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Should Capital Punishment Be Allowed In The US?

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Should Capital Punishment be Allowed in the U.S.?
A 35 year-old man, guilty of brutally murdering his ex-wife and her father, was sentenced to death. This man underwent a botched execution, which was excruciatingly painful due to human error. The inmate awoke shortly after the lethal drugs had been injected and remained conscious for nearly 45 minutes until he experienced a heart attack and died. Although this man suffered greatly, many argue that the criminal still deserved the punishment received and tat there is no alternative more humane. Until 1976 executions were more brutal, for example public hangings, the electric chair, and firing squads but now more than 85% are preformed by lethal drugs ("Capital Punishment: Should" 5). The topic …show more content…

Multiple prisoners in the United States still receive death as a punishment for heinous crimes. More than 1,420 inmates have been sentenced to death since 1976 ("Capital Punishment: Should" 1). Because so many lives have been lost, some question weather death is a suitable punishment. In addition, there are a number of states of which have enacted the death penalty. According to the DPIC as of 2015, 31 states have enacted the penalty but several are debating abolishing it. The many issues of the punishment have provoked controversy within states. Lastly, the method of execution for the prisoners is also frequently debated. Although it has been rendered unaccountable, more than 85% of executions since 1976 have been by the method of lethal injection ("Capital Punishment: Should" 1). The inaccuracy of the method raises many suspicions of unreliability and violation of the 8th amendment. Overall, the debate over capital punishment is likely to continue in the near …show more content…

Critics point out that over the years, many have been falsely accused and executed. They say that the fact of over 150 death row inmates have been exonerated is proof enough that the penalty should be abolished ("Capital Punishment: Should" 4). This evidence suggests that many innocent lives have been lost to our mistakes. Other critics back the idea that the lethal injection method is inhumane and crewel. This is seen in the botched executions of Clayton Lockett, Joseph Wood, and Denis McGuire all of which awoke during execution and suffered a long and horribly painful death ("Capital Punishment: Should" 5). These three men are proof that the death penalty inflicts unnecessary pain denies the 8th amendment. Opponents also contend to the fact of prominent racism in regards to the penalty. Professor Katherine Beckett from the University of Washington states her findings that, "Jurors in Washington were 4.5x more likely to impose a sentence of death when the defendant was black than they were in cases involving similarly situated white defendants" (Holsinger 3). Clearly showing a strong and unjust connection between the convictions and race. Opponents argue this variety of examples and believe they have many strong points of which raise suspicion toward the

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