Death Penalty and Morality
Date Submitted: 09/09/2006 23:46:02
DEATH PENALT AND MORALITY
Capital Punishment is the legal infliction of the
death penalty. In the United States capital
punishment is legal in thirty-nine of the fifty
states. Beginning in 1973, prison populations began
an inevitable growth. There were 204,211 inmates in
1973, and by 1977 the number of prisoners had grown to
285,456, which later grew to 315,974 in 1980. By
1976, it was clear that the death penalty had to be
reinstated. America's twenty-one year experiment with
capital punishment has resulted
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rejected a challenge
to capital punishment based on statistics that
indicated racial bias in sentencing. In separate
decisions in 1989 the Court decided that the death
penalty could be applied to those who were mentally
retarded or who were underage, but at least 16, at the
time of the murder. In the early 1990s the trend of
Supreme Court rulings was to cut back on the appeals
that Death Row inmates could make to the federal
courts.
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