Jeff Gerritt is the Deputy Editor of the Toledo Blade, a paper which has sup­port­ed Ohios death penal­ty for years. Disagreeing with the paper’s Editor, Gerritt called for repeal of the death penal­ty in the state, not­ing the risk of exe­cut­ing the inno­cent, Wrongly con­vict­ing any­one con­sti­tutes a hor­ri­ble injus­tice, but exe­cut­ing the wrong per­son elim­i­nates any chance of revers­ing the error. Nationwide, more than 140 peo­ple await­ing exe­cu­tion have been exon­er­at­ed. Mistakes are far more like­ly in cas­es involv­ing poor defen­dants, who usu­al­ly don’t have ade­quate legal coun­sel.” He also point­ed to the racial unfair­ness of the death penal­ty: In Ohio, for exam­ple, more than half of the death-sen­tenced defen­dants since 1981 have been African-Americans, even though African-Americans make up less than 13 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion. Eighteen African-Americans have been exe­cut­ed in Ohio under the 1981 law — 35 per­cent of the total.” He con­clud­ed, The evi­dence points to one ver­dict: Capital pun­ish­ment should die in Ohio.” Read the full op-ed below.

Ohio should kill capital punishment

By Jeff Gerritt
Deputy Blade Editor

Capital pun­ish­ment has been part of Ohio’s jus­tice sys­tem since state­hood in 1803, and The Blade’s edi­to­r­i­al page has a tra­di­tion of sup­port­ing it. It’s a tra­di­tion I oppose, even as its deputy editor.

I couldn’t per­suade Publisher and Editor-in-Chief John Robinson Block, who sin­cere­ly sup­ports cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, to change The Blade’s long-stand­ing posi­tion. But I can argue, as an indi­vid­ual, that Ohio should fol­low the lead of six oth­er states that have, in as many years, abol­ished this cost­ly, imprac­ti­cal, inhu­mane, and unjust practice.

Ohio has exe­cut­ed more than 390 con­vict­ed mur­der­ers. Executions have con­tin­ued since the ear­ly 1800s, except between 1972, when the U.S. Supreme Court declared the death penal­ty uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, and 1981, when Ohio law­mak­ers enact­ed the cur­rent cap­i­tal punishment statute.

Even so, the state can offer no ratio­nal defense for it.

Some peo­ple argue, with­out evi­dence, that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment deters heinous crimes. In fact, accord­ing to FBI crime sta­tis­tics, mur­der rates in death-penal­ty states are sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er than those in states with­out the death penal­ty, and they have been for decades.

Nor does the deter­rence argu­ment make sense. Does any­one real­ly believe that the dif­fer­ence between exe­cu­tion and life in prison would deter any mur­der, whether com­mit­ted in pas­sion­ate heat or cold-blooded calculation?

Another pop­u­lar argu­ment for the death penal­ty — one I saw again in The Blade’s Readers’ Forum last week — is that it saves tax­pay­ers the expense of incar­cer­a­tion. In Ohio, it’s about $25,000 a year.

But the legal expens­es of pros­e­cut­ing death-penal­ty cas­es and fight­ing appeals are far high­er. Prisoners often remain on death row for decades, while they exhaust a con­sti­tu­tion­al appeals process that can tap tax­pay­ers $10 mil­lion per case.

A recent study in Colorado, pub­lished in the University of Denver Criminal Law review, found that cap­i­tal pro­ceed­ings require six times as many days in court as do life-with­out-parole cas­es. On aver­age, death-penal­ty cas­es take almost four years longer to complete.

In California, a 2008 report by the Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice esti­mat­ed that the death penal­ty costs the state at least $137 mil­lion a year. Just con­fin­ing a death-row inmate costs $90,000 a year more than hold­ing a max­i­mum-secu­ri­ty pris­on­er. Another study, com­plet­ed in 2011 and updat­ed last year, con­clud­ed that the death penal­ty had cost California more than $4 bil­lion since 1978, includ­ing $1.7 bil­lion in legal expens­es for state and federal appeals. 

Small won­der a con­ser­v­a­tive Republican com­men­ta­tor in North Carolina called the death penal­ty the very epit­o­me of a waste­ful government program.”

