The Death Penalty Does NOT Reduce Crime

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Today's system of capital punishment tolerates many inequalities and injustices. The common arguments for the death penalty are filled with holes. Imposing the death penalty is expensive and time consuming. Each year billions of dollars are spent to sentence criminals to death. Perhaps the most frequently raised argument against capital punishment is that of its cost. Other thoughts on the death penalty are to turn criminals away from committing violent acts. A just argument against the death penalty would be that sentencing an individual to death prevents future crimes by other individuals. However, criminals are not afraid of the death penalty. The chance of a criminal being sentenced to death is very slim. The number of inmates actually put to death is far less than it was decades ago. This decrease in number shows that the death penalty is faulty. With that being true, many criminals feel that they can get away with a crime and go unpunished. Also, the less that the death sentence is invoked, the more conflicting it becomes when it is actually used. Alternative can be found to substitute for the death penalty. A huge misconception of the death penalty is that it saves society the costs of keeping inmates imprisoned for long periods of time. Ironically, the cost of the death penalty is far greater than the cost of housing a criminal for life. Appeals on the death penalty become a long, drawn-out and very expensive process. There are those who cry that we, the taxpayers, shouldn't have to "support" condemned people for an entire lifetime in prison-that we should simply "eliminate" them and save ourselves time and money. The truth is that the cost of state killing is up to three times the cost of lifetime imprisonment (Long 80). ...

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...d let our lives be terrorized. No longer can we sit back and watch criminals be released and then commit crime again. We must no longer live our live in fear. We must come together and draw the line where crime is concerned. We must make the world safe so that we along with the next generations can live in a world without the fear of being senselessly killed or losing our loved ones.

Works Cited:

Long, Robert Emmet. Criminal Sentencing. New York, NY: H.W. Company, 1995. Zimring, Franklin E. Capital Punishment and the American Agenda. Cambridge, 1987.

Clear, Todd R., and Cole, George F., American Corrections (3rd Edition). Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1994.

Cavanagh, Suzanne. “Capital Punishment: A Brief Overview”. CRS Report For Congress 95-505GOV (1995): 4. Sellin, Thorsten. The Penalty of Death. Sage Publishing Co.,1980.

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