The issue of the death penalty is one that has sparked much discussion.

Authors Avatar
INTRODUCTION

The issue of the death penalty is one that has sparked much discussion in the past and continues in the present. A few years ago Professor Carl stone, noted sociologist at the University of the West Indies, conducted a survey to get the reactions of the people in regards to the death penalty. Eighty three percent were in favour of its retention and it is suspected by many to be even higher today due to the recent terrorism, and wanton killings in this our island home. To many the topic has already taken up enough time and energy. One writer sees it as "worn out from an intellectual point of view". But is it, whenever we touch issues that carry behind it some kind of humanitarian 'consequence' (for want of a better word) we get emotional and fail to come to a reasoned position.

This paper will look at both of the issue and an argument put forward in favour of the retentionists.. For this writer the question of the death penalty hanged for quite a long time until I did some research and came to what I consider to be a reasoned position. It is hoped that this paper will bring some level of clarity as we proceed.

In this first chapter we will look at some of the arguments put forward by the abolitionists. Before we venture any further let's try and capture a working definition of capital punishment. The Catholic Encyclopedia defines it as "the infliction by due legal process of the penalty of death as a punishment for crime" (vol. 12, p 65). To put it simply, it is the punishment inflicted by the state for various crimes.

On the surface it seems only fair that you are punished according to your deeds and should you kill, you should also be killed. However, there are many who object to this surface reasoning. Let's now examine some of these objections.

THE ABOLITIONISTS

One of the arguments used by abolitionists is the flawed nature of the justice system. Reverend Clinton Chisholm in responding to Amnesty International report intones:

"Some of the factors highlighted by Amnesty International which militated against fair trials for the men on death row, I have to take by faith. There is one though that I can verify as a live possibility based on my years in the R.M courts in Montego Bay- legal aid assignments being so late that inadequate time was allowed for the preparation of a good defense. In this regard as well it may still be true in many parishes that only, or rarely other than, 'hard up' lawyers accept legal aid assignments. The truth is that if certain lawyers are assigned to your case and imprisonment or death is a possible sanction then 'pack yu grip' or 'mek yu will' however innocent you are (1989).

They (abolitionists) argue that this flawed justice system can cause an innocent man to be put to the gallows. Abolitionists argue that only the very poor is executed whilst those who can afford the 'big shot' lawyers get lesser sentences and at worst are freed from the charges. A former U.S governor Michael Disalle intones, "the men on death row in the penitentiary have one thing in common: they are penniless...that they have no money is the principal factor in their being condemned. I have never seen a person of means go to the chair (105, p10). In 1979 the Minister of Justice set up the Barrett and Fraser committee on capital punishment and penal reform here in Jamaica to take a closer look at the issue. They examined the cases of the forty men on death row at the time. They found that "they came overwhelmingly from lower economic backgrounds, having little or no education. Most were first time offenders and many did not have the benefit of proper legal counsel (Carol 1995, p4). In 1988 Amnesty International collected data from one hundred and twenty prisoners on death row and the conditions were similar to that found by the Barrett and Fraser committee (ibid). Regrettably, the situation is likely to be the same.
Join now!


Another argument put forward by the abolitionists is that it does not serve as a useful deterrent. Stanley Bohn a former lecturer at the Jamaica Theological Seminary opines that the death penalty does not in any way deter crime. He quotes FBI statistics that showed in the U.S "murder rates are twice as high in death penalty states as in states which do not use the death penalty" (Daily Gleaner 199?). Lowell Erdahl comments further "instead of deterring murder and other crimes, the violence of capital punishment may actually serve to stimulate the spirit of violence within a ...

This is a preview of the whole essay