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Executions Down in 2008The demise of the death penalty continues, according to a new report by the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC). Compared to an average of almost 300 death sentences per year in the 1990s, 2008 has seen only 111 individuals sentenced to death -- the lowest number of new condemnations in three decades. And since a high of 98 executions in 1999, executions have steadily declined to a 14-year low of 37 in 2008. Furthermore, as the title of the DPIC report succinctly puts it, "Marginalization of the Death Penalty Deepens with 95% of Executions in the South." The geographic location of the state in which the murder was committed determines who lives and who dies. In 2008, the South accounted for all but three of the 37 executions: Texas -18, Virginia — 4, Georgia — 3, South Carolina — 3, Florida — 2, Mississippi — 2, Oklahoma — 2. Ohio executed 2 men and Kentucky had 1. The good news is that of 36 death penalty states only 9 actually administered lethal injections. This U.S. movement away from the use of this barbaric punishment is consistent with a similar worldwide movement towards abolition of the death penalty. Just this morning, Afrik.com News reported that the West African nation of Togo has joined the list of nations that have abolished capital punishment. Last year just five countries — China, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, Sudan and the United States — carried out the overwhelming majority (88%) of known executions. Death penalty nations are becoming increasingly isolated within the international community as calls for a global moratorium gain strength. The question is not whether the death penalty will be repealed but how long it will take. Rather than continue to pour millions of dollars into the coffers of death, let us invest in our communities. Let us choose life rather than death.
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4 Responses to "Executions Down in 2008" |
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Dec 14th, 2008 at 4:36pm
:)
Dec 14th, 2008 at 6:17pm
You mean all but 2... Kentucky is in the south...
Dec 18th, 2008 at 2:04pm
That the death penalty is in-effective as a deterrent, that the justice system is sometimes ineffective at capturing and killing the correct criminal, that when a killing is mistaken and cannot be corrected, and that the killing is a way to avoid the responsibility of dealing intelligently with the pathological psychologies that our society repeatedly produces, it is good that the killings are down.
But if not death, then what is being done with the criminals?
Dec 22nd, 2008 at 1:57pm
Kentucky was not considered the south during the civil war. We (I am a Kentuckian) were split up.