In a recent op-ed in the Washington Post, a vic­tim’s fam­i­ly mem­ber in Missouri described her mixed feel­ings about the death penal­ty and the exe­cu­tions that have occurred there. Laura Friedman wrote, Death penal­ty sup­port­ers talk of clo­sure. That may work as a mat­ter of process — exe­cu­tion rids the state and the jus­tice sys­tem of any fur­ther involve­ment — but it is much more com­pli­cat­ed for fam­i­lies of vic­tims. Each enve­lope from the Department of Corrections, each anniver­sary when the crime is recount­ed in the paper, every dis­cus­sion about the death penal­ty on TV — those are reopen­ings, not clos­ings.” Friedman said many aspects of the death penal­ty were dis­turb­ing: I am trou­bled by the num­ber of minori­ties on death row (more than half), by the pre­pon­der­ance of whites among their vic­tims (about 80 per­cent, even though blacks and whites are vic­tims in rough­ly equal num­bers). I am trou­bled by the evi­dence that juries and judges make uncon­scionable mis­takes (144 death-row inmates exon­er­at­ed since 1973). And I am trou­bled by the pre­tense of exe­cu­tion as a med­ical pro­ce­dure: As drug mak­ers and med­ical per­son­nel back away from par­tic­i­pat­ing in lethal injec­tions, states are exper­i­ment­ing on con­demned men with untest­ed drug com­bi­na­tions and inad­e­quate­ly trained per­son­nel while con­ceal­ing the source, skills and meth­ods used.” She con­clud­ed with the uncer­tain hope that the process will final­ly bring an end to killing in our lives.”

(L. Friedman, Death penal­ty debate isn’t sim­ple for fam­i­lies of vic­tims,” Washington Post, op-ed, August 22, 2014). See Victims and New Voices.

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