The Death Penalty Just Punishment

Decent Essays
In Chicago alone, there were a reported 762 homicides in 2016 (Ansarl, Flores.) The only way to actually punish some criminals for extreme crimes is death. Criminals will not learn from their mistakes by spending life in prison, so why waste time to hold them when the state can execute them. Chris Goodnow, author of, The Death Penalty is a Just Punishment For The Most Heinous Crimes, States, “According to the Bureau of Justice Statistic, 15% of violent felons, defined as those who commit murder, aggravated assault or rape, will commit a violent felony again.” Goodnow’s facts he found proves that prison will not help criminals of heinous crimes, only death will stop them. Goodnow also states, “Considering this balance, the modern death penalty

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Article Summary #1: Author William Tucker uses his 2000 American Spectator article to explain why the death penalty is actually a deterrent to criminals. Tucker analyzes the statistics of crime over the years and concludes that when death penalty rates are up, murder rates are down, and when execution rates decrease, the rate of homicides rises (par. 13). While many criminologists believe that the death penalty doesn’t affect the amount of murders that take place in America, Tucker counters by saying, “The results are plain to see. Beginning at almost the exact point when executions ended, murder soared to unprecedented heights.…

    • 693 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Often jails can be worse than death row. One way we can to lessen the atmosphere of violence in society, is that the United States media is swimming with violence from comics to television and the big budget movies. Everywhere you look you see stuff getting more and more violent. We need to take a step back and truly think of what we are ingesting every day. T.V shows such as Game of Thrones, Breaking Bad, and The Walking Dead are extremely violent and those three shows just so happen to be three of the most popular shows.…

    • 1740 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    If a criminal murders a member of society, whether he/she had the intent or it was the result of another crime – armed robbery gone wrong, then the punishment should be death. If we implement this philosophy, the overcrowding of correctional facilities would decline. There’s no reason for someone to be sentenced longer than their life expectancy, for example sentenced to 80 years as a 30-year old. Letting murderers and rapist back onto the streets just gives them the opportunity to commit crimes as revenge, or a release of their pent-up rage. For example, the criminal, Willie Horton, that was allowed weekend passes–after being sentenced to life in prison after stabbing a boy nineteen times during a robbery–and brutality kidnapped a couple, murdering the boyfriend and repeatedly raping the female (Bush ad, 1988).…

    • 632 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The death penalty should be abolished because it is not constitutional. The missions of the Founding Fathers were to promote a fair and equal administration of justice; and to act as a unified voice for every individual whether rich or poor with respect to issues of statewide. The belief is that justice for all is better served by a sentence of life imprisonment without the availability of parole than by implementing of the death penalty. Reichel (2013), explained “The constitutionality of sentences must be decided through judicial review of legislation because that is the process designed to protect the rights of minorities and others who are unable to adequately protect their rights through the democratic process” (p. 244). Families at large…

    • 163 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Every time a crime is committed there is a punishment that follows, whether it be a death sentence, or jail time, or maybe just some community service and an apology. The point is for every crime there is a difference in punishment. The differences of the punishments are called the five goals of criminal sentencing, each of them being important and useful in different ways. They list as; Retribution, incapacitation, deterrence, rehabilitation, and restoration.…

    • 1373 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The debate between Judges and juries awarding the death penalty or life in prison to juvenile offenders has been ongoing for many years. The decision to execute a convicted juvenile felon (age varies depending on state) that has been found guilty of a capital offense, or to incarcerate that person for life continues to be a topic that is discussed and debated in state legislatures and the Supreme Court every year. This article will explore the comparisons of the cost to keep a convicted felon incarcerated for life, or to execute them. Additionally, it will explore the possibility of being able to rehabilitate young offenders given the sentence of life without the possibility of parole (LWOP), or locking them away for the rest of their natural…

    • 1351 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    American prisons are extremely overpopulated, thus executing the worst kind of criminals will be beneficial to the prison system. Various workers in the criminal justice field also believe that capital punishment costs less than life imprisonment. The death penalty ensures that fewer taxpayers’ money is spent for the maintenance of individuals that have acted against society in the most violent way (Kasten, 1996). Capital punishment is the only way that victims and their families can get the justice that they…

