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“If we are to abolish the death penalty,
I should like to see the
first step taken by my friends the murderers.”
Jean-Baptiste
Alphonse Karr (November
24, 1808 – September 29, 1890) was a French critic, journalist, and
novelist. His brother Eugène was a talented engineer and his aunt
Carme Karr was a writer, journalist and suffragist in La Roche-Mabile.
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Simon
Heffer. "The case for capital punishment". 23 Nov. 2005 - We
waltzed into a plenary session about the need to curb serious crime
- murder, rape, armed robbery, drugs trafficking, all those little
things that make life in our inner cities so vibrant today. When I
uttered the fact - not at that stage reinforced by an expression of
opinion, but simply a fact - that the murder rate had quadrupled
since the abolition of capital punishment, an embarrassed silence
permeated the room. It was as if my personal hygiene had suddenly
taken a turn very much for the worse.
Afterwards, however, I was approached by a meek, mild little
gentleman, who turned out to be a Professor of Ethics at one of
America's leading universities, and an adviser retained by the
police departments of several major cities. He wanted to apologise
to me for not having spoken up in my support, but explained that he
had felt intimidated by the weight of liberal opinion engulfing us.
As we shook hands and I urged him not to be concerned, he told me a
story. 'Of course capital
punishment works. In China recently they had a drug problem. One
day, they took out 6,000 drug dealers and shot them in the back of
the head. The result: they don't now have a drug problem.'
Now before you reach for your pens or your computer keyboards, I
should clarify that I am not advocating the mass slaughter of
criminals in this country, agreeable though that might be to
many people. We are not a repressive or barbaric state, at least
not yet. The rule of law suggests that we do things more
moderately here: but many would, equally, say too moderately.”
Why I'd gladly hang Huntley
26 April 2004
The liberal society has been guilty of many mistakes over the past
40 years. However, none was quite so profound as the abolition of
the death penalty for murder, as many were reminded with the
conviction of Ian Huntley yesterday.
There is, quite simply, no
reason to keep Huntley alive.
Why I'd gladly hang Huntley
26 April 2004
Not only is it hard to keep sentimentality and emotion out of a case
such as this, it is utterly wrong. Our law is founded, or should be
founded, on justice. And
justice means doing what human beings, emotional and sentimental as
they may be, believe to be right.
Why I'd gladly hang Huntley
26 April 2004
But for a crime as bestial and calculated as this, where a young man
has murdered two small girls for what can only be construed as his
own gratification, anything less than Huntley paying with his own
life is singularly inappropriate.
Why I'd gladly hang Huntley
26 April 2004
Thanks to the liberal society, of course, Huntley will not pay the
fair price. Of course, there will be much hand-wringing among those
who govern us about the fate of these two poor girls, and about how
such a crime must never happen again.
But, sadly, it will happen again. And it will happen again because
our rulers systematically put the rights of criminals above the
rights of their victims and the victims' families.
Why I'd gladly hang Huntley
26 April 2004
Much has changed - for the worse - since 1964, when the last
murderers went to the gallows in Britain.
It is not just that the
widespread availability and use of drugs has made human life much
cheaper, and removed much of the psychological restraint on people
killing in the pursuit of gain or gratification.
Why I'd gladly hang Huntley
26 April 2004
However, so long as Huntley
and other murderers like him live, we shall inhabit a society where
evil is, in the twisted minds of the potential killer, all but
condoned. Tragically, the only position taken by our rulers towards
such wickedness is their surrender to it - and their utter hypocrisy
in claiming to be fighting it.
Make junkies pay for hospital treatment
By Simon Heffer 12:01AM GMT 12 Jan 2008
"The evil that drug dealers
do cannot be adequately punished under our present law; I would take
a leaf out of China's book, and have them taken out and shot in the
back of the head. That isn't going to happen. But using the laws we
do have more effectively, applying them with zero tolerance, and
making junkies pay - literally - for the damage they do to society
would be a start. I fear, though, that it is already too late."
Why capital punishment can no longer be dismissed By
Simon Heffer 12:00AM BST 23 Jul 2000 - We
all know people who would not countenance capital punishment for any
other crime but who, nonetheless, support it for the murderers of
children. Those who believe that the state in no circumstances has
the right to take life are in a minority - albeit an influential one
- and beyond this argument. There are others who find no
philosophical difficulty in having the state execute murderers,
provided the law enabling execution is passed by democratic means,
and provided those executed have been found guilty after a fair
trial. However, many such people still withhold support for capital
punishment because of the risk of the wrong man being hanged. It is
they who most need to reconsider their view after the events of this
week, particularly the apparently clinching evidence of Hanratty's
guilt.
“There are certain sorts of
murders that are so premeditated, so violent and so shocking, that
in the interest of maintaining confidence in the rule of law, the
only appropriate punishment is the death penalty.” [The
story of Capital Punishment BBC
Documentary 2011]
For Ian Brady’s continuing baleful presence shows that since the
death penalty was abolished, there has been no satisfactory solution
for a society when it comes to dealing with the most wicked and
depraved criminals. [Ian
Brady's victims weren't allowed to choose if they lived or died.
