Detroit Free Press

October 162004

Even death penal­ty sup­port­ers ought to hope that the U.S. Supreme Court ends the bar­bar­ic prac­tice of exe­cut­ing mur­der­ers who killed when they were 16 or 17.

The United States is vir­tu­al­ly alone in per­mit­ting the exe­cu­tion of minors. Only six oth­er nations have allowed it since 1990, and those coun­tries, includ­ing Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and China, have prac­ti­cal­ly aban­doned using it.

Justices have already acknowl­edged that matu­ri­ty and men­tal capac­i­ty help deter­mine a legal lev­el of respon­si­bil­i­ty. They have applied the con­sti­tu­tion­al ban on cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment when a killer lacks the abil­i­ty to under­stand his or her actions. The high court out­lawed exe­cu­tions for those 15 or under when they com­mit­ted their crimes, and for the men­tal­ly retard­ed. Still, 19 states con­tin­ue to allow the death penal­ty for old­er teenagers.

The argu­ments against the death penal­ty for adults are per­sua­sive enough. Minorities and the poor make up most death row inmates. DNA tech­nol­o­gy has shown that a dis­qui­et­ing num­ber of them are inno­cent. Moreover, because of legal chal­lenges, the death penal­ty is cost­ly, and no evi­dence shows that it deters.

The case against exe­cut­ing juve­niles is even more com­pelling. Society does­n’t extend adult rights to 16- and 17-year-olds because it believes they do not pos­sess the same matu­ri­ty and judg­ment. Nor should they, gen­er­al­ly, suf­fer the same con­se­quences. That does­n’t mean minors should not be pun­ished, but the most severe sanc­tion pos­si­ble for adults is not appro­pri­ate for juve­niles.

The Supreme Court can bring the nation in line with its own Constitution — and all stan­dards of decen­cy — by out­law­ing the exe­cu­tion of children.

Sources

Detroit Free Press