Globe and Mail (Canada)

April 52004

An aston­ish­ing 75 juve­niles are on death row in the United States, the only coun­try apart from Iran that for­mal­ly exe­cutes youths 17 and under. In the past dozen years, the remain­ing hold­outs have banned the prac­tice — Yemen and Zimbabwe in 1994, China in 1997 and Pakistan in 2000 — while the Democratic Republic of Congo has placed a mora­to­ri­um on it. This is not, by and large, an axis of good, yet even it has man­aged to do the right thing.

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed ear­li­er this year to recon­sid­er its 1989 deci­sion per­mit­ting cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment for 16- and 17-year-olds. This is an oppor­tu­ni­ty to con­tin­ue dis­man­tling the archa­ic struc­ture of the death penal­ty. In 1988, the court abol­ished the penal­ty for 15-year-olds. Two years ago, it banned the prac­tice of exe­cut­ing men­tal­ly retard­ed peo­ple, and thus allowed the United States to part com­pa­ny with Kyrgyzstan.

Since the first U.S. exe­cu­tion of a juve­nile crim­i­nal in 1642 (50 years before the Salem witch tri­als), 336 youths have been put to death out of 20,000 total exe­cu­tions. Much has changed in law, sci­ence and the fam­i­ly since then, but the coun­try still clings to the notion that putting killers to death will make it a safer place to live.

Yet even by the coun­try’s own legal stan­dards for impos­ing the death penal­ty, a strong argu­ment can be made that it is time to abol­ish the penal­ty for 16- and 17-year-olds.

When the court threw out the death penal­ty for men­tal­ly retard­ed pris­on­ers, it said the pub­lic con­sen­sus no longer sup­port­ed it. The 6 – 3 major­i­ty cit­ed the fact that in 1989 only two death-penal­ty states did not allow it, while in 2002 18 did not.

By the same token, five death-penal­ty states have barred exe­cu­tions of juve­niles since 1989, and juries seem increas­ing­ly reluc­tant to impose the ulti­mate pun­ish­ment on teens. Last year, just two juve­niles received death sen­tences; 10 years ago, 17 did. A jury in the case of 17-year-old Washington-area sniper Lee Malvo refused last December to sen­tence him to death for a cold-blood­ed killing.

Retribution and deter­rence are the two stat­ed rea­sons for the U.S. death penal­ty, as set out by the Supreme Court. Something shocks the con­science in demand­ing death as ret­ri­bu­tion from teenagers, who are deemed so imma­ture that they can­not mar­ry with­out parental con­sent until the age of 18. (In Missouri, where the state Supreme Court recent­ly struck down cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment for juve­niles, youths can­not serve on juries until they are 21.) As for deter­rence, it is mere spec­u­la­tion that the prospect of a death sen­tence works on the impul­sive teenage mind in a way that a long prison term does not.

Since four of the Supreme Court’s nine judges have already called juve­nile exe­cu­tions a shame­ful prac­tice,” just one more vote is need­ed to over­turn the prac­tice. It would be most like­ly to come from Justice Sandra Day O’Connor or Justice Anthony Kennedy; both vot­ed two years ago to end exe­cu­tions of the men­tal­ly retard­ed.

If the juve­nile death penal­ty falls, some observers say, the next fights could involve the death penal­ty for those 18 to 20 and for those who are bor­der­line men­tal­ly retard­ed. Executing juve­niles is a stain on the United States. The coun­try may not give up quick­ly on the illu­sion that state-sanc­tioned killing is a just and effec­tive answer to vio­lence in the com­mu­ni­ty. Piece by piece, how­ev­er, it may be start­ing to let go.

Sources

Globe and Mail (Canada)