The crimes for this punishment has been imposed have varied over the centuries, but murder, rape, and treason are the most common. The state organization of capital punishment is complex. Every state honing the death penalty has diverse laws in regards to its strategies and criminal acts that qualify. Normally, it includes four basic steps: Sentencing, Direct Review, State Collateral Review, and Federal Habeas Corpus. “The first established death penalty laws date as far back as the Eighteenth Century B.C. in the Code of King Hammaurabi of Babylon, which codified the death penalty for 25 different crimes.”(1) In 1608, Captain George Kendall was the first to be executed. As of now there are 18 states that don’t have the death penalty with the year they were abolished and they are: AK (1957), CT (2012), DC (1981), HI (1957). IL(2011), IA(1965), ME(1887), MD(2013), MA(1984), MI(1846), MN(1911), NJ(2007), NY(2009), ND(1973) RI(1984), VT(1964), WV(1965), and WI(1853). …show more content…
The death penalty is the best solution to those who commit murder. By conducting the death penalty it has deterrence on convicted offender. The FBI Reports the Northeast, the locale with the least executions, had the most minimal homicide rate of any district, and its murder rate diminished 3.4% from the earlier year. Many believe that we will have a more safe and peaceful society if the death penalty is imposed. Another reason people are in favor because it goes against the bible quotes: Genesis. 9:6, Exodus. 21:12, Lev. 20:27 and Num. 35:16. Another reason people support the death penalty because after that person is executed it doesn’t cost the state any