. But in every sys­tem that involves human beings, there is the poten­tial for human error.

Yes, California could change its laws and increase spend­ing to car­ry out the death penal­ty more expe­di­tious­ly. But we might do so at the risk of exe­cut­ing an inno­cent per­son – arguably the worst mis­car­riage of justice imaginable.

Starting in the 19th cen­tu­ry, The Bee sup­port­ed the death penal­ty, large­ly because it believed it would deter crime and pre­vent vig­i­lante actions. Yet the research to date, in states that have fre­quent­ly car­ried out exe­cu­tions, does not demon­strate that the death penal­ty has reduced the rate of mur­ders and oth­er heinous crimes. In Texas and California, for instance, homi­cide rates went up in the 1970s and 1980s, and have dropped since then, even though California has car­ried out few exe­cu­tions. Murder rates in Canada have increased and dropped in a sim­i­lar pat­tern, even though Canada has car­ried out few exe­cu­tions since 1962.

In November, California vot­ers will have a chance, through Proposition 34, to end the death penal­ty and replace it with a sys­tem of life impris­on­ment with­out pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole. We urge you to vote for it. While cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment remains pop­u­lar in California, polls sug­gest that a major­i­ty of those sur­veyed would accept end­ing the death penal­ty if it were replaced with a manda­to­ry sen­tence of life with­out parole. Numerous long­time sup­port­ers of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment have con­clud­ed our sys­tem can’t be fixed and are sup­port­ing Proposition 34 because of it.

Like The Bee, they want California’s jus­tice sys­tem to be hon­est with its cit­i­zens and with the vic­tims of crime. The cur­rent sys­tem is anything but.

(“Editorial: Time to end the fic­tion of California’s death penal­ty,” Sacramento Bee, September 9, 2012.) The Sacramento Bee has also com­piled excerpts from its past edi­to­ri­als on the death penal­ty. See DPIC’s pages on Editorials, New Voices and Costs.

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