The Pros And Cons Of The Death Penalty

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In Duval County, Florida during 2013, prosecutors were seeking the death penalty for the murder of Shelby Farah. However, Shelby’s mom, Darlene Farah, expressed her opinion regarding the hardships of the death penalty process. "I do not want my family to go through the years of trials and appeals that come with death-penalty cases." Instead, she wants her family to be able to, "celebrate [Shelby's] life, honor her memory and begin the lengthy healing process." (New Voices, n.d.) A topic of constant debate is the length and expenses attributed to the death row process. The appeal process in death penalty cases takes enormous amount of time to complete. Typically, a case may take between 6 to 10 years, but there are always exceptions (Death Penalty …show more content…

The death penalty is only legal in 32 states of the 50 in the US found in Appendix-Image 1 (32 States, 2016). It should be no surprise that the three biggest states have the most on death row; California: 754 Florida: 395 Texas: 254 (Death Penalty info, n.d.). The states that have abolished the death penalty, have replaced it with a sentence of life imprisonment with no possibility for parole. The remaining states across the country will continue to debate its fairness, reliability, and cost of implementation …show more content…

It was started in 1992 by Peter Neufeld and Barry Scheck to exonerate those wrongly convicted through DNA testing and to push reforms in the criminal justice system to prevent future injustice (About, n.d.). On their website, they have 349 cases listed and information about the exonerated cases, they were involved in; 20 being death penalty cases. These errors are more likely to get fixed nowadays with technology advances. Recently, the death penalty has become a hot topic again in the media with the rushing of death penalty executions in Arkansas. According to CNN, inmate Kenneth Williams was executed Thursday, April 27th, 2017, as the fourth person the state has executed in eight days ending a frantic schedule as the state's supply of a sedative it uses in lethal injections expires at the end of April (Karimi,

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