|
Du bist hier: Referate Datenbank | Philosophie
| Prison and death penalty
Prison and death penalty
SPEZIALGEBIET
PRISON AND DEATH PENALTY
SUMMARIES: SING ME A DEATH SONG- BY JAY
BENNETT
Marian Feldon, a young woman Will be executed for murder of
her lover. Everyone, even her lawyer, is convinced of her guilt. Except for
Jason. He knows his mother could never murder anyone. When he visits his mother
in prison, she doesn`t confess having murdered her lover to her son. Jason is
desperate and doesn`t want to admit that his mother has perpetrated the crime
and risks anything to save his mother’s life. The court convicts Marian
Feldon of her deed and is sentenced to death.
DEAD MAN WALKING - BY SISTER HELEN
PREJEAN
Chava Golon from the Prison Coalition asks Sister Helen
Prejean to become a pen pale to a death - row inmate. She accepts and the first
death - row inmate is Elmo Patrick Sonnier. On November 4,1977, he and his
younger brother, Eddie abducted from a lovers` lane a teenage couple, David Le
Blanc and Loretta Bourque. They raped the gin, forced the young people to he
face down, and shot them in the head. His younger brother Eddie is also at
Angola serving a life sentence. Patrick Sonnier wants to safe his brother from
the electric chair. The Jury readily agrees with the prosecutor and recents
Patrick Sonnier to death.
On September 15, Sister Helen Prejean drives to Angola for
her first visit with Pat.
In July 1983 Pat gets a paper with the date of his
execution, August the 19 1983.
The crucial race factor in Pat`s case is that his victims
were white, and Eddie`s victim`s were black.
The day of execution Sister Helen Prejean stays with Pat
until he dies. Millard Farmer is representing two death- row inmates in
Louisiana and he would like her to become their spiritual
adviser.
The first person is Robert Lee Willie. On May,28, 1980 he
and Joseph Vaccaro brutally raped and strapped Faith Harvey and left her to die
in the woods. Robert got death and Vaccaro got life.
Sister Helen Prejean visits on the one hand Robert, on the
other hand Faith`s parents. On the day of the execution the Harvey’s come
to see the murder of Faith die. Robert Willie is sorry about what he has done to
Faith and her parents, but his death hasn`t relieved the suffering of Mrs. and
Mr. Harvey.
BIRDMAN OF ALCATRAZ- BY THOMAS E.
GADDIS
Robert Stroud`s troubles begin before he is born. Part of
the trouble stem from his mother`s family, and more from her unexpected
pregnancy. Even at four, however he is remembered as an abstracted lonely boy.
When he gets older, he begins to drift toward the life of the docks and sea. He
meets sailors and lumberjacks. Their freedom attracts him. At 17 he installs
electronical fixtures in the multiplying homes of new Seattle. He turns his
earnings over to his mother, but his father criticises his son`s Job and choice
of companion. After a violent quarrel with his -father in the spring of 1908, he
moves to Alaska. In Cordova, Stroud`s career takes a fateful turn, but Stroud
develops pneumonia and is cared for and cared by Kitty 0`Brien, his first woman.
In September Stroud meets Charlie Dahmer a friend of him. Dahmer invites Stroud
to visit the cottage which he shares with a roommate, Nels. On January 18,1909
they meet again and Stroud and Kitty visit Dahmer. One evening Stroud returns
later to the room. Kitty lays on the bed, She got hit by Dahmer and her Cocket
is keeping Dahmer until she comes to stay with him. Stroud shoots Dahmer with
Kitty`s gun.
After the dead, he walks to the office of Juneau City
Marshal and confesses that he has killed a man. The Marshall takes him to the
Federal jail. Stroud is indicted for first-degree murder. On August 23,1909, the
new judge looks at Stroud and sentences him to the Statutory limit. 12 years in
the penitentiary at Mc Neil Island.
In Leavenworth, Kansas, where an enormous new prison has
been under construction a new cell house is completed. Stroud is one of the
Prisoners who are transferred to the new prison. Leavenworth, is a maximum
security prison. Among the ,,hard-case” prisoners, it is a mark
of distinction to own a knife.
