International Police Forum on the Death Penalty

Fighting Crime in the U.S. and Internationally: Is the Death Penalty Necessary?

A Unique Conversation Between U.S. and European Law Enforcement

On October 13, 2010, offi­cials from the U.S. and Europe held what may have been the first inter­na­tion­al forum of law enforce­ment offi­cers on the mer­its of the death penal­ty in reduc­ing vio­lent crime. The offi­cers dis­cussed whether cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment actu­al­ly helps to keep cit­i­zens safe, assists heal­ing for vic­tims, and uses crime-fight­ing resources effi­cient­ly. The pan­elists addressed issues such as deter­rence, clo­sure to vic­tims’ fam­i­lies, and costs as com­pared to alter­na­tive sen­tences. The pan­el was held at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., and was mod­er­at­ed by Richard Dieter, Executive Director of the Death Penalty Information Center. Elizabeth Zitrin, Coordinator of International Outreach and Communications at Death Penalty Focus and Laura Porter, Director of Organizing at Equal Justice USA offered open­ing remarks, and their orga­ni­za­tions co-spon­sored the event with DPIC. The offi­cers’ also answered ques­tions from the media and the pub­lic in atten­dance. The forum was fol­lowed by sim­i­lar pre­sen­ta­tions at the Delegation of the European Union in Washington, D.C.

I … know that in prac­tice, [the death penal­ty] does more harm than good. So while I hang on to my the­o­ret­i­cal views, as I’m sure many of you will, I stand before you to say that soci­ety is bet­ter off with­out cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment… Life in prison with­out parole in a max­i­mum-secu­ri­ty deten­tion facil­i­ty is a better alternative.”

-Police Chief James Abbott of West Orange, New Jersey, the Republican appointee to the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission. 

Click here for the video of Chief Abbott’s remarks.

Out of the 100 or more cas­es that I was per­son­al­ly involved in… in the vast major­i­ty of those, I do not think deter­rence would have been an issue at all.” He con­tin­ued, If you were to use exe­cu­tion of killers as a deter­rent, I think you would end up hav­ing to exe­cute every killer in the hope that you might deter some poten­tial killer in the future. I think the deter­rence argu­ment, while I do not dis­miss it, is very, very weak.”

-Former Detective Superintendent Bob Denmark of Lancashire Constabulary, England. 

Click here for the video of Detective Superintendent Denmark’s remarks.

Nobody can assure that the death penal­ty can con­tribute to reduce the num­ber of the most hor­ri­ble crimes. In Portugal, we have – with­out the death penal­ty – one of the low­est sta­tis­tics [rates] of violent crimes.”

-António Cluny, Senior Attorney General and Public Prosecutor from Portugal. 

Click here for the video of Attorney Cluny’s remarks.

What we need to do from a law enforce­ment per­spec­tive is to be smart on crime, not to be hard on crime… I couldn’t find evi­dence that the death penal­ty did any good here in the dis­trict, as a police offi­cer… What we ought to be is smart on the crime. All of the mon­ey that we spend on the death penal­ty every year, I can imag­ine what that mon­ey can be involved in, if we used it in edu­ca­tion and train­ing for police… invest­ing in things that can real­ly make a dif­fer­ence in our community.”

-Ronald Hampton, Executive Director of National Black Police Association International Leadership Institute and a 23-year vet­er­an of the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department. 

Click here for the video of Officer Hampton’s remarks.


Photos by abe@​ncadp.​org and M. Louden

Additional Resources:
To learn more about law enforce­ment offi­cials’ views on the death penal­ty, read DPIC’s report Smart on Crime: Reconsidering the Death Penalty in a Time of Economic Crisis.” (con­tains results of a nation­al poll of police chiefs in the U.S. on the death penalty).

Read more about Costs, Deterrence and Victims.

DPIC’s Press Advisory for the event.

Biographical infor­ma­tion on the panel members.

Descriptions of sponsoring organizations.