Death By Execution example essay topic
The first established death penalty laws date as far back as the Eighteenth Century B.C. in the Code of King Hammurabi of Babylon, which codified the death penalty for 25 different crimes. The death penalty was also part of the Fourteenth Century B.C.'s Hittite Code; in the Seventh Century B.C.'s Draconian Code of Athens, which made death the only punishment for all crimes; and in the Fifth Century B.C.'s Roman Law of the Twelve Tablets. Death sentences were carried out by such means as crucifixion, drowning, beating to death, burning alive, and impalement. The nation has since matured with the passage of time. Although we continue to execute those who have done wrong we employ technology to make the process more 'humane'.
Death by execution is now enforced with lethal injection, electrocution, death by firing squad, hanging, and the gas chamber. Of all these methods, more people are sentenced to death by lethal injection, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. A total of 903 death row inmates have been executed since 1976, and 708 of them were executed by lethal injection and 2 by firing squad. Of all these statistics very few were available as to the amount of executions gone wrong. Not a very well-known topic, but controversial none the less we have the botched executions from various states who have done little or nothing to correct the matter.
Of all the states who practice death by electrocution, the states that have the majority of botched executions are Texas, Alabama, and Florida. Reports of people bursting into flames during executions have increased over the last several years. The state's response is either the person was oversized for the method used or there was some sort of malfunction with the equipment. On July 8, 1999 in Florida, Allen Lee Davis was executed by electrocution.
"Before he was pronounced dead... the blood from his mouth had poured onto the collar of his white shirt, and the blood on his chest had spread to about the size of a dinner plate, even oozing through the buckle holes on the leather chest strap holding him to the chair". 45 His execution was the first in Florida's new electric chair, built especially so it could accommodate a man Davis's size (approximately 350 pounds). Later, when another Florida death row inmate challenged the constitutionality of the electric chair, Florida Supreme Court Justice Leander Shaw commented that "the color photos of Davis depict a man who -- for all appearances -- was brutally tortured to death by the citizens of Florida". 46 Justice Shaw also described the botched executions of Jesse Tafe ro and Pedro Medina (q. vs. ), calling the three executions "barbaric spectacles" and "acts more befitting a violent murderer than a civilized state". 47 Justice Shaw included pictures of Davis's dead body in his opinion. 48 The execution was witnessed by a Florida State Senator, Ginny Brown-Waite, who at first was "shocked" to see the blood, until she realized that the blood was forming the shape of a cross and that it was a message from God saying he supported the execution.
49 Executions which were botched due to mechanical malfunction were said to be caused by a sponge, which is normally placed under the cap of the electrocution cap, which needed to be changed. This is something that should be carefully monitored as victims have been known to burst into flames for no other reason than a worn sponge. There is not much better to be said about Lethal Injection. Reports of physicians taking anywhere from 30 minutes to 1 hour to find an appropriate vein and set up are more commonplace than not. On June 28, 2000 In Missouri, Bert Leroy Hunter's time was up. Hunter was to be executed by means of Lethal Injection Hunter had an unusual reaction to the lethal drugs, repeatedly coughing and gasping for air before he lapsed into unconsciousness.
53 An attorney who witnessed the execution reported that Hunter had "violent convulsions. His head and chest jerked rapidly upward as far as the gurney restraints would allow, and then he fell quickly down upon the gurney. His body convulsed back and forth like this repeatedly... He suffered a violent and agonizing death". 54 The question we must now ask ourselves is, 'Is this humane, and does it make a difference?' Some may argue that even though a person had to commit horrific crimes to be placed on death row, they are still humans and should be executed as such.
I on the other hand tend to agree with the latter who argue, 'For the victims who suffered much worse at this person's hand, does it really matter? They are going to be killed anyway so why should we be overly concerned with their welfare?' Most death row inmates are on death row from 5 to 10 years or more as they exhaust their appeals, and right to petition for a stay of execution. During this time we, the public, have had our hard earned money taxed to support these sociopaths who if set free would do worse to innocent people. No, I can't say that the fact some of these executions were botched makes me loose sleep at night.
I can't say that I have but so much sympathy for those such as Hunter and Davis. I can say that the person in charge of execution should be a bit more careful to avoid unnecessary controversy. Death Penalty Timeline by Death Penalty Information Online Eighteenth Century B.C. - first established death penalty laws. Eleventh Century A.D. - William the Conqueror will not allow persons to be hanged except in cases of murder. 1608 - Captain George Kendall becomes the first recorded execution in the new colonies. 1632 - Jane Champion becomes the first woman executed in the new colonies.
