The Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC)

July 312004

Editorial

Executing peo­ple for crimes they com­mit­ted as 16- and 17-year-olds vio­lates wide­ly accept­ed human rights norms.

The Supreme Court has the chance this fall to step in to affirm that teenage crim­i­nals ought not be sen­tenced to death because they are not old enough to be ful­ly respon­si­ble for their judg­ment and their actions.

The juve­nile death penal­ty, in place in 19 states and active­ly used in sev­en, qual­i­fies as cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment” under the Constitution’s Eighth Amendment, accord­ing to a Missouri appel­late court rul­ing that the U.S. Supreme Court will review next ses­sion. And it does­n’t deter crime or reflect the American ide­al of treat­ing chil­dren dif­fer­ent­ly from adults.

With this case, the court could put a stop to the prac­tice, and it should. Executing peo­ple for crimes they com­mit­ted as 16- and 17-year-olds vio­lates wide­ly accept­ed human rights norms, as the 25-nation European Union and 23 oth­er nations put it in a brief filed in sup­port of the Missouri case the court will con­sid­er next ses­sion. Such poli­cies iso­late the United States from its allies and dimin­ish the pow­er of its diplo­mats to speak out con­vinc­ing­ly on the array of human rights issues.

Child exe­cu­tions vio­late min­i­mum stan­dards of decen­cy now adopt­ed by near­ly every oth­er nation in the world, includ­ing even auto­crat­ic regimes with poor human rights records,” reads a brief signed by retired U.S. diplo­mats, includ­ing for­mer Ambassadors Stuart Eizenstat, Thomas Pickering and Felix Rohatyn.

The only oth­er coun­tries that killed con­victs of mor­tal crimes com­mit­ted in their youth in the past four years were China, Congo, Iran and Pakistan, the diplo­mats say — not America’s usu­al crowd.

In 1998, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the death penal­ty for offend­ers younger than 16, but the next year upheld it for those 16 and old­er, reflect­ing the fears that a gen­er­a­tion of super­preda­tors” was com­ing. It nev­er did. And in 2002, the court banned exe­cut­ing men­tal­ly retard­ed con­victs, say­ing a nation­al con­sen­sus” con­sid­ered such exe­cu­tions wrong.

Research con­tin­ues to con­firm that the areas of the brain respon­si­ble for impulse con­trol and moral rea­son­ing do not mature ful­ly until age 18 (and some­times into the mid-20s), the American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association and hun­dreds of oth­er med­ical groups and indi­vid­u­als repeat­ed in a let­ter in sup­port of abo­li­tion.

That match­es the com­mon wis­dom hard-earned by par­ents, teach­ers and oth­ers in day-to-day con­tact with teenagers.

In a nation where 16- and 17-year-olds aren’t con­sid­ered legal­ly mature enough to vote or buy beer, it strains creduli­ty to argue that they should have com­plete con­trol over them­selves in just this one, most extreme, part of the law.

Compassion, cou­pled with sci­en­tif­ic fact, argues for life.

Sources

The Sun Times (Myrtle Beach, SC)