Neither should he By Simon Heffer PUBLISHED: 22:55 GMT, 4 July
2012 | UPDATED: 06:25 GMT, 6 July 2012]
I would argue that the taking of a truly evil individual’s life is a
way for society to apply justice in its most appropriate form, given
the gravity of the offence. [Ian
Brady's victims weren't allowed to choose if they lived or died.
Neither should he By
Simon Heffer PUBLISHED: 22:55 GMT, 4 July 2012 | UPDATED: 06:25 GMT,
6 July 2012]
But we must be aware that
once we chose not to put the most evil murderers to death, we
dehumanized ourselves a little by what we chose to do instead. In
Brady’s case, taking his life all those years ago would have been
better for us all — him included. [Ian
Brady's victims weren't allowed to choose if they lived or died.
Neither should he By
Simon Heffer 6 July 2012
Simon James
Heffer (born
18 July 1960) is a British journalist, columnist and writer, noted
for his conservative political views. He was educated at King Edward
VI's School, Chelmsford, and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge,
where he read English and subsequently took a PhD in modern history.
He joined The Daily Telegraph as a leader writer in 1986 and had
since held the posts of chief leader writer, political
correspondent, parliamentary sketchwriter, comment editor and deputy
editor.
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There has apparently been no comment by the legal authorities on the
veracity of these claims, although they are surely investigating
quietly behind the scenes, but even if all these claims turn out to
be demonstrably false, and Hayes is trying deviously to work his
ticket to an asylum, his crimes, proven beyond all reasonable doubt
or any doubt at all, make him a prime candidate for a punishment
which, if used sparingly, should attract no serious criticism at
all. [Op-Ed:
Some killers deserve to die - the case of Steven Hayes By
Alexander Baron Published: 24 October 2011]
The claim that the state has
no right to take somebody's life or that capital punishment is the
moral equivalent of murder is particularly frivolous. To begin with,
although pragmatic politicians like to avoid it, most states have no
qualms about going to war when it suits them. Modern warfare is more
or less contingent on the killing of innocent people, including at
times women and children. A state that is unwilling to execute a
serial killer who has been convicted by due process of law ought not
to take up arms against another country, certainly not as
Britain did in the Falklands War, to take just one example. [A
Straight Look At Capital Punishment By
Alexander Baron Posted: Sep 30, 2012 in Crime]
Alexander Baron is
a Digital Journalist based in London, H9, United Kingdom. He joined
on May 12, 2010.
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If crime rate was low when capital punishment was in force what is
stopping the authorities from imposing the death sentence denying
bail to these sex perverts?
Any child is as important as one’s child – punish the perverts for
rape with death. [Death
Penalty for Rape Thursday 5 July 2012]
Shenali Waduge is
a working mother of two from Sri Lanka. She received her Bachelors
and Masters degrees from the University of Delhi in India. She has
lived abroad in both the UK and India and derives great joy from
learning about other cultures. Shenali's journalism is an outlet to
express her desire to see a more fair and just society. A voice for
truth, she covers politics, social change, culture, woman's issues
and education. Shenali regularly contributes to the Asian Tribune
and Lankaweb. Shenali is also an artist and volunteers her time to
programs that help the needy in Sri Lanka. Her dream is to see the
world without armaments, without strife and with the freedom for all
to experience world cultures.
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The hanging of Ajmal Kasab has provoked another round of debate on
the merits of continuing with capital punishment. There are
arguments for and against it. Some crimes have to be punished with
death. [Death
sentence is bad, but it is still needed Friday,
23 November 2012 21:39]
All this leads to the case of Ajmal Kasab. Should his sentence have
been commuted to a life term? Frankly, no — and this has nothing to
do with the nature of his actions on November 26, 2008. To keep
Kasab in prison is to make him a prize for a high-profile ransom
operation. It is to invite a hijacking such as the one in Kandahar
in 1999 or a similar situation where the LeT or its affiliates could
seek the freedom of a mass murderer, and make a political point. It
could potentially endanger the lives of many innocent people. [Death
sentence is bad, but it is still needed Friday,
23 November 2012 21:39]
For similar reasons, it was never going to be possible to capture
Osama bin Laden alive and try him in a court in Manhattan. He had to
be killed in Abbottabad. This may not have been desirable or
perfect, but was the only practicable course. Kasab too needed to be
hanged. One man’s life is precious, but the lives of a hundred
common people who may have suffered in a Kasab-inspired piracy
incident are much more precious. [Death
sentence is bad, but it is still needed Friday,
23 November 2012 21:39]
At the root of the criminal justice system is the principle of
deterrence. A wrongdoer is punished so as to teach him that there is
a price to pay for a crime and to prevent recurrence. Keeping Kasab
alive would have prevented him from repeating his crime. It would
not necessarily have led to deterrence or recurrence of a
terror-related crime that would have sought to release him from
“Indian captivity”. Without running away from the broader debate
about the death sentence, we need to keep that practical problem in
mind. [Death
sentence is bad, but it is still neededFriday,
23 November 2012 21:39]
Ashok Malik is
a senior Indian journalist and columnist. He is currently staying in
New Delhi. He writes for a number of national and international
publications. His areas of interest are politics, India’s political
economy, and foreign policy. Malik graduated from the University of
Calcutta, India with a B.A. (Hons) degree. Malik is a popular Indian
columnist. He writes regularly for the Times of India, Hindustan
Times, The Asian Age, The Pioneer and Tehelka. He has also
contributed to various international publications viz. Forbes and
YaleGlobal Online. He appears frequently on news television debates.
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CONGRATULATIONS to the Chinese Government for
carrying out the death penalty on drug smuggling Brit, Akmal Shaikh.
But what a pity our Government aren't following a similar path with
the drug pushers who are wrecking thousands of lives in this
country.
Soft on crime soft on the causes of crime, Nu Labour Britain has
become a haven for the world's criminals who know they have little
chance of being caught and even less chance of ever being prosecuted
and handed down a real sentence for their heinous crimes.
However, poll after poll clearly illustrates that the
British public want the death penalty reintroduced. Instead of the
hand-wringing over one man's execution, politicians like Brown and
Cameron should be addressing these demands.
JON GAUNT
- YES
25 Feb 2008
WE need the death penalty - and we need it NOW.
The metropolitan liberal ruling elite dares to sneer at people like
you and me, who are demanding its restoration.
What planet do these fools live on? The ultimate deterrent of the
rope would make some of the madmen pause for thought.
But forget deterrent. When someone commits crimes as heinous as
those of Steve Wright or Mark Dixie, what's wrong with revenge? Poll
after poll shows the public wants the death penalty. But every time
it is debated, politicians ignore the wishes of their constituents
and vote against it.
Forget the human rights of monsters. Let them swing.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/justice/841368/Hanging-debate-Sun-writers-speak-Columnists.html?offset=1
Now he's going to spend the rest of his life in a cushy prison, no
doubt pumping up his steroid-filled body in between studying the
human rights laws so he can screw even more out of the system. He
should have been forced to hear his sentence and then forced to
watch as the judge placed the black cap on his head. His next stop
should not have been a cell with a plasma TV but the gallows. (Put
them down like rabid dogs 29 February 2008)
For the record, I do think it will act as a form of deterrent but,
more importantly, some people's crimes are so abhorrent that the
only sentence is death. If a vicious dog attacks and kills a toddler
it is put down. Can anyone really convince us that animals like
Bellfield, Steve Wright and Mark Dixie deserve more rights than a
rabid dog?(Put
them down like rabid dogs 29 February 2008)
Jon Gaunt (born
3 March 1961 in Coventry), is an English radio talk show presenter,
and a former newspaper columnist for The Sun.Gaunt describes himself
as a "working-class, educated guy with, in broad strokes, a
rightwing agenda". He regularly appears as a newspaper reviewer on
Sky News Sunrise.
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The clamour among certain sections of our society to abolish the
death sentence appears to be motivated by propaganda from human
rights groups. The Government mustn’t succumb. [Some
crimes deserve death penalty, no less]
The truth is that crime has ceased to be rare; it has grown in
depravity and the volume of victims who could be targeted in a
single act of violence — bomb blasts in moving trains, markets,
cinema halls, or roads. As technology helps motivated criminals to
target more and more unarmed victims with impunity — victims are
always more than those caught and punished — some argue that the
death penalty has not had a deterrent effect on crime, and hence it
should be abolished in favour of incarceration for life. [Some
crimes deserve death penalty, no less]
The argument is faulty. The death penalty (or jail term) is not
about deterrence; it is a judicially imposed punishment for a crime
in which the accused is convicted after due process of law. So, when
families or villages or groups of citizens are targeted en masse,
resulting in multiple murders, the abolition of the death penalty
could make citizens lose faith in the judiciary itself. This could
trigger undesired responses from some citizens, as also from an
overworked and under-appreciated police force. [Some
crimes deserve death penalty, no less]
Ironically, the argument that some convicts must be incarcerated for
life and never return to normal society tilts the balance in favour
of the death penalty. Jail sentences are for persons who have to pay
for certain transgressions, and then return to civil society. [Some
crimes deserve death penalty, no less]
Sandhya Jain is
a contemporary affairs analyst and independent researcher; she
writes a fortnightly column for the daily newspaper, The Pioneer,
and edits the web portal www.vijayvaani.com.
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People are more inclined to commit murder when they know they can
get away with it.
To deter their patrons, complicity for murder should also be
punishable by death. [Yes,
I support the death penalty September 26, 2012]
Our blood has flowed through the ages and if more is spilled in our
quest for justice, we are willing to make the sacrifice. If
the death sentence is commuted, convicts will be freed after serving
life imprisonment, which is 14 years in Pakistan. [Yes,
I support the death penalty September
26, 2012]
The question is not whether the death penalty acts as a deterrent,
but whether it serves the ends of justice.
