Life Without Parole

  • April 24, 2012

    by Jeremy Leaming

    Californians are set to engage in a high-profile debate over capital punishment, with an initiative to end the death penalty approved for the November ballot. The Los Angeles Times reports if the ballot measure passes “more than 700” death sentences would be commuted to life-without-parole sentences, making it that state’s “most severe form of criminal punishment.”

    A coalition to replace the death penalty with a sentence of life in prison lauded the approval of the measure for the November ballot, calling the current system “broken, expensive,” and a danger to innocent people on death row. (Former L.A. County District Attorney Gil Garcetti told the Times that with more than 700 people on death row, there is a strong possibility that at least one innocent person is among the group. Garcetti is also a supporter of the campaign to repeal the state’s death penalty and replace it with the Savings, Accountability and Full Enforcement for California Act, or the SAFE California Act.)

    Jeanne Woodford, former warden at San Quentin state prison and supporter of the SAFE California Act, said in a press statement, “Back in 1978 [when the state expanded its use of capital punishment], we did not have an alternative sentence that would keep convicted killers behind bars forever. We certainly did not know that we would spend $4 billion on 13 executions.”

    The Los Angeles Times noted a three-year study of the state’s death penalty that concluded it cost “$183 million more to administer than life without possibility of parole, and that California’s 13 executions cost taxpayers $4 billion. The additional expense includes legal costs for expanded trials and appeals and for housing inmates in single cells.”

    Fair and Unbalanced reports that “polls show California voters are ready to replace the death penalty, and join a nationwide trend.” If Californians vote to dump the death penalty, it will become the 18th state without capital punishment.

  • April 24, 2012

    by Jeremy Leaming

    From time to time, perhaps once a decade, syndicated columnist George Will can say or write something that does more than trumpet right-wing talking points. A recent piece on the Supreme Court’s consideration of whether sentencing juveniles to prison with no chance of parole violates the Constitution is an example.

    Writing about cases involving juveniles who were sentenced to life in prison for crimes they committed when they were 14, Will says the judges involved had “no discretion to impose any other” sentences, and that such mandatory sentencing bars courts from taking into consideration our “society’s sense of cruelty.” This kind of thinking, however, as Will notes can undercut so-called originalism, a method of interpreting the Constitution favored by conservative judges. Toward the end of his column, Will writes that “even the ‘originalist’ Scalia, although disposed to construe the Constitution’s terms as they were understood when ratified, would today proscribe some late-18th-century punishments, such as public lashing and branding.”

    Instead of obsessively trying to figure out what the Constitution’s framers thought when they crafted the document, competent judges today consider societal developments, which are informed by science. In fact, Will writes that the high court “has accommodated what science teaches.” He cites high court opinions from 2005 and 2010 that took into account studies on the differences between youngsters and adults in limiting the use of the death penalty in cases involving juveniles.

    In 2005’s Roper v. Simmons, the justices relied in part on the differences between children and adults in concluding that the death penalty would not be imposed for crimes committed by those under 18, and later in Graham v. Florida that life sentences without parole would not be dealt to juveniles convicted of non-homicide crimes.

    Will argues that the social science should be relied on by the high court in finding that teenagers committed of violent crimes, including homicide, should not be imprisoned forever. “Denying juveniles even a chance for parole defeats the penal objective of rehabilitation,” Will writes.

    In a March 13 guest post for ACSblog law professor Kristin Henning also notes that scientific research “on adolescent development bolsters the commonsense understanding that teenagers lack self-control, are vulnerable to environmental pressures, and have fewer life experiences on which to draw in evaluating the consequences of their actions.”

  • January 19, 2010

    Anti-death penalty advocates united from across the political spectrum this weekend in Louisville, Ky, for the annual conference of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (NCADP). The Associated Press's Brett Barrouquere reported from the event that social and fiscal conservatives are increasingly alligning with the movement to end capital punishment.

    "Roy Brown seems like a rarity - a conservative who's against the death penalty," wrote Barrouquere. "But to Brown, a state senator and the 2008 Republican nominee for governor of Montana, the philosophy aligns perfectly with conservative ideology."

    On its homepage, NCADP cites a number of arguments against the death penalty that could appeal to progressives and conservatives alike, including assertions about its deterrence value, religious arguments, highlighting the execution of innocent people, and the high costs relative to life imprisonment without parole.

    The bi-partisan wave of opposition to the death penalty may be part of a larger recognition that tough-on-crime solutions are increasing criminal justice costs without delivering corresponding benefits. Prof. Mark Kleiman, UCLA School of Public Affairs, advocates for an alternative, smart-on-crime approach in his recent book When Brute Force Fails