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The Death Penalty : An Overview of the Ethical Issues

The Death Penalty : An Overview of the Ethical Issues. Ethics Matters. Lawrence M. Hinman, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy University of San Diego Larry at EthicsMatters dot net November 29, 2010. Table of Contents. Statistics and Laws Philosophical Justifications Issues.

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The Death Penalty : An Overview of the Ethical Issues

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  1. The Death Penalty:An Overview of the Ethical Issues Ethics Matters Lawrence M. Hinman, Ph.D.Professor of Philosophy University of San DiegoLarry at EthicsMatters dot net November 29, 2010 (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  2. Table of Contents • Statistics and Laws • Philosophical Justifications • Issues (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  3. StatisticsandLaws (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  4. Global Statistics Source: http://www.amnesty.org.uk/uploads/documents/doc_19251.pdf (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  5. Executions in the U.S. Source: DOJ, http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/exe.htm (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  6. Blue: No current death penalty statute • Orange: Death penalty statute declared unconstitutional • Green: No one executed since 1976 • Red: Has performed execution since 1976 • Source Death Penalty States (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  7. Executions by State http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/arbitrariness#Geography (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  8. Executions in the United States, 2 Over one-third of executions occur in Texas; Source: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/article.php?did=414&scid=8 Also see: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/article.php?scid=8&did=186 (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  9. Supreme Court Decisions • Not permitted for minors or crimes committed while a minor. • Kennedy v. Louisiana, 2008: overturned Louisiana law to permit punishment of rape of a child by the death penalty (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  10. Philosophical Justifications (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  11. Justifications for Punishment • Recall two ways of justifying punishment • Backward-looking: retribution for a past wrong, the lex talionis • Forward-looking: deterrence against future crimes (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  12. “A Life for a Life” • The lextalionis asserts that we punish with “an eye for an eye” and, by extension, “a life for a life” • How do we then punish torturers? • Is the lextalionis restricted by prohibitions against cruelty, etc. • Distinguish between whether the offender deserves the punishment and whether we would be demeaned by punishing in that way. (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  13. The Sanctity of Life • Both opponents and defenders of the death penalty appeal to the sanctity of life • Opponents say life is sacred and no one should take it (Cardinal Bernadine’s seamless garment analogy) • Advocates say that the way to honor the sanctity of life is to execute those who have so violated its sanctity by murdering someone (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  14. Hope and the Possibility of Change • Is the death penalty as act of giving up hope on the possibility of salvation in this life for the murderer? • Should we give up hope in some cases? • Might the death penalty foster moral awareness on the part of the murderer? (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  15. The Effects of the Death Penalty • Does the death penalty deter? • That particular criminal • Other possible criminals • Some researchers have argued that the death penalty saves 7-8 innocent lives a year. • Do capital punishment states have lower rate of capital crimes? (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  16. The Argument from Common Sense • Common sense says that the death penalty is worse to an offender than life in prison. • Questions: • Do criminals think they will be punished? • Does this establish a climate of brutalization? (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  17. Executions and Deterrence • If capital punishment is justified in terms of deterrence, then should we do whatever we can to increase their deterrent effect, including: • execute more swiftly? • televise executions? (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  18. Issues (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  19. Capital Punishment and Mistakes • Capital punishment is irrevocable in a way that other punishments aren’t • The Trade-off: • How many executions of innocent persons are avoided? • How many actual murders are not executed or punished? • The Innocence Project (157 exonerated): http://www.innocenceproject.org/ • Sources of Mistakes: • 2 DNA Inclusions at Time of Trial • 6 Other Forensic Inclusions • 15 False Confessions 16Informants / Snitches • 17 False Witness Testimony • 21 Microscopic Hair Comparison Matches • 23 Bad Lawyering • 26 Defective or Fraudulent Science • 34 Prosecutorial Misconduct • 38 Police Misconduct • 40 Serology Inclusion • 61 Mistaken I.D. • Governor Ryan’s Commission on the Death Penalty: • http://www.idoc.state.il.us/ccp/ccp/reports/commission_report/summary_recommendations.pdf (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  20. Capital Punishment and Race • Four possible areas of racial bias: • Race of perpetrator—a diminishing issue • Race of victim—still a significant problem • Race of jurors—a significant issue • Race of prosecutor—98% of prosecutors are white • Most significant in mid-range cases, not most or least aggravated cases. • Raises memories of racial lynchings in early 20th century • Subtle bias in terms of how offenders are charged, how the prosecution proceeds, etc. • See http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/glance/exe.cfm and • http://www.capitalpunishmentincontext.org/issues/race (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  21. Capital Punishment and Race of Perpetrator Source: DOJ, http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/drrace.htm (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  22. Capital Punishment and Foreign Nationals • Mexican nationals were often denied access to consular aid. • Many other countries, including Mexico, do not have the death penalty. • http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A15355-2005Mar7.html (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

  23. Physician Participation in Executions • Statements from Doctors and Medical Organizations • Curfman et a;, “Physicians and Execution,” New England Journal of Medicine, January 24, 2008 • Video • Breach of Trust: Physician Participation in Executions in the United States. This report, published jointly by Physicians for Human Rights, the American College of Physicians, the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, and Human Rights Watch in 1994, deals with the ethical issues involved with physician participation in capital punishment. PDF (c) Lawrence M. Hinman http://ethicsmatters.net

  24. Conclusion • What, if anything, would it take to change your mind on the death penalty? (c) Lawrence M. Hinman

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