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Things by Carol Lane Patterson
METAPHYSICAL OVERVIEW: Whether the viewer knows their stance on this subject or not, this film is worthwhile. Certainly, it will cause many to again ponder this highly distasteful, yet necessary, ethical question. In the 38 states in our country where there is execution of people, death is dealt by a lethal injection of three chemical dosages…first to sedate, then stop the breathing and finally to stop the heart of that person (all in the space of about ten minutes.) Most states still retain the right to end the alleged criminal life force with electrocution, gas chamber, hanging or firing squad. According to the research done by the director, Alan Parker, there are some 3,697 ‘offenders’ under sentence of death in our country. Last year, half of the ones executed met their fate in Texas, a state that has led the cry for the death penalty. Texas, which was electrocuting their death row inmates, waited during the ‘70’s while the Supreme Court, which had ruled against the death penalty in the late ‘60’s, ultimately labeling the death penalty unconstitutional in 1972…then reversing itself in 1976 with instructions for restructuring capital crimes trials and rhetoric about counseling jurors on discretion, was back at it in 1982 adding enough notches to its belt to account for over 25% of the executions in this country.
Actually, the question is not whether they should be executed for the crime for which they were found guilty, but whether any such person should be executed at all…especially, if, say, they weren’t actually guilty, for instance. In the past twenty-five years, 102 death row inmates were turned out onto the streets…they were innocent and found guilty due to dishonest witnesses and ineffective evidence (for instance, new DNA testing has been the key to some inmate’s restored freedom.) Many…most of our death row inmates undoubtedly did exactly what they were charged with doing. This, however, may not give us the clear conscience to execute them. Granted it costs considerably more than the $86 lethal injection method (priced out by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice www.tdcj.state.tx.us/stat/deathrow.htm) to incarcerate them in our prisons, but the moral price we now pay may be insurmountable—both to ourselves and most of our allies. And if the alleged criminal is an innocent lacking adequate science, testimony or honor amongst the witnesses to keep his freedom, can we compound this injustice with such an irrevocable act as the ultimate punishment for any crime—death at someone else’s hand?
LOCAL NOTES (Las Vegas, Nv.)
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