Analysis Of The Wrong Man By Alan Berlow

934 Words2 Pages

Terrible Trials “The prospect that innocent people will be executed in America is horrifyingly likely.” In Alan Berlow’s article, “The Wrong Man”, Alan gives an unsparing report on the criminal-justice system and the death penalty. Although many believe the execution of an innocent person is impossible and many advocate that it is so, Alan gives a detailed look at the death penalty and how possible it is. The purpose of this article is to show the flaws in our criminal justice system and how common an innocent can be sentenced to death. The major premise of Berlow’s article is to show the many injustices that take place within our courts that could contribute to wrongful sentencing of innocent men and women. For example, Berlow highlights the case of Rolando Cruz. Berlow states in paragraph 2, “Despite the fact that the police …show more content…

If the individuals are interested in the death penalty and the cases it encompasses. For example, one could have heard of a recent case where a person was freed after years of imprisonment and set free from the death penalty. Whatever the case, reading Berlow’s article will inform readers of the criminal-justice system and its failures and inconsistent justice it serves. He informs the reader of the case Furman v.Georgia in paragraph 12, “ the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the death penalty as then administered violated the Eighth Amendment 's proscription against cruel and unusual punishment and the Fourteenth Amendment 's equal-protection clause. Individual justices in the majority found much they didn 't like about the death penalty. They said that it was disproportionately applied to the "poor and despised," that it was frequently imposed on the "constitutionally impermissible basis of race," and that it was applied in an "arbitrary and capricious" fashion.” Also the racial factor that plays into these harsh rulings can be found by the

Open Document