A recent edi­to­r­i­al in the Paradise Post of California called the state’s death penal­ty a cha­rade” and rec­om­mend­ed that it be end­ed. The edi­to­r­i­al cit­ed fig­ures released by the state’s Legislative Analyst’s Office, which found that repeal­ing the death penal­ty would save state and coun­ties about $100 mil­lion annu­al­ly in mur­der tri­als, death penal­ty appeals and cor­rec­tions in the first few years, grow­ing to about $130 mil­lion annu­al­ly there­after.” The edi­to­r­i­al also empha­sized that since the death penal­ty law was enact­ed in California in 1978, 900 indi­vid­u­als have been sen­tenced to death, but only 14 (actu­al­ly 13) have been exe­cut­ed, while 83 have died on death row and 75 have had their sen­tences reduced. Even assum­ing that exe­cu­tions resumed at their pri­or pace, the paper said it would take 906 years to exe­cute just those present­ly on death row. The edi­to­r­i­al con­clud­ed, “[W]e’re wast­ing mon­ey on a process that accom­plish­es lit­tle. Knowing that there’s a far bet­ter chance of an inmate dying in prison than via the death penal­ty, why con­tin­ue the cha­rade?” Read full edi­to­r­i­al below.

Voters in California will be con­sid­er­ing Proposition 34 in November, a bal­lot ini­tia­tive that would replace the death penal­ty with life with­out parole as the max­i­mum pun­ish­ment for mur­der, while using the mon­ey saved to solve cold cas­es and support victims.

EDITORIAL: Time to end the death penal­ty
Posted: August 292012

This November, California vot­ers are going to be asked to repeal the death penal­ty. The elec­tion has­n’t start­ed yet, but we antic­i­pate a whole lot of soft on crime ads direct­ed at Proposition 34 supporters.

And an even greater num­ber of claims by sup­port­ers of those who’ve been unfairly executed.

Prop. 34 would repeal the death penal­ty as the max­i­mum pun­ish­ment for per­sons found guilty of mur­der, and replaces it with life impris­on­ment with­out pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.

Those already on death row would be com­mut­ed to life in prison.

Prop. 34 also claims that those found guilty of mur­der must work while in prison, with their wages sub­ject to deduc­tions to be applied to any vic­tim resti­tu­tion fines or orders against them.

It would also give $100 mil­lion to law enforce­ment agen­cies for inves­ti­ga­tions of homi­cide and rape cas­es over four years.

The Legislative Analyst’s Office said that the mea­sure may save state and coun­ties about $100 mil­lion annu­al­ly in mur­der tri­als, death penal­ty appeals and cor­rec­tions in the first few years, grow­ing to about $130 mil­lion annually thereafter.

When we looked at this mea­sure, the work require­ment and the notion that the state has $100 mil­lion to spare on inves­ti­ga­tions of homi­cide and rape cas­es over four years did­n’t move us much.

Although the endorse­ment vote was split among us, two things moved us to endorse Prop 34.

As the LAO points out, Since the cur­rent death penal­ty law was enact­ed in California in 1978, around 900 indi­vid­u­als have received a death sen­tence.”
* 14 have been exe­cut­ed;
* 83 have died pri­or to being exe­cut­ed; and
* 75 have had their sen­tences reduced by the courts.

As of July 2012, California had 725 offend­ers in state prison who were sen­tenced to death. Let’s say half of the 725 on death row are exe­cut­ed at the cur­rent rate of one every 2.5 years: It’ll take this state 906 years to get it done.

In short, we’re wast­ing mon­ey on a process that accom­plish­es lit­tle. Knowing that there’s a far bet­ter chance of an inmate dying in prison than via the death penal­ty, why con­tin­ue the charade?

And this isn’t a Republican vs. Democrat issue – we’ve had gov­er­nors from both par­ties in office before those 14 cas­es were brought to their legal end.

Aside from the mon­ey, gov­ern­ment should­n’t have the pow­er to decide who dies and when. We pun­ish those who take that deci­sion into their own hands and there’s no good rea­son why gov­ern­ment should assume that role.

Government’s role should be to pro­tect soci­ety from some of our most bru­tal mem­bers. And lock­ing them away for the rest of their nat­ur­al lives does that.

Whether they gain abso­lu­tion is up to their mak­er, not us.

(Editorial Board, Time to end the death penal­ty,” Paradise Post, August 29, 2012). See Costs. Read more Editorials about the death penal­ty. Listen to DPIC’s pod­cast on Costs.

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