It is precisely because life is precious that people in favour of
the death penalty believe justice can only be served if the killer
forfeits his own. [Yes,
I support the death penalty September
26, 2012]
It is an entirely different matter, however, when the debate focuses
on the ‘satisfaction’ the aggrieved family will get out of the
killers’ death. There can be no closure for the loss of a life
brutally cut short; just a sense of vindication. [Yes,
I support the death penalty September
26, 2012]
Hajra Khizran
Ilahi is
a journalist and a documentary filmmaker. Official designation:
Senior Sub-editor on The Express Tribune Islamabad Desk.
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We need that safeguard of the death penalty for the very worst
cases, and only after the fairest of trials. We needevil people to
be scared of losing their own life if they take someone else's. - Death
penalty saves lives. Fact
Society has had no qualms, moral or legal, in the past about
executing monsters.
I haven't heard my liberal friends protesting that it was wrong to
execute the Nazis at Nuremburg, or to hang Saddam. Once, there was a
phrase about "the awful majesty of the law" when the judge put on
the black cap. Today the law has no majesty. It is a mockery. - Death
penalty saves lives. Fact
Fergus Shanahan is
deputy editor of The Sun and writes a punchy Friday column on
everything from current affairs to football. Fergus lives in Essex
with his wife and two daughters. He can't stand Tony Blair or the
Labour Party but wishes the Conservatives would be a bolder
Opposition, particularly over tax cuts to help the less well-off.
Fergus backs British independence against a Federal Europe run by
unelected Brussels officials. He thinks Sun readers are the backbone
of Britain and believes they talk more sense than any politician.
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Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) – Since
this looks embarrassingly like an undemocratic contempt for majority
opinion, opponents of capital punishment realize that they need
formidable arguments to justify it. The arguments they use are as
follows: that justifying the death penalty on the retributive
grounds that the punishment should fit the crime is barbaric; that
it does not deter potential murderers as its advocates claim; that
there are no other arguments that might justify the state taking a
life; that it risks killing the wrongly convicted; and, all in all,
that it is a cruel punishment incompatible with a civilized society.
Are these argument formidable? Well, they are repeated so frequently
and in tones of such relentless moral self-congratulation that they
doubtless come to seem formidable after a while. But they wilt upon
examination. Let us take them in turn: Take retribution. This turns
out to be a more complex argument that its opponents may have
bargained for. To begin with, far from being cruel or barbaric,
retribution is an argument that limits punishment as much as
it extends it. We do not cut off hands for parking offenses even
though that would undoubtedly halt such offenses overnight. Why?
Because we recognize that it would violate retributive norms: It
would be excessive in comparison to the crime and therefore cruel.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - By
the same logic, the death penalty is sometimes the only punishment
that seems equal to the horror of a particular crime — a
cold-blooded poisoning, say, or the rape and murder of a helpless
child, or the mass murders of the Nazis and the Communists.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - Significantly,
such civilized nations as the Danes and the Norwegians, which had
abolished the death penalty before the First World War, restored it
after 1945 in order to deal equitable justice to the Nazis and their
collaborators. Was that an excessive response to millions of
murders? Was it cruel, unusual, barbaric, uncivilized? Or a measured
and just response to vast historic crimes?
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - But
this particular dispute is likely to be moot since, as soon as
capital punishment is safely outlawed, the ACLU and its
camp-followers will immediately file suit to have the courts declare
life without parole to be a cruel and unusual punishment outlawed by
the U.S. Constitution. In the British debates of the 1970s over
whether or not terrorist murderers should face execution, I well
remember being assured by politicians who later served as Northern
Ireland ministers that convicted murderers would have to serve their
full sentence; for there was simply no legal way of releasing them
beforehand. Ho Hum. Those same murderers are now walking the streets
of Belfast "on license." The Grim Reaper grants no paroles.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - So
how about the argument from deterrence? Perhaps the loudest and most
confident claim made by abolitionists is that there is "no evidence"
that the death penalty is a deterrent to potential murders. If that
were so, of course, it would hardly be a decisive point in itself.
Mere lack of evidence would not establish the reverse proposition —
it would not prove that capital punishment was NOT a
deterrent. As it happens, however, this claim of "no evidence" is
false.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - That
brings us to what is genuinely the strongest argument of the
abolitionists — wrongful execution. For it must certainly be
admitted that an innocent man might be wrongly convicted and
executed, that we can never entirely eliminate that risk, and that
such a miscarriage of justice would be shameful. For that very
reason we take extreme measures to avoid it. As a result, only a
handful of such miscarriages of justice are known to have happened;
none of them has happened since the restoration of capital
punishment in the U.S. in 1976; and the science of DNA has now added
a further barrier to such terrible mistakes. The recent release of
man as a result of DNA evidence, cited by Rod Dreher (in The Corner)
as justifying his opposition to the death penalty, in reality
strengthens the case for it since it makes future errors even less
likely than they were before.
