Gregg v. Georgia

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    After the Georgia General Assembly altered the state’s legislation concerning the death penalty, it was able to be reinstated. In 2001, Georgia abandoned the use of the electric chair. According to BBC News, the state court ruled “that death by electrocution ‘inflicts purposeless physical violence and needless mutilation that…

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    November 21, 1973, a man named Troy Leon Gregg murdered two men while hitchhiking in an attempted robbery in the mountains of Georgia. In the case Gregg v. Georgia, Gregg was sentenced to the electric chair by a Georgia Grand Jury and this decision was upheld by the US Supreme Court after many appeals. It was deemed that the death penalty does not violate the eighth amendment of the constitution that prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. Although Gregg escaped custody and was found dead one…

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    The most common and considered the most humane method of execution used today is lethal injection. Lethal injection is the act of injecting a lethal drug “cocktail” directly into a person’s circulatory system. In Baze v. Rees (2008), the Supreme Court reviewed the three-drug protocol then used for lethal injection by 30 states. The court ruled that the three-drug cocktail at issue in Baze did not violate an inmates Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishments. This…

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    People want criminals to pay for the crime that they have committed. Some people commit misdemeanors, which carry a maximum of twelve months in jail or less and are crimes like assault, theft, and traffic violations. Other people commit felonies which carry more than twelve months in jail and are crimes like murder, rape, and arson. Misdemeanors are less serious crimes compared to felonies. (“Infractions, Misdemeanors And Felonies- What 's The ...” n.d.). People who commit felonies will usually…

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    Death Penalty Reforms

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    nullification,” in which they would simply acquit defendants they might otherwise have sentenced in order to avoid the imposition of a death penalty sentence. Further supports for reforms were seen as early in American history as 1879 in Wilkerson v. Utah. This court decision…

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    form of paying for a crime. What is not being taken under consideration, however, is the fact that the law has been morally and properly assessing these cases. How so? Well, lets begin by stating that the Supreme Court ruled in 1976 in the Gregg v. Georgia and Jurek v. Texas, that a death sentence did not violate the eighth amendment as the forms of execution have been reformed so that the punishments are not categorized as inhumane and cruel. The person sentenced to death will not feel any…

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    the death penalty. The Wilkerson v. Utah case in 1879 would be the first to argue that a specific method of execution was cruel and unusual punishment, thereby making it unconstitutional. The court did not side with the defendant and found that death by firing squad was a protected method of punishment. (Wilkerson v. Utah, 99 US 130) Various cases came and went without much change to the constitutionality of capital punishment until the 1972 case of Furman v. Georgia which turned the institution…

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    On May 1993, a man named Nathan Dunlap, shot five workers at Chuck E Cheese at Aurora, Colorado. Four of them, passed away and one survived a shot to the face. On July 2012, James Holmes created a massacre also at The Aurora Theater in Aurora, Colorado. There was a total seventy victims, were twelve were killed, and fifty-eight were injured. The last man to ever cause capital punishment to rise was Ariel Castro, who kidnapped three women in certain years, and kept them captive for more than a…

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    Georgia was the first in the United States to abolish the death penalty. This case dealt with three separate cases as a whole. All three cases dealt with African American males committing various crimes in the state of Georgia. The first male William Henry Furman was 26, had not completed the 6th grade, and was diagnosed as moderately mentally deficient, suffering…

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    Teresa Lewis Case

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    Georgia court case that took place in 1972, the Gregg v. Georgia case circulated during 1976 and completely discredited the Furman v. Georgia court proceedings. According to The Harvard Journal on Legislation, “ Under Georgia’s new statute, an offender became death-eligible only if the offender was found guilty of a capital offense and then met at least one of the statutory ‘aggravating circumstances’” (Wang 514). In other words, the Gregg v. Georgia court proceedings reinstated…

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