Late in February 1916 a friend of Stroud gets raped by a
prison guard, Andrew Turner. After a violent quarrel, Stroud kills the guard. In
June 28,1918, Judge Lewis immediately passes the death sentence, ordering that
Stroud should be hanged on Friday, November 8,1918. Stroud lives to watch his 2
date for death pass by him on November 8, 1918. Robert Lewis of Denver arrives
to pronounce sentence for the last time on Stroud.
During that time Stroud starts to breed sparrows and
canaries, and raises.7-fiftythree canaries. He becomes known to hundreds of
bird-
lovers throughout the country. Stroud now advises regularly
in the Roller Canary Journal, where most of his articles
appear.
1929, Stroud discovers all bird infections, and diseases of
canaries.
1937 he married Della Jones. In the same year he becomes a
scientist and an international authority on bird disease.
1942, Stroud is taken to Alcatraz. Four years after his
arrival, there is a not in Alcatraz. Some prisoners and one guard who were
involved into the fights, get killed.
Stroud becomes the greatest authority on canary ailments. In
December 1951, Stroud nearly kills himself.
.... Stroud still hopes the President may chooses to intervene in his
behalf.
ALCATRAZ
Alcatraz is an island in San Francisco Bay, the site of the
famous prison of the same name. The island was discovered by the Spanish in
1545, and named in 1775 for its pelicans (in Spanish, alcatraces) Owned by the
U.S. government since 1850, it was fortified and used as a military prison until
1933, when it became a federal prison. The prison was considered escape-proof
because of its fortress like structure and the strong, cold currents in the
surrounding waters. Closed in 1963, the structure stood empty until it was
seized by a group of Indians in November 1969. They held it until June 1971 in
an unsuccessful attempt to gain government recognition of their claim to the
island. The island was opened(1972) to the public as a part of the Golden Gate
National Recreation Area.
Fromits inception, Alcatraz and the penology it represented
drew criticism. The majority of the public, however, appeared to consider
Alcatraz as a necessary and expensive evil. It became a symbol and an emotional
release for the citizenry throughout the country, with the exeption of San
Francisco. The Rock lay on the New York, Alcatraz at the other end of the
country made anatomical comparison inevitable.
PRISON
A prison is a facility maintained for the confinement of
convicted felons Until the l8th century, exile, execution, and various forms of
corporal punishment were the most common penalties for criminal acts. Although
jails were commonplace, imprisonment was viewed as a temporary ranged from
workhouses for debtors (Bridewell in Britain and the Maison in Rome1
which was priarily designed to incarcerate incorrigible boys. Retribution was
acknowledged as the prime motivation for official punishment.
Under the influence of the l8th-century Enlightenment,
however, the extreme harshness of most punishment was questioned for the first
time. attempts were made to fit the severity of the punishment to the severity
of the crime, in the belief that the existence of clearly articulated, and just,
penalties would act as a deterrent to crime. thus deterrence, rather than
retribution, became a leading principle of European penology
DEVELOPMENT OF U.S. PRISONS
From the establishment of the Walnut Street Jail in
Philadelphia (1790) through the development of the Auburn, N.Y. (1817), and
Pennsylvania (1829> systems, the well-ordered, physically isolated prison was
viewed as a mechanism to instil discipline, remove temptation, and rehabilitate
the offender. In the Auburn system, prisoners were housed in separate cells at
night, but worked together during the day; the Pennsylvania system isolated the
offender for the entire period of confinement. Both systems, however, were based
on the premise that isolation, the substitution of good habits for sloth and
crime, and a regimen of silence, penitence, and labour would return the offender
to society cured of vices and ready to become a responsible
citizen.
Largely because it was a more effective way of harnessing
the labour power of prisoners and was thus less costly to adopt, the Auburn
system became the dominant method of confinement in the United States. The goal
of reformation was eventually shunted into the background-prisoners became
holding operations, designed to promote a respect for order and
authority.
The National Prison Conference, held in Cincinnati, Ohio, in
1870, was the first signal of reform. Encouraged by the recent development of
PROBATION and PAROLE, the conference called for the establishment of the
indeterminate sentence, which allows a court to specify, within statutory
limits, the minimum and maximum length of sentence for a particular offence. It
was believed that this type of sentence would give the offender an incentive for
rehabilitation, for he or she would be released only when it was determined that
satisfactory change had taken place.
In recent years, however, rising crime rates have thrown
into question the effectiveness of prison rehabilitation, and several states
have re-turned to mandatory sentencing laws whereby the convict must serve a
term of specified length.
THE U.S. PRISON SYSTEM TODAY
BY the end of 1988 the total number of convicted criminals
U.S.
federal and state prisons reached 628,000, the largest
number ever incarcerated and an increase of some 90 percent over an 8-year
period. (another 150,000 were awaiting trial in local prisoners.) The prison
population expanded by about 7 percent duringl988, a rate of increase that would
require the addition of more than 800 beds per week to U.S. degree, the national
drug problem contributed to this growth: since 1980 the number of arrests for
drug violations increased 80 percent.
As a result of the large numbers of prisoners, overcrowding
is common-place in all correctional institutions. Overcrowding can lead to
higher levels of tension and aggression, and is a contributory factor in prison
riots. There is little doubt that conditions in most prisons are a threat to the
safety of inmates and prison staffs alike. Prison guards, usually rural and
underqualified, face the open hostility afinmates who are often from urban
ghetto environments.
The cost of maintaining prisons is staggering: depending on
the type of prison and the state where it is located, an annual $14,OOO-30,OOO
per prisoner. The cost of new construction averages almost $54,OO0 per bed
(although a maximum-security bed in Massachusetts or West Virginia where prison
costs are highest-reaches $140,OOO). In 1989, 43 states were under court order
to correct overcrowding in their prisons. A few of these states have turned to
private companies, who build and administer new prisons at lower costs than
those the states can obtain. Some criminologists4uestion whether it is
appropriate for a state to hand over its correction and detention
responsibilities to private enterprise.
The most familiar type of correctional institution is the
large, fortress like, maximum-security prison. Such structures as San Quentin
prison in California are characterised by their massive size, thick stone walls,
gun towers, steel doors, multi -tiered cell blocks, large populations, and rural
locations. By contrast, medium-and minimum-security institutions are identified
by their openness and the absence of strict security procedures. Persons held in
such facilities are judged to be less dangerous and therefore better security
risks. A myriad of correctional programs and wide range of counselling pro-grams
are offered in many prisons, their extent is limited by their cost, the size of
the prison population, and the expertise of the staff.
Prison work programs have existed since colonial times,
although often under rigid restrictions intended to limit their competing with
outside industry. Recent attempts to bring outside work into the prison have
demonstrated the productive potential of prison labor, however.
Under one such program, businesses are offered some type of
financial inducement to enter the prison. Inmates are paid the market wage for
their labor, and deductions are made for room and board, family support, union
dues, taxes, restitution, and savings. Nevertheless, in 1988 only some 50,000
inmates were assigned to prison industry programs. Medical care is another
urgent inmate need, especially with the growing presence of AIDS in the prison
population. Many prisoners have exceedingly poor medical histories; they may
suffer from the ravages of drug and alcohol abuse. In addition, the population
of medically-vulnerable elderly prisoners will increase as inmates serve longer
sentences. Despite the need, regular medical services are costly to provide and
difficult to maintain. Many institutions have attempted to provide care by
contracting for medical services rather than maintaining full-time
facilities.
Despite the presence of prison rehabilitation services, one
point must be emphasised: prisons have never been schools, factories, hospitals,
or psychiatric centers. First and foremost, they are places of confinement. The
ever increasing size of the U.S. prison population insures that, in future, most
prisons will serve primarily as holding facilities.
PRISON LIFE
The male inmate is thrown into prolonged intimacy with other
men and is forced to assume an aggressive posture and to maintain a constant
wariness for his personal safety. Homosexual rape is a common occurrence in male
prisons, with attacks generally made on vulnerable new inmates.
In U.S. female prisons, inmate society is generally made up
of informal pseudofamilies. Almost all inmates are part of a "family" and define
predictable and stable structure of social relations-including homo-sexual
relations-to which a female inmate can turn for support and uncommon, however,
for different ,,families" to come into conflict. Women are held in smaller
prisons with fewer programs and recreational opportunities, and the programs
that are offered reflect stereotyped female roles, with emphasis on
housekeeping, sewing, clerical, and typing skills. Because female prison
populations are growing at a faster pace than are male populations, however,
even those programs once available to women inmates are becoming more difficult
to enter: and living conditions for women prisoner, both in women`s prisons and
in the women` 5 wings of men`s prisons, have grown even more onerous
than
conditions for men. A recent development, the
co-correctional prison, permits a certain level of male-female mixing and offers
improved pro-gram opportunities for women. Overall, however, women prison with
more serious health problems than men. Mothers may have the burden of concern
about the care of their children while they are in prison.
Given the problems engendered by prison itself, it is not
surprising that rehabilitation programs have failed to reduce recidivism in the
United States. The number of ex-prisoners who are arrested within three years of
their release is estimated at about 60 percent.
LEGAL RIGHTS OF PRISONERS
Early U.S. court decisions ruled that prisoners had
forfeited all of the rights enjoyed by free citizens. Eventually, the courts
recognised certain rights and legal remedies available to prisoners, who may now
file their own suits, have direct access to the federal courts, and file writs
of HA~US CORPUS and mandamus.(Under habeus corpus the prisoner may request
release, transfer, or another remedy for some aspect of confinement. Mandamus is
a command issued by a court directing a Prison administrator to carry out a
legal responsibility-to provide a sick prisoner with medical care, for
example-or to restore to the prisoner rights that have been illegally denied.)
Prisoners have sought remedies for many problems, including relief from
unreasonable searches, release from solitary confinement, and the procuring of
withheld mail. Recent decisions have indicated, however, that the courts are now
willing to limit legal suits by prisoners in deference to the security
requirements of the prison.
PRISON IMPROVEMENTS AND
ALTERNATIVES
Attempts to aid the prisoner`s return to society have to the
development of several innovative programs. The goal of conjugal visitations is
to keep marriages intact by permitting social and sexual contact between
prisoners and wives. Furloughs provide home visits of 48-72 hours for a prisoner
nearing his release date; they are intended, to aid in restoring family ties and
in job seeking. The work release program permits inmates to test their work
skills and earn money outside the institution for He major the part of the day.
The supervised halfway house is designed to help the parolee make the transition
from prison to community. Placement in a halfway house is often a condition of
parole.
CAITAL PUNISHMENT
Capital punishment is the lawful infliction of the death
penalty, and since ancient times it has been used to punish a wide variety of
offences. The Bible prescribes death for murder and many other crimes, including
kidnapping and witchcraft. By 1500 in England, only major felonies carried the
death penalty: treason, murder, larceny, burglary, rape, and arson. By 1800,
however, Parliament had enacted many new capital offences, and hundreds of
persons were being sentenced to death each year. In the United States prior to
the Civil War, the death penalty was imposed an slaves far many crimes punished
less severely when committed by others.
Reform of the death penalty began in Europe by the 1750s,
and was championed by such thinkers as the Italian jurist Cesare Beccaria, the
French philosopher Voltaire, and the English law reformer Jeremy Bentham. They
argued that the death penalty was needlessly cruel, overrated as a deterrent,
and occasionally imposed in fatal error. Along with Quaker leaders and other
social reformers, they defended life imprisonment as a mare rational
alternative.
By the 1850s these reform efforts bare fruit. In the United
States the death penalty far murder was first abolished in Michigan (1847);
Venezuela (1853) and Portugal (1867) were the first nations to abolish it
altogether. Today, it is virtually abolished in all of Western Europe and most
of Latin America. Elsewhere-in Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East
(except Israel)-most countries still authorise capital punishment far many
crimes and it with varying frequency.
Methods of inflicting the death penalty have ranged from
stoning in biblical times, crucifixion under the Romans, beheading in France, to
those used in the United States today: HANGING, ELECTROCUTION, GAS CHAMBER,
firing squad, and LETHAL INJECTION.