1767 - Cesare Beccaria's essay, On Crimes and Punishment, theorizes that there is no justification for the state to take a life. Late 1700's - United States abolitionist movement begins. Early 1800's - Many states reduce their number of capital crimes and build state penitentiaries. 1823-1837 - Over 100 of the 222 crimes punishable by death in Britain are eliminated. 1834 - Pennsylvania becomes the first state to move executions into correctional facilities. 1838 - Discretionary death penalty statutes enacted in Tennessee.
1846 - Michigan becomes the first state to abolish the death penalty for all crimes except treason. 1890- William Kemmler becomes first person executed by electrocution. Early 1900's - Beginning of the "Progressive Period" of reform in the United States. 1907-1917 - Nine states abolish the death penalty for all crimes or strictly limit it.
1920's - 1940's - American abolition movement loses support. 1924 - The use of cyanide gas introduced as an execution method 1930's - Executions reach the highest levels in American history - average 167 per year. 1948 - The United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights proclaiming a "right to life". 1950-1980 - De facto abolition becomes the norm in Western Europe.
1958 - Trop vs. Dulles. Eighth Amendment's meaning contained an "evolving standard of decency that marked the progress of a maturing society". 1966 - Support of capital punishment reaches all-time low. A Gallup poll shows support of the death penalty at only 42%. 1968 - Witherspoon vs. Illinois. Dismissing potential jurors solely because they express opposition to the death penalty held unconstitutional.
1970 - Crampton vs. Ohio and McGautha vs. California. The Supreme Court approves of unfettered jury discretion and non-bifurcated trials. June 1972 - Furman vs. Georgia. Supreme Court effectively voids 40 death penalty statutes and suspends the death penalty. 1976 - Gregg vs. Georgia. Guided discretion statutes approved.
Death penalty reinstated January 17, 1977 - Ten-year moratorium on executions ends with the execution of Gary Gilmore by firing squad in Utah. 1977 - Oklahoma becomes the first state to adopt lethal injection as a means of execution. 1977 - Coker vs. Georgia. Held death penalty is an unconstitutional punishment for rape of an adult woman when the victim is not killed.
December 7, 1982 - Charles Brooks becomes the first person executed by lethal injection. 1984 - Velma Barfield becomes the first woman executed since reinstatement of the death penalty. 1986 - Ford vs. Wainwright. Execution of insane persons banned. 1986 - Batson vs. Kentucky. Prosecutor who strikes a disproportionate number of citizens of the same race in selecting a jury is required to rebut the inference of discrimination by showing neutral reasons for his or her strikes.
1987 - Mccluskey vs. Kemp. Racial disparities not recognized as a constitutional violation of "equal protection of the law" unless intentional racial discrimination against the defendant can be shown. 1988 - Thompson vs. Oklahoma. Executions of offenders age fifteen and younger at the time of their crimes is unconstitutional. 1989 - Stanford vs. Kentucky, and Wilkins vs. Missouri. Eighth Amendment does not prohibit the death penalty for crimes committed at age sixteen or seventeen.
1989 - Perry vs. Lynaugh. Executing persons with mental retardation is not a violation of the Eighth Amendment. 1993 - Herrera vs. Collins. In the absence of other constitutional grounds, new evidence of innocence is no reason for federal court to order a new trial. 1994 - President Clinton signs the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act expanding the federal death penalty.
1996 - President Clinton signs the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act restricting review in federal courts. 1998 - Karla Faye Tucker and Judi Bueno ano executed. November, 1998 Northwestern University holds the first-ever National Conference on Wrongful Convictions and the Death Penalty. The Conference brings together 30 inmates who were freed from death row because of innocence. January 1999 - Pope John Paul II visits St. Louis, Missouri, and calls for an end to the death penalty.
April 1999 - U.N. Human Rights Commission Resolution Supporting Worldwide Moratorium On Executions. June 1999 - Russian President, Boris Yeltsin, signs a decree commuting the death sentences of all of the convicts on Russia's death row. REFERENCE PAGE 45. Davis Execution Gruesome, GAINESVILLE SUN, July 8, 1999, at 1 A. 46. Provenzano vs. State, 744 So. 2d 413,440 (Fla.
1999). 53. David Scott, Convicted Killer Who Once Asked to Die is Executed, ASSOCIATED PRESS, June 28, 2000.54. Letter from attorney Cheryl Rafe rt to Missouri Governor Mel Carnahan, June 30, 2000. web Death by State.