    • 1264 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The death penalty has continuously been used ever since European settlers brought it over in the seventeenth century. “The first recorded execution in the new colonies was that of Captain George Kendall in the Jamestown colony of Virginia in 1608” (“Part I: History of the Death Penalty”). He was executed for being a spy for Spain. The death penalty varied and each colony had different laws regarding it during colonial times. In Virginia, Governor Sir Thomas Dale enacted the Divine, Moral, and Martial Laws.…

    • 1242 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Death Penalty laws were first mentioned in the Code of Hammurabi, dating back to 1700 BC. Numerous different empires and countries used the death penalty for consequences of crime. Although many countries began to abolish the death penalty, the United States did not. During the colonial era is when the United States first began using Capital Punishment.…

    • 1628 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Sentencing an individual to the death penalty does not necessarily mean that the individual dies then and there, the individual remains in a section for inmates sentenced to the death known as death row. Death row is a long process, which may last for years. "During this time, [inmates] are generally isolated from other prisoners, excluded from prison educational and employment programs, and sharply restricted visitation and exercise, spending as much as 23 hours a day alone in their cells," (Time on Death Row. 2016).Visitation is minimal, and when permitted it tends to be in part because time is running out and death is near. Usually, inmates are allowed to obtain training or participate in educational programs while in prison like that of…

    • 1423 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Taking the life of another has been considered a heinous crime that is worthy of capital punishment; but should taking the life of a person who has taken the life of another be justified? Is the murderer’s life less important than that of the person whose life he took? The death penalty has been the highest form of punishment around the United States, execution of innocent men, its negative influence on our society and the offence it has against human rights are all concerns that make the capital punishment wrong. The first established death penalty laws date as far back ats the Eighteenth Century B.C. in the Code of King Hammurabi of Babylon, which codified the death penalty for 25 different crimes.…

    • 1338 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Death Penalty: The Price Society Pays The death penalty has been a topic of controversy for centuries, known for its inhumane brutality methods which have evolved over the years from lynching to gassing, electrocuting and now the lethal injection; it is in fact the sentencing of those who have committed a heinous crime. On the other hand, justice has been served when the death penalty has finally been executed on the prisoner, bringing a sense of retribution to those who have lost a loved one due to the crime committed. Although many people might think it is a working system, others land in the mixture of controversy for various reasons. Over the course of time, the death penalty has started to become obsolete and is slowly making a turnover…

    • 1158 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Continuing from the deterrent argument, professional translator and blog writer, Casey Carmical argues that “the death penalty is actually 100% effective as a deterrent to crime: the murderer will never commit another crime once he has been executed” (Carmical). It is not uncommon for murderers that get a chance to be paroled to go out to the world to commit another crime. Some of these killers have mental illnesses and cannot even control their own behaviors which makes it threatening to the individuals that killers have contact with in their daily lives. This possibility can only be eliminated through the capital punishment because killers can continue their behaviors even in prison. To illustrate, Carmical suggests that a “study found that of 11,404 persons originally convicted of “willful homicide” and released during 1955 and 1974, 34 were returned to prison for commission of a subsequent criminal homicide during the first year alone” (Carmical).…

    • 1130 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Prison Vs Death Penalty

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Murder is crazy Andre Thomas, Andre Frank Garrett, Larry Keith Robison and Monty Allen Delk were all convicted of murder and sentenced to death for committing multiple murders. What do all these men have in common besides the type of crimes they have committed? All have been diagnosed of some form of mental disease, mainly paranoid schizophrenic. Although not all death row prisoners qualify as mentally ill, In my opinion most human beings must have some mental lap in judgment or mental breakdown to commit such horrible and heinous crimes.…

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Death Penalty should deter crimes! Have you ever thought about what the death penalty does or how it makes people think differently? The book, Capitol Punishment, by Adam Marzilli it explains the death penalty makes crimes decrease in the United States. In the magazine, Will death sentence put an end to Human Trafficking, by Beijing Review explains that the human trafficking could stop, or at least decrease. In the newspaper, New York Times, Death Penalty Assumes New Political Overtones, Years after If Bedeviled Democrats.…

    • 1358 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays