Former Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction Director Terry J. Collins (pic­tured) says the death penal­ty is a failed pub­lic pol­i­cy” that isn’t worth fix­ing.” With 30 years of expe­ri­ence as a war­den, region­al cor­rec­tions direc­tor, assis­tant direc­tor, and then cor­rec­tions direc­tor, Collins par­tic­i­pat­ed in 33 exe­cu­tions. He says, With each exe­cu­tion I asked myself: Did the exten­sive process of appeals ensure we got it right? I often won­dered if we made a mis­take. My curios­i­ty arose because I had walked peo­ple out of prison after years of incar­cer­a­tion who turned out to be inno­cent,” includ­ing Ohio’s first death row exoneree, Gary Beeman. Collins said he is trou­bled by Ohio’s track record” of exe­cut­ing 53 death-row pris­on­ers while exon­er­at­ing 9. But his con­cerns about the death penal­ty are not lim­it­ed to the pos­si­bil­i­ty of killing an inno­cent per­son.” He says, The offend­ers in our pris­ons I encoun­tered who com­mit­ted unimag­in­able crimes were usu­al­ly not on Death Row.” As a result, he do[es] not accept the argu­ment that we only exe­cute the worst of the worst.” In fact, he says, a recent study of Ohio exe­cu­tions found that the race of the vic­tim and the coun­ty where the crime took place mat­ter more than the sever­i­ty of the crime.” In addi­tion, Collins says, The death penal­ty is expen­sive, inef­fi­cient and takes far too long. I believe it only pro­longs the pain and heal­ing process for vic­tims’ fam­i­lies.” He con­cludes that It is time for state offi­cials to have seri­ous and thought­ful con­ver­sa­tions about whether Ohio’s death penal­ty remains nec­es­sary. … My expe­ri­ence tells me the death penal­ty isn’t worth fix­ing. Our jus­tice sys­tem will be more fair and effec­tive with­out the death penalty.”

(T. Collins, Ohio’s for­mer pris­ons chief: The death penal­ty isn’t worth fix­ing’,” WCPO, Cincinnati, February 24, 2016.) See New Voices, Innocence, and Arbitrariness.

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