Death Penalty's False Promise By Anna Quindlen

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Some crimes cannot be paid for in full. This is true for many acts of murder, rape, and torture for which some are put behind bars. As said in “Death Penalty’s False Promise: An Eye for an Eye” by Anna Quindlen, “There is nothing anyone could do that is bad enough for an adult who took a 6-year-old boy away from his parents, perhaps tortured, then murdered, him and cut off his head. Nothing at all. Lethal injection? The electric chair? Bah”(Quindlen 140). What she says here perfectly sums up the death penalty. There's no true equivalent for certain crimes, and there never will be in this world. True vengeance would never occur because the only way such a despicable criminal could pay would be if they got the same treatment as their victims …show more content…

Even the worst crimes should not be paid with the simple escape of death. The death penalty costs far more than a life sentence, though it seems like the opposite would be true. With the multiple appeals and trials and relocations, it’s millions down the drain. According to deathpenalty.org it costs taxpayers $90,000 more a year to maintain a death row prisoner versus maintaining a prisoner in general population. Add in the cost of execution depending on the method, $24 million for each electrocution in Florida, at least $86 per lethal injection, around $25,000 for a fire squad execution,(deathpenaltyinfo.org) and it’s even more for a quick end. There is no point in wasting thousands each year on such a practice that has no effect on criminal decision-making. In fact, according to the FBI’s “Crime Rates in the US”, the states without the death penalty actually have a lower murder rate than states with the death penalty. We should not use the death penalty to teach criminals that killing people is wrong; it’s hypocrisy. You don't teach someone that murder is wrong by murdering the one who's done it just as you wouldn't teach someone that stealing is wrong by stealing something of

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