The Death Penalty

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The Death Penalty; What Tennessee Should Do About It. The U.S. Constitution’s Eighth Amendment says that the death sentenced prisoners should not face execution after the death penalty and should not be treated any less then the eighteenth century prisoners. So why is capital punishment still legal in the state of Tennessee? It is true that Tennessee does not keep up with much of the data for the cost record, but the records they do have shown how expensive it is to prosecute someone. Survey data indicates that capital trials cost an average of $46,791; life without the possibility of parole trials cost an average of $31,494; and life with the possibility of parole trials cost an average of $31,622. The life without parole average does not include defense attorney costs, as the defense counsel did not respond to data requests. The death penalty trials cost an average of 48% more than the average cost of trials in which prosecutors seek life imprisonment. (Casale 2012) Tennessee should create an innocent project like California School of Law did; Criminals would remain off the streets for the rest of their lives, and the money saved could be spent on improving the criminal justice system such as increasing public safety or providing resources to help prevent wrongful convictions. You will find a few examples of the cases and research that has been done, why you can’t be something without nothing, what exactly capital punishment is, the closest thing Tennessee has to the innocent project, and where the repeal stands today. The Cases and Research In the past few decades the American Correctional Policy had focused on a “get tough” approach toward all of the crime and punishment that has been happening. To say they ar... ... middle of paper ... ...e Supreme Court to jettison it. The court pointed out it is not so much the number of these states that is significant but the consistency of the direction of change. With regard to the legislative repeal of the death penalty, the direction of change is clear: five states have abolished their death penalties since 2004, four of them by statue and the other New York by a hybrid judicial legislative process. Meanwhile, no state has permanently reinstituted the death penalty since Kansas in 1994. Though that state has not actually executed anyone since 1965. In the years since repeal legislation began to take hold, there has been a complete absence of states passing legislation reinstating the power to conduct executions. And in none of those states that have legislatively abolished capital punishment has a reinstatement bill actually come to a full vote. (Parker 2013)

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