Even though wrongful executions are exceedingly rare, we know a
great deal about them. Yet we hear little or no mention of their
exact equivalent on the other side of the argument — namely, murders
committed by those who have already committed a murder, served their
sentence, and been released to murder again (or who have murdered an
inmate or guard in prison.) That is curious. For a few years ago
there were 820 people in U.S. prisons who were serving time for
their second murder of this kind.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - If
the death penalty had been applied after their first murders, their
820 subsequent victims would be alive today. That figure is not a
statistical inference but an absolute certainty. Of course, it is
intellectually possible for abolitionists to argue that it is better
to acquiesce reluctantly in the murder of 820 innocent men than to
execute mistakenly one innocent man — but somehow I doubt if that
argument, stated so plainly, would convince the democratic majority.
What those 820 murders establish is that, contra the abolitionists,
there is another strong argument for capital punishment. It is known
technically as the argument from incapacitation (i.e., dead men
commit no murders.) And that argument alone is more than adequate
justification for capital punishment. That is perhaps why we never
hear of it.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) – Do
they then mean a society marked by gentle manners, courtesy, low
levels of private violence, and declining crime? If so, that
argument too backfires on them. Britain in the 1930s and America in
the 1950s were societies that had achieved high levels of social
tranquility by comparison with their own pasts and the standards of
other advanced societies. Yet they employed the death penalty for
serious crimes — indeed, murder trials were among the gripping
social entertainments of those days. And as the death penalty was
gradually abolished (formal abolition generally following on a
growing reluctance to impose it except in the most terrible cases),
so crime and violence rose, and so society became increasingly
brutalist in its popular culture — the violence of films and
television making the murder trials of the 1930s seem, well,
civilized by comparison.
Britain is still in the midst of this perverse experiment that
combines official squeamishness with rising levels of violent crime;
America began to restore the death penalty in the 1970s — and 20
years later violent crime began to fall.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - A
genuinely civilized society would take a very different view of the
evidence cited above. It would pay more attention to the cries of
the victims than to its own squeamishness. And it would transfer its
compassion from the David Westerfields of this world to the Danielle
Van Dams.
Deadly Stakes The debate
over capital punishment (30 August 2002) - For
if the death penalty would certainly have saved 820 innocent lives,
and might arguably save tens of thousands of innocent lives in the
future, almost certainly at the cost of no innocent lives at all,
then surely a society that shrinks from using it deserves to be
called sentimentalist and cruel rather than civilized. And if in
addition it ignores majority opinion in order to indulge its refined
sensibilities, then it deserves to be called undemocratic too.
When next the EU ambassadors come calling at the State Department to
complain of executions in Texas, Colin Powell might tell them
exactly that.
European Dignity, American Rights (Tuesday
27 March 2012) - The European Union is so certain of its own virtue
that it simply parades a set of moralistic precepts on the death
penalty that the unobservant might confuse with arguments. Its
statement of principles on the issue is intellectually trivial and
ignores strong points on the other side. For instance, the statement
makes the usual self-confident claim that there is no evidence that
the death penalty has a unique deterrent effect in combating crime.
There is, in fact, quite a lot of statistical evidence to this
effect. However, even if we let that go, there remains an
irrefutable case that the death penalty prevents second murders by
those who have been previously convicted of the crime. This is the
so-called incapacitation effect. In a phrase: Dead
men commit no murders.
European Dignity, American Rights (Tuesday
27 March 2012) - These victims go unmourned
by bien pensantopinion. In the British debate on capital
punishment, we hear constantly — and rightly — about the two men
executed in the 1950s for murders of which they are now considered
wholly or partly innocent. But we do not even know the names of the
30 victims of our abolitionist penal policy over the last 15 years.
European Dignity, American Rights (Tuesday
27 March 2012) - Well then, abolitionists
usually respond at this stage of the debate, let us keep murderers
in prison forever to protect the public. This sounds suitably
hard-hearted, but it neglects the fact that some second murders
occur in prison. Even if we were to impose life imprisonment without
parole, we would not be able give absolute protection to prison
guards and other inmates who form a small but important minority of
the victims of second-time murderers. Life without parole is,
therefore, no solution, unless we don’t mind if guards and common
criminals are murdered. I do mind.
John O'Sullivan (born
April 25, 1942) is a British conservative political commentator and
journalist and currently the executive editor of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty.