More trou­bling is the pos­si­bil­i­ty of exe­cut­ing the inno­cent. In the 1990s, DNA tech­nol­o­gy proved that inno­cent peo­ple have been con­vict­ed of crimes and sen­tenced to death. Wrongly con­vict­ing any­one con­sti­tutes a hor­ri­ble injus­tice, but exe­cut­ing the wrong per­son elim­i­nates any chance of revers­ing the error. Nationwide, more than 140 peo­ple await­ing exe­cu­tion have been exon­er­at­ed. Mistakes are far more like­ly in cas­es involv­ing poor defen­dants, who usu­al­ly don’t have ade­quate legal counsel.

Even before DNA tech­nol­o­gy became preva­lent, a study con­duct­ed by the Stanford Law Review doc­u­ment­ed two dozen cas­es in 1987 of per­sons sen­tenced to death that lat­er had been released because of doubts concerning guilt.

Conservatives, espe­cial­ly, don’t trust gov­ern­ment to do any­thing. Why would they want to give it pow­er over life and death?

Mandatory life sen­tences — the alter­na­tive penal­ty in the 18 states that have abol­ished cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment — negate any pub­lic safe­ty argu­ments for the death penal­ty. In fact, some peo­ple have argued against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sole­ly because they believe life in prison inflicts more suffering.

Finally, the death penal­ty is crim­i­nal­ly inequitable, dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly affect­ing African-Americans and oth­er peo­ple of col­or. In Ohio, for exam­ple, more than half of the death-sen­tenced defen­dants since 1981 have been African-Americans, even though African-Americans make up less than 13 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion. Eighteen African-Americans have been exe­cut­ed in Ohio under the 1981 law — 35 per­cent of the total.

Nationwide, African-Americans who kill whites are far more like­ly to get the death penal­ty than those who kill African-Americans.

Sentencing reforms can­not rem­e­dy deep-seat­ed bias­es in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. They affect the qual­i­ty of defen­dants’ legal coun­sel, police patrolling, arrest pro­ce­dures, jury pan­els, and judges.

In truth, ret­ri­bu­tion is the only sol­id argu­ment for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. It has dri­ven the death penal­ty for more than 4,000 years, start­ing with stoning.

No doubt, the thirst for vengeance is almost uni­ver­sal. Victims of a bru­tal crime may feel it most of all.

In moments of anger or rage, I’ve want­ed to kill or hurt peo­ple too, but check­ing emo­tions is part of liv­ing in a civil society.

Reason and redemp­tion are also part of the human con­di­tion. Society, and the laws that uphold it, shouldn’t cod­i­fy and cul­ti­vate people’s most atavistic impulses.

If any­thing, state-spon­sored exe­cu­tions exac­er­bate vio­lence and dimin­ish respect for life. It’s as much about what it does to us as to the condemned.

Nationwide, cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is becom­ing increas­ing­ly unusu­al, as defined by the Eighth Amendment’s cru­el and unusu­al stan­dard. Last year, the nation car­ried out 43 exe­cu­tions — includ­ing three in Ohio — com­pared to 85 in 2000 and 98 in 1999, reports the Death Penalty Information Center. Most of the U.S. death-penal­ty cas­es have come from only 2 per­cent of the nation’s coun­ties, many of them in Texas and California, anoth­er sign that death sen­tences are inequitable and arbitrary.

Former death-penal­ty sup­port­er Edwin J. Peterson, who served as chief jus­tice of Oregon’s Supreme Court, called the death penal­ty dys­func­tion­al, expen­sive, unwork­able, and unfair.”

Former President Jimmy Carter last week became anoth­er voice call­ing for the end of the death penal­ty, say­ing gov­ern­ments too often impose it on the poor, minori­ties, and those with diminished capacities.

Ohio first used pub­lic hang­ings to exe­cute con­vict­ed mur­der­ers, switch­ing to the elec­tric chair in 1897. In 2001, under the admin­is­tra­tion of Gov. Bob Taft, the state retired the elec­tric chair. Since then, Ohio has relied on lethal injections.

Now, a nation­wide short­age of lethal drugs has trig­gered anoth­er nation­al debate on the death penal­ty. The evi­dence points to one ver­dict: Capital pun­ish­ment should die in Ohio.

(J. Gerritt, Ohio should kill cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment,” Toledo Blade, November 17, 2013). See New Voices and Innocence.

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