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Alabama Man's Argument Against The Death Penalty

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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

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