The
regular legislative session that recently concluded didn’t
produce any successful legislation directly affecting capital punishment,
but one tangential to the issue will affect the practice’s effectiveness, depending
on voter attitudes. That will put a constitutional
amendment on the ballot that requires jury unanimity for felony convictions
including capital sentences; presently, only 10 of a dozen jurors need agree to
declare someone guilty.
Mathematically,
this makes less likely a jury would convict an individual accused of murder,
which increases the chances that a guilty suspect goes free. This translates to
an increased chance of homicides occurring, as research demonstrates that every
additional capital sentence carried out decreases the incidence of murder.
But that effect may pale in comparison to the campaign of sabotage, some just a by-product of defending the accused but other of it deliberate to carry out an ideological imperative serving to subvert the beneficial impact of the death penalty, against the practice. Studies also indicate that the lower the proportion of convicts with capital sentences carried out, the less powerful the deterrent effect becomes.
This
allows opponents who fault the penalty to claim its ineffectiveness thus proves
the state should dispense with it, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy. Whether
they realize it, that strategy invalidates their argument that it doesn’t work;
it would, if done in a credible way. Costliness remains another matter, but
that also almost entirely stems from ideological opponents’ actions in their aggressive
efforts to slow the process – often using taxpayer dollars to facilitate this,
as the vast majority of convicted murderers use public defenders before incarceration
and to a lesser degree afterwards in appeals.
One
particularly insidious part of the credibility gap – which certainly applies in
Louisiana since its last forced execution happened 16 years ago – comes from special
interests pressuring manufacturers of the chemicals used for the only method
currently allowed under state law of execution not to sell them to states with capital
punishment on the books. To bypass this chokepoint, the state should change its
law to allow for an alternative method, such as firing squad.
Unfortunately,
no legislator has filed a bill to do this since Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards
took office, although the year
before that an attempt to pass that kind of bill failed. Edwards has remained
coy about the death penalty as a whole, saying he won’t commit to keeping
or abolishing it.
Keep
in mind as well that just because the law permits this penalty that doesn’t
mean prosecutors must seek it or juries assent to it. Even if the state rarely
levied it, as long as it carried out the sentence with regularity – Texas has sent
43
murderers to their final rewards over the past 54 months with a death
row hovering at nearly 250 – that would deter potential homicides which in
turn would reduce the need for executions.
Unfortunately,
that’s not the kind of virtuous cycle opponents want. Worse, that obstructionism
underscores the mistaken notion that prohibiting capital punishment somehow is “pro-life”
– when in fact the proper pro-life stance understands that the death penalty,
properly administered in a timely way, saves innocent lives.
Regrettably,
the sitzkrieg looks likely to
continue next year with legislators unlikely to pursue an alternative execution
method just prior to elections, if the fate of the 2015 bill reveals anything. And,
even as putting unanimous jury decisions into the Constitution might decrease
chances of convicting the innocent, it also would put more innocents at risk at
the hands of those wishing to take their lives.
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