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There is murder in our hearts. We want a trap door to crash open and
a rope to break - and then stretch - the neck of Ivan Milat. We want
syringes filled with sodium thiopental and potassium chloride
injected into the veins of Anita Cobby's killers. And in the next
few weeks, we want to know that a firing squad has done away with
Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, Ali Ghufron, known as Mukhlas, and Imam
Samudra. [Protect
life by meting out death By
Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
2008 12:00AM]
The three men who helped carry out the 2002 Bali bombings that
killed more than 200 people, including 88 Australians, are expected
to face an Indonesian firing squad when the current Muslim holy
month of Ramadan ends in early October. Strange,
though, how these men who say they have nothing to fear from death
and welcome their impending martyrdom have turned squeamish. They
are appealing to Indonesia's Constitutional Court claiming execution
by firing squad is a form of torture. [Protect
life by meting out death By
Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
2008 12:00AM]
Revenge is a visceral impulse that is hard-wired into our DNA. It's
why we have a justice system in the first place - to extract
retribution against those who offend against us. [Protect
life by meting out death By Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
2008 12:00AM]
It's why the majority of Australians continue to support the
reintroduction of the death penalty. And it's why, if anyone ever
took the life of someone we love in a cold, callous act, the
majority of us believe it only fair the offender forfeit theirs. [Protect
life by meting out death By Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
200812:00AM]
Their first port of call is always the claim that the taking of any
life lowers and demeans us as a society. This immediately implies
that anyone with an opposing view is not on the same moral playing
field. [Protect
life by meting out death By Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
2008 12:00AM]
They then put forward the danger of a wrongful conviction. Follow
this logic to its ultimate conclusion and you get this: Thousands of
people around the world are wrongly convicted each year. So let's
not have any trials or juries because of the danger of locking away
the wrong person for the rest of their life. [Protect
life by meting out death By Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
2008 12:00AM]
So here's a moral question for all those on the high ground. If we
hold human life to be so sacred then surely those who snuff it out -
particularly in the most heinous cases - deserve a penalty that
recognises the true severity of such a crime. [Protect
life by meting out death By Garry Linnell From: The
Daily Telegraph September 26,
200812:00AM]
Garry Linnell is
National Editor of Fairfax Media. He was appointed the newly created
position of National Editor, Metro Media Division, reporting to the
CEO of Metro Media on Wednesday 15 June 2011. Garry Linnell has long
been recognised as a leader in Australian journalism, holding
positions of editor of the Daily Telegraph, director of news and
current affairs at The Nine Network and editor-in-chief of The
Bulletin. He was a Walkley award winner for features writing in
1998.
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The EU encourages public debate, strengthening public opposition and
putting pressure on retentionist countries to abolish the death
penalty, or at least introduce a moratorium as a first step. The
EU’s overbearing attitude in dealing with sovereign domains could be
interpreted as adjudicating on issues of faith and morals across
cultures which experience very different histories regarding capital
homicide at varying levels, from individuals to genocides. The EU
contends that all such perpetrators should be treated similarly and
incarcerated at taxpayers' expense, thus avoiding the “cruel and
inhuman punishment, which represents an unacceptable denial of human
dignity and integrity”. Shelter and three meals a day seem to be
grossly inequitable recompense relative to the gravity of the debt
owed to society. As the Mikado in Gilbert and Sullivan's musical
states: “The punishment must fit the crime.”
In all of the rhetoric there is no mention of the cruel and inhuman
treatment meted out to victims and by association their families.
This has always been the arch criticism of the proposal to abandon
the death penalty. Too often we hear voices raised in defence of the
aggressors without equal concern for their victims. There are
repeated calls for the perpetrators to be allowed to forgo the
penalties prescribed under the domestic law which includes capital
and non-capital punishment. We are led to believe that the
preservation of the aggressor's life outweighs the loss, anguish,
and grief of the lifeless victim's relatives.
The tragic slaughter of innocent human beings includes the shooting
of women, pregnant and otherwise, babies, children and the elderly,
involving beheading and dismemberment, to name some of the barbaric
practices that are anathema in a civilised Christian society. If
similar brutal murders had taken place in the EU, they may have
adopted a different point of view towards the death penalty. God
forbid, but if there is ever another significant attack by Al Qaeda
in the EU, the terrorists, if caught, would likely be treated
accordingly by public demand, instead of being given “bed and
breakfast” for the rest of their lives.
The spectre of wrongful conviction by jury could result in
sentencing an innocent person to death, as regrettably has occurred
in the past before the development of DNA evidence that is now
available. The release of inmates on death row after DNA proved
their innocence has attracted universal attention. Conversely, the
same DNA evidence applied proactively can avoid wrongful convictions
in the future. Furthermore, rejection of capital punishment by the
Roman Catholic Bishops of the West Indies does not negate its
application in extreme cases, as recorded in the new Catechism
Article 2267: “Assuming that the guilty party's identity and
responsibility has been fully determined, the traditional teaching
of the Church does not exclude recourse to the death penalty, if
this is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives
against the unjust aggressor.”
This development will not be viewed favourably by Jamaicans who
believe in the justifiable administration of capital punishment.
