Oregonian

February 282004

Editorial

No juve­niles for the chair — The Supreme Court should rule that lengthy prison sen­tences are more appro­pri­ate for young killers

Oregon does­n’t exe­cute mur­der­ers younger than 18, nor does it casu­al­ly hand out death sen­tences like they were parking tickets.

But some states do, earn­ing the peri­od­ic scruti­ny of the U.S. Supreme Court. The high court’s deci­sion this week to revis­it the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of exe­cut­ing juve­niles is yet anoth­er need­ed and wel­come for­ay into this sticky moral issue.

The Supreme Court should rule that exe­cut­ing juve­niles is uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, or at least out­side the bounds of soci­ety’s evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy. A lengthy or life­long prison sen­tence is a more appro­pri­ate pun­ish­ment for juve­nile killers on the cusp between child­hood and adulthood.

The Missouri case head­ing to the Supreme Court involves a man who robbed and killed a woman when he was 17 years old. The high court express­ly for­bids exe­cu­tions of peo­ple who were 15 or younger at the time of the crime. Juveniles who kill at the age of 16 or 17, how­ev­er, occu­py a con­sti­tu­tion­al gray area.

The court ruled in 1989 there is no nation­al con­sen­sus” against exe­cut­ing killers who are 16 or 17. But the court’s opin­ion may be chang­ing with the times.

Only 3 states –Texas, Oklahoma and Virginia — have exe­cut­ed juve­nile offend­ers dur­ing the past decade. Twelve states out­law cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment alto­geth­er, and anoth­er 17 states and the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment for­bid it for all juve­niles. The num­ber of death sen­tences hand­ed to juve­nile killers nation­wide has dropped sig­nif­i­cant­ly, from 15 in 1999 to 4 in 2002.

What’s more, recent pub­lic­i­ty over wrong­ful con­vic­tions, shod­dy legal defense and lack of evi­dence in cap­i­tal cas­es has made the nation more aware that soci­ety can make mis­takes in the pur­suit of justice.

States and the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment should reserve the right to exe­cute soci­ety’s most vicious and cal­cu­lat­ing killers. That pow­er should be used spar­ing­ly, how­ev­er, saved for the mur­der­ers who most egre­gious­ly vio­late the social contract.

In oth­er words, states should fol­low the exam­ple of Oregon, which has exe­cut­ed 2 peo­ple in the past 2 decades, not of Texas, which will exe­cute 4 peo­ple this month.

Deciding when and how to apply the death penal­ty will remain sub­jec­tive, since every mur­der is rep­re­hen­si­ble and every mur­der­er can­not be exe­cut­ed. Making dis­tinc­tions based on age may feel as arbi­trary as the legal dis­tinc­tions based on IQ and mental illness.

But all of these dis­tinc­tions, ide­al­ly, should be guid­ed by the same prin­ci­ple: whether the accused killer has the capac­i­ty to under­stand con­se­quences and cul­pa­bil­i­ty. People who are insane or pro­found­ly retard­ed don’t. Neither do many teenagers.

Society should err on the side of cau­tion and reserve death sen­tences for the worst crim­i­nals who know what they’ve done — and for those who, if wrong­ly accused, have more than a snow­bal­l’s chance of mount­ing a defense.

Sources

Oregonian