The death penal­ty adverse­ly affects both fam­i­lies of mur­der vic­tims and fam­i­lies of the accused, accord­ing to two recent jour­nal arti­cles. In his Psychology Today blog, Talking About Trauma, psy­chol­o­gist Dr. Robert T. Muller (pic­tured) reports that psy­cho­log­i­cal stud­ies have have found that the death penal­ty pro­duces neg­a­tive effects on fam­i­lies and friends of mur­der vic­tims (referred to as co-vic­tims”).

One University of Minnesota study found that just 2.5% of co-vic­tims report­ed achiev­ing clo­sure as a result of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, while 20.1% said the exe­cu­tion did not help them heal. That may be because, as one co-vic­tim described it, Healing is a process, not an event.” A 2012 Marquette University Law School study report­ed that co-vic­tims had improved phys­i­cal and psy­cho­log­i­cal health and greater sat­is­fac­tion with the legal sys­tem in cas­es where per­pe­tra­tors received life sen­tences, rather than death sen­tences. The authors of that study said co-vic­tims, may pre­fer the final­i­ty of a life sen­tence and the obscu­ri­ty into which the defen­dant will quick­ly fall, to the con­tin­ued uncer­tain­ty and pub­lic­i­ty of the death penalty.” 

Lula Redmond, a Florida ther­a­pist who works with fam­i­ly mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims, said, More often than not, fam­i­lies of mur­der vic­tims do not expe­ri­ence the relief they expect­ed to feel at the exe­cu­tion. Taking a life doesn’t fill that void, but it’s gen­er­al­ly not until after the exe­cu­tion that fam­i­lies realize this.” 

A num­ber of co-vic­tims expressed sym­pa­thy for fam­i­ly mem­bers of the con­demned, but the death penal­ty process also can polar­ize the fam­i­lies, obstruct­ing heal­ing for both. An arti­cle for the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform by Professor Michael Radelet of the University of Colorado at Boulder describes the ret­ribu­tive effects of the death penal­ty on the fam­i­ly, friends, and attor­neys of death row pris­on­ers. Radelet com­pares these impacts to the effect of life with­out parole and argues that the death penalty’s added pun­ish­ment over LWOP often pun­ish­es the fam­i­ly just as much as the inmate, and after the exe­cu­tion the full brunt of the pun­ish­ment falls on the fam­i­ly. This added impact dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly pun­ish­es women and chil­dren.” These effects on peo­ple oth­er than the inmate, he writes, under­mine the prin­ci­ple that the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem pun­ish­es only the guilty and nev­er the inno­cent. The death penal­ty affects every­one who knows, cares for, or works with the death row inmate.”

Citation Guide
Sources

R. Muller, Death Penalty May Not Bring Peace to Victims’ Families,” Psychology Today, October 19, 2016; M. Radelet, The Incremental Retributive Impact of a Death Sentence Over Life Without Parole,” University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform, Volume 49, Issue 4, 2016. See Studies and Victims.