When the time comes MPs and the Senate may have to vote on the
retention of the death penalty in the constitution. Such a voting
exercise would have to reflect the will of the constituents whom
they represent, and override any conscientious objection they may
harbour. It is expected that the death penalty would remain in the
Constitution, with the expectation that an alteration to the wording
would circumscribe the restrictions placed upon the abandonment of
the death penalty by the Privy Council as contrived by Barbados. The
nature and motivation of perpetrators responsible for such
unspeakable homicides that a terrorized society must bear should
equitably pay their debt to the families and victims who have been
denied their right to life. - Caribbean jurisprudence
at risk onWednesday, May 04, 2011
The argument that capital punishment is not a deterrent continues.
Is there a person alive who would not seriously reconsider their
murderous intent if their life could be lost? The indomitable human
spirit is forever concerned about self-preservation, evidenced by
the existence of relative peace in the world due to the presence of
nuclear weapons which so far have prevented another world
holocaust. [The
EU's crusade against capital punishmentWednesday
19 October 2011]
There is an overwhelming belief that capital punishment is
effective, and that any depiction of cruelty and inhumane treatment
for the accused should be expressed, instead for the victims and
their families. Furthermore, human activists are slow to condemn the
killing of law enforcement officers who are the society's first
defence against crime and violence. These unsung heroes belong in
the Christian category that believes that "no greater love hath any
man than to lay down his life for a friend". [The
EU's crusade against capital punishment Wednesday
19 October 2011]
Another reason advanced for opposition to capital punishment is the
possibility of jury error resulting in the conviction of an innocent
person that constitutes a miscarriage of justice. Much public
attention has been drawn to condemned prisoners who have been proved
innocent by DNA evidence and therefore set free. The same DNA
evidential technology could be applied proactively to determine the
person's guilt or innocence, minimising jury error to an
infinitesimal possibility. [The
EU's crusade against capital punishment Wednesday
19 October 2011]
Anthony Gomes is
a columnist of Jamaica Observer. The Jamaica Observer is a daily
newspaper published in Kingston, Jamaica. The paper is owned by
Butch Stewart, who chartered the paper in January 1993 as a
competitor to Jamaica's oldest daily paper, The Gleaner. It's
founding editor is Desmond Allen who is currently its executive
editor - operations. At the time, it became Jamaica's fourth
national newspaper. It began as a weekly newspaper in March 1993,
and in December 1994 it began daily publication. The paper moved to
larger facilities as part of its tenth anniversary celebrations in
2004.
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Referring to the murder of Trinity Bates in Queensland, Australia: The
messages of condolences on the Internet were constant: 'to put your
daughter to bed and discover her missing next morning must be
horrific ... I hope they catch this animal quickly ... I cried for
this child as much as I would for my own ... even after many years
in the military some things still leave me speechless ...who would
oppose the death penalty now?'
Who indeed? A person who would do this to a child does not deserve
to live.
I believe that if a referendum on capital punishment were held
across this country most states would vote in favour. I suspect the
YES vote could be as high as 70%. [A
deadly debate 22
January 2006]
But in the case of mass murderers like Martin Bryant and Julian
Knight there is no doubt about their crimes. I would not call for
the death penalty in cases of domestic violence – as cruel and
savage as it can be. By I would for people who killed Police or
prison warders or abducted and raped and killed children. [A
deadly debate 22
January 2006]
I have had this debate many times on radio and television and around
the dinner table. And I say: “I know all the arguments against
capital punishment. For 25 years I was totally opposed to it.” And
then I read the autopsy report on nurse Anita Cobby who was
abducted, gang-raped, had an eye gouged out and then had her throat
cut. You tell me how those callous killers have any right to remain
in any civilised community. [A
deadly debate 22
January 2006]
And if you argue that you didn't oppose the execution of the Bali
bombers out of respect for the victims' families then what about the
families of those slaughtered by Julian Knight and Martin Bryant?
I believe the death penalty should be available for certain crimes.
And when there is no doubt, not just beyond reasonable doubt, about
a killer's guilt. [Should
we kill the death penalty? Posted
by: Derryn Hinch for 3AW.com.au | 1 July, 2009 - 4:58 PM]
A person who abducts, rapes and murders a child should face the
death penalty. A person who kidnaps, rapes and murders a woman. A
person who kills a witness to protect his own identity, a cop
killer, a serial killer. A Knight or a Bryant. They have forfeited
the right to remain in this world. Even behind bars. [Should
we kill the death penalty? Posted
by: Derryn Hinch for 3AW.com.au | 1 July, 2009 - 4:58 PM]
Derryn Nigel Hinch (born
9 February 1944) in New Plymouth, New Zealand (now an Australian
citizen) is an Australian media personality best known for his work
on Melbourne radio. He is currently the host of 3AW's drive time
radio show. He has also been a police reporter, foreign
correspondent, newspaper editor, television show host, novelist and
vintner.
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I know readers might not agree, but I honestly think the death
penalty should be bought back. Imagine someone kills your mother,
your father, sister, brother, granny, grandfather or even friend.
