Just recently on the news, a man is charged with murder and faces the death penalty if convicted. An officer shoot an unarmed black man in the back eight times again race is a fact for the killing. But, will race play a part in the sentencing, if found guilty, of the white officer. On the flip side of that, an Alabama man was released from death row after serving 30 years for a crime he did not commit. Much of the reasoning behind sentencing the Alabama man to death, was his race. He is a black man. Just think if the courts would have carried out the sentence given to the Alabama man, they would have killed an innocent man. There are probably many more men and women in the same situation as the Alabama man, sitting on death row for a …show more content…
In 1608, George Kendall was the first person to be executed in American. He was executed for plotting to go against Britain for the Spaniard. In 1837, many states handed down death for just about anything a person. Like the state of South Carolina did not have a prison system so they did not have anywhere to housed condemned prisoners or no other solution With knowing this, South Carolina handed down death for any crime committed such as for murder, slave-stealing, bank robberies, arson, trying to help a slave escape, dueling, tying to help a slave read, or causing mayhem. Many execution were done publicly. Many of the town’s people would show up just to see a person being executed. There were often fighting among the people to try to get the best viewing of the execution. Michigan became the first state to abolish the death penalty in 1846 followed by Rhode Island in 1852 and Wisconsin in 1853. Both of these states were influenced heavily by religious groups to change or abolish their death penalty. With the push to abolish slavery in the United States, the movement for the abolishment of the death penalty began to gain some ground. During the Second Great Reform period which lasted from 1895-1917, Congress decided to pass a bill that would reduce the number of crimes that would constitute the death penalty. The “Maine Law was passed in Kansas in 1907 which abolish all death penalties. Within seven years, several other states followed pursuit and did the same. The states were Tennessee, North and South Dakota, Oregon, Arizona and Missouri. But, if a person was convicted of rape, then death was an option as punishment. Oregon and Arizona later brought back the death penalty. In 1964, the people in Oregon voted to abolish the death penalty all together. States were having difficulties abolishing the death penalty on their own so the courts were brought
he death sentence has been around for all most all of our counties history starting with hangings and execution style deaths. The Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments stand behind the death penalty in the United States until the 1960’s when people started challenging the basic legal standards if the death penalty is correct. People started seeing the death penalty as a form cruel and unusual punishment and a way of it keeping our country in the “older times” During the mid-Nineteenth Century a movement called the Abolitionist Movement started to gain the county attention (especially in the Northeast) and the death penalty started to move out of the public eye and into correctional facilities. Pennsylvania being the first state to do so in 1834. Some of the first states to abolish the death penalty were
The article that I read about the racial bias of the death penalty in the U.S. by David Love explained how southern states are responsible for the vast majority of African American executions in the United States. Love explicitly stated that “the application of the U.S. death penalty is unfair, arbitrary, and racially biased.” Most disturbingly, the article explained that whether or not a capital punishment defendant receives the death penalty does not depend on the facts of the case but more so on the race of the defendant and the race of the victim. Moreover, even the county in which the case was prosecuted can play a role in capital punishment sentencing.
The Death Penalty and Capital Punishment have been a topic for concern with many people in the past and the present today. The death penalty and capital punishment have been used throughout history going back as far as Ancient China in which they would sentence a person to death for committing a capital offense, such as spying, murdering, acting as a traitor, etc. The earliest documentation of the use of the death penalty in the United States was in 1608 when Captain George Kendall was executed for being a spy. In 1612, Thomas Dale, governor of Virginia, enacted the Divine, Moral, and Martial Laws which could enact the death penalty for minor offences, like stealing grapes, trading with Indians, etc. The crimes that were considered logical for the death penalty varied from state to state, but they mainly had the same reasons for doing so. The death penalty has
The ethnicity of a defendant in a capital case should not play a role whatsoever in their sentencing. However, it plays a significant and crucial role in deciding who receives capital punishment. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, minorities account for a disproportionate “43% of total executions since 1976 and 55% of those are currently awaiting execution.” An interesting piece of information that I found from the article was that only 12 people have been executed where the defendant was white and the murder victim was black which is disconcerting when compared to the 178 black defendants who have been executed for the murders of white victims. The racial disparities in these statistics are alarming and troublesome.
In the 1800s during the time of prison reform, the use of capital punishment and conviction with the death penalty became increasingly stigmatized- less and less was this an acceptable form of punishment and grew to be seen in a much more negative light. Throughout American history, the death penalty through hangings and other execution styles was a part of public society and was often a form of entertainment. Gradually these executions moved out of the public limelight and into a more private sphere, often within the prison walls, and eventually made their way to death by electric chair and lethal injection. Increasing focus on morality led the states and country to tend toward these more ethical ways execution, yet the death penalty has still
Though it may seem that the debate over the death penalty only most recently surfaced, the dreadful tradition of capital punishment arrived in the United States at the time of the colonists. In the 17th century, most people were hung, beheaded, burned alive, or crushed under stones. All of these were in public, where a large crowd gathered to watch the horrible sight, similar to the tradition in old Europe. Eventually, the 19th century favored hanging as the most common form of execution. This marked the start of a more humane approach accepted as constitutional as executions moved away from the public eye. More developments came in the 1800’s as a movement to abolish capital punishment arose. This effort was stalled for a time during the Civil
In 1847, Michigan became the first State in America to outlaw the death penalty (Brunello, 17). However, in the years following the abolitionist movement slowed, specifically during the Civil War, but the
Over the next two centuries, more and more crimes began to be punishable by death. Stealing, cutting down a tree, and robbing a rabbit warren were only three of the total of 222 crimes. America’s death penalties were carried out in some of the same fashions, as they were heavily influenced by the British. In 1977, the preferred method of execution became lethal injection, with Oklahoma becoming the first state to adopt it.
Based on these rules, crimes such as rejecting the “God,” were punished by death. (Randa, 1997).In nineteenth century, many states decreased the number of their capital offenses and constructed state prisons. In 1834, Pennsylvania moved the execution law away from the public eye. In 1846, Michigan, another state of America, eliminated the death penalty for all offenses except betrayal. After all, Rhode Island and Wisconsin were two states that put end for all crimes. After years challenging, the elimination of death penalty except for some severe cases was approved in 1972.
Racism is often an excuse people use to say how unfair the death penalty is against African Americans. This excuse has been proven false in a few studies. More white murderers have been put to death since 1976 then black murderers, showing that the death penalty is not unjust to African Americans and minorities (Fisanick 26).In contrast, almost half of the criminals, on death row are black. Even though that is the case, blacks commit more murders than whites making it proportional (deathpenaltycurriculum.org). Criminals should not be given a lighter or harsher sentence due to their race, but due to the crimes that they committed and the severity of them.
The history from capital punishment starts back to colonial time’s .During the colonial times more than 15,000 people have been executed in the United States. The Capital punishment was first introduce early as biblical times for absolute assurance that a criminal 's life would end. The followers of Christianity and Judaism claimed to find justification for capital punishment in the Bible. According to the facts, in 1608, the first execution in the thirteen centuries was Captain George Kendall, he was executed for spying for the Spanish. In 1632 Jane Champion was the first women to be executed for unknown reasons .Surprisingly, Texas is the state that has a used capital punishment the most since 1976. In 1930 the executions average 167 per year, which was the highest in American history.
To look closely at many of the mechanisms in American society is to observe the contradiction between constitutional equality and equality in practice. Several of these contradictions exist in the realm of racial equality. For example, Black s often get dealt an unfair hand in the criminal justice system. In The Real War on Crime, Steven Donziger explains,
The death penalty has been around since the time of Jesus Christ. Executions have been recorded from the 1600s to present times. From about 1620, the executions by year increased in the US. It has been a steady increase up until the 1930s; later the death penalty dropped to zero in the 1970s and then again rose steadily. US citizens said that the death penalty was unconstitutional because it was believed that it was "cruel and unusual" punishment (Kurtis 67). In the 1970s, the executions by year dropped between zero and one then started to rise again in the 1980s. In the year 2000, there were nearly one hundred executions in the US (Biskupic 34). On June 29, 1972, the death penalty was suspended because the existing laws were no longer convincing. However, four years after this occurred, several cases came about in Georgia, Florida, and Texas where lawyers wanted the death penalty. This set new laws in these states and later the Supreme Court decided that the death penalty was constitutional under the Eighth Amendment (Biskupic 34).
Issuance of the death penalty is not a new practice in the United States, especially not in Florida. The death penalty has been a well-established, though highly controversial, practice in the United States for almost 400 years. The first execution of a criminal in the American colonies occurred in Virginia in 1622. During most of the 20th century, the vast majority of states in the country permitted execution of convicted criminals. The practice dates back to early English common law, where virtually any person convicted of a felony offence faced a mandatory death sentence, but the practice has always been much more widespread in the US than in the United Kingdom, which abandoned capital punishment in 1973. For much of US history, capital punishment was extended beyond the crime of murder to include, among other offences, arson, burglary, armed robbery, rape, kidnapping, and possession of certain
The United States learned to use the death penalty as a form of punishment from their parent country the United Kingdom (Marcus). The first record of capital punishment in America was in the colony of Jamestown in 1608. George Kendall accused John Ratcliff of violent acts towards Indian girls. Ratcliff responded by accusing Kendall of being a Spanish spy and had him executed by firing squad (Adcock). With the country's new freedom and the Constitution, along with the Bill of Rights, the founders left out an amendment directly addressing capital punishment. This left it up to each state to decide their own stances, resulting in America’s use of capital punishment to vary depending on the state. The Supreme Court did not address Capital Punishment until the 1970’s with the court cases McGautha v. California and Furman v. Georgia. The McGautha v. California case ruled that capital punishment is a fair, just punishment upholding the philosophy that it is okay under the constitution. One year later the Supreme Court overturned McGautha v. California with the Furman v. Georgia case. In Furman v. Georgia, the defendants were Furman for murder, Jackson, and Branch for rape. The ruling was that capital punishment was cruel and unusual punishment, and it violated the eighth amendment (Unknown). This ruling meant that capital punishment was unconstitutional, but the nine judges of the Supreme Court were unable to come to a