What would your feelings be towards that person that has taken the
life of an innocent person you know and love? (Bring
back capital punishment by Fia Tarrant Friday,
05 August 2011 10:46)
There is no fear in killers any more, if they kill someone then
what? ……… they go on trial and get to live. When your 100% sure of
the killer then they should pay the price. Anders Breivik has
killed at least 76 innocent people and admits it! He even has the
audacity to have a grin on his face as he left court. Think of all
of them, their family’s there friends all the lives he has destroyed
all because he’s a disgusting barstard that thinks he’s got a
message. (Bring
back capital punishment by Fia Tarrant Friday,
05 August 2011 10:46)
Fia Tarrant has
been presenting radio shows for the past 9 years. She started her
career filing paperwork at Holiday FM, which quickly led on to
co-presenting then presenting her own Monday to Friday breakfast
shows in England and Europe and weekend shows in Oman. It is her
experiences abroad, not only presenting but also DJing, that gave
her a greater knowledge of international music, and the realisation
that hugely talented, successful artists in other countries aren't
being given the platform to be recognised elsewhere. It was this
that made her aware that there was a gap in the market for a world
chart show.
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Magnotta reportedly will not fight his extradition back to Canada to
answer for his crimes after his arrest in Berlin. So, at some point,
there is going to be a trial and the alleged murderer will put on a
suit and be the star of the show. Again. The memory of his alleged
victim will gather dust, mourned by family members but forgotten by
most others, serving as yet another reminder of the depravity
humankind is capable of.
So, here’s a question: How many reminders do we need before we have
a conversation about capital punishment in Canada? How many
Magnottas’, in whatever form they take, will rape, defile and kill
before we acknowledge that there is such a thing as pure evil. [Joe
O’Connor: Luka Magnotta deserves death penalty (if only Canada
had it) Jun
5, 2012 – 3:09 PM ET | Last Updated: Jun 5, 2012 3:26 PM ET]
Locking it away in a prison
cell doesn’t make it go away. It simply removes the evil from view,
feeding it, clothing it, providing it with access to magazines and
newspapers and high school equivalency courses. Offering it a life,
a chance to grow old, a chance murder victims don’t get. [Joe
O’Connor: Luka Magnotta deserves death penalty (if only Canada
had it) Jun
5, 2012 – 3:09 PM ET | Last Updated: Jun 5, 2012 3:26 PM ET]
Joe O'Connor writes
for The National Post in Canada.
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Compared to the brutality victims suffer at the hands of criminals,
lethal injection is humane. [Drugs,
heinous crimes and the death penalty By Alejandro Del Rosario | Posted
on Nov. 17, 2012 at 12:01am]
I am for the death penalty. I strongly believe in the biblical sense
of justice. [Drugs,
heinous crimes and the death penalty By Alejandro Del Rosario | Posted
on Nov. 17, 2012 at 12:01am]
Alejandro Del
Rosario is
a columnist for the Manila Standard Today.
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…The death penalty was abolished in Britain, even though the vast
majority of the British people never wished it to be. All of us, who
regret the transformation of our country from a `relative oasis in a
violent world' to a society where crimes like the A6 murder are
almost daily occurrences, are surely entitled to an apology. [Hanratty
deserved to die by
Neil Clark Published: 11 May 2002 in The Spectator]
Leaving aside arguments of deterrence, the main moral argument for
the death penalty is that murder, being such a terrible and unique
crime, warrants a unique punishment. [Hypocrisy
and death penalties August 11, 2003]
Any other punishment devalues the crime and simply does not give the
victim the respect that he/she deserves. The state should execute a
murderer not because it holds life in low regard, but precisely
because it holds the lives of those that the murderer dispatched in
such high regard. Capital punishment is pro and not anti-life. [Hypocrisy
and death penalties August
11, 2003]
Recent events show us that it is the supporters of the death penalty
who are the true upholders of due process, and not decidedly
non-pacifistic anti-hangers such as Tony Blair, who would shoot
first and ask questions afterwards.[Hypocrisy
and death penalties August
11, 2003]
Could Blair kindly tell us why he endorsed the dropping of four
1000kg bombs on a Baghdad restaurant where Saddam Hussein was
thought to be dining, but why he would not support the execution of
the ex-Iraqi leader if he were found guilty of capital crimes in a
court of law? [Hypocrisy
and death penalties August
11, 2003]
If asked what 'punishment they would impose on the killer(s) of
Jessica and Holly, this lobby would no doubt opt for life
imprisonment Yet this would be a wholly inadequate response and a
far less humane alternative than the state execution of those
eventually judged responsible. The killers of Jessica and Holly
should be killed, not because we hold human life in low regard, but
precisely because we hold it in such high regard. The execution of
those who take life is the clearest possible statement from society
that it regards murder as a wholly unacceptable activity, a uniquely
serious crime which warrants a uniquely serious penalty. [THE
LIBERAL CASE FOR RESTORING THE DEATH PENALTY]
Neil Clark is
a UK-based journalist, blogger and writer. He is a contributor to a
wide range of UK and international publications. His blog was voted
best UK blog in the 2007 Weblog Awards.
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