In the United States, beginning in 1967, executions were
suspended to allow the appellate courts to decide whether the death penalty was
unconstitunal. In 1972, the Supreme Court ruled in Furman V. Georgia that the
death penalty for murder or for rape violated the prohibition against ,,cruel
and unusual punishment." The Court argued that death was meted out with
,,freakish" irregularity and so its use was ,,arbitrary" and ,,cruel." Most of
the states enacted new death penalty statutes, however, and in 1976 the Supreme
Court in Gregg v. Georgia held that these were not unconstitutional. Capital
status now typically authorise the trial court to impose sentence (death or
life) only after a post conviction hearing, at which evidence is submitted to
establish which aggravating" or ,,mitigating" factors were present in the crime.
If the ,,aggravating" factors prevail and the sentence is death, then the case
is automatically reviewed by an appellate court. In 1977, however, the Supreme
Court also ruled that death far rape was ,,grossly disproportionate and
excessive" (Coker v. Georgia). Thus, apart from certain crimes (notably,
treason) an which the Supreme Court has not ruled, the only capital crime in the
United States today is murder.
In 1977, executions resumed, and by 1985 more than 1,500
persons were under death sentence in 33 states. The rate of executions also
increased, averaging nearly two per month during 1984 and 1985. Public opinion
seemed to support this; various polls reported that about 70% of Americans
favoured the death penalty for murder.
Debate over the merits of capital punishment continues
unabated. Proponents defend it mainly an two grounds: death is the fitting
punishment far murder, and executions maximise public safety thorough
incapacitation and deterrence. Opponents reply that there is no evidence that
the murder rate fluctuates according to the frequency with which the death
penalty is used. They also abject that lex talionis (,,a life far a life") is
not a sound principle of criminal justice- that society cannot allow the
brutalities of criminal violence to set the limits of appropriate punishments.
Also disputed is whether the death penalty continues (as critics claim) to
manifest racial and socio-economic bias.
On October 16, 1985, the electrocution of William Vandiver
by the state of Indiana took seventeen minutes, requiring five charges of
electricity On April 22, 1983, as the state of Alabama electrocuted John Louis
Evans the first electrial charge burned through the electrode an the leg and the
electrode fell off. The prison guards repaired it and administered another
charge of electricity. Smoke and flame erupted from Evan`s temple and leg but
the man was still alive. Following the second jolt, Evan`s lawyer demanded that
Governor George C. Wallace halt the proceedings. The governor refused. Another
jolt was administered. It took fourteen minutes far Evans to die. On May 5,
1990, as the state of Florida killed Jesse Tafero, flames shat six inches from
the head his head. The executioner interrupted the standard twa-minute2,0OO-valt
electrical cycle and officials determined that a sponge an Tafero`s head had
caught fire.
The only man to walk away from an electric chair alive was
seventeen-year- old Willie Francis. On May 2,1946, he was strapped into
Louisiana’s portable electric chair in the jail in St. Marin Parish. As
the current hit his body, witness reported that the youth`s ,,lips puffed out
and he groaned and jumped so that the chair came off the floor, and he said,
,,take it off. Let me breathe." The officials applied several mare jolts, but
Francis was still alive. They then helped him back to his cell to recuperate
from the ordeal. The U.S. Supreme Court, considering whether it could be
considered ,,cruel and unusual punishment" or "double jeopardy" to subject
Francis to electrocution a second time, rendered a split verdict. On May 8,
1947, Louisiana officials once again strapped Willie Francis into the chair, but
this time they succeeded in killing him.
But evidence that executions do not deter crime is
conclusive. In the U.S. the murder rate is no higher in states that do not have
the death penalty than in those that do. In Canada, the homicide rate peaked in
1975, the year before the death penalty was abolished, and continued to decline
far ten years afterward. and the first major report an capital punishment
prepared for the United Nations in 1962 concluded:
,,all the information available appears to confirm that
such a removal (of the death penalty) has, in fact, never been followed by a
notable rise in the incidence of the crime no longer punishable by death." In
the fall of 1987, immediately after the state of Louisiana executed eight people
in eight and a half weeks, the murder rate in New Orleans rose 16.39
percent.
In contrast, New York City, in a state with no death
penalty, reduced its crime rate dramatically in the first four months of 1992-
murders declined by 11 percent- which many attribute to increased community
policing. In 1990 the city had 750 foot officers an the streets. Today there are
3,000.
Similarly, in New Orleans in 1992, the year ended with a 21
percent decrease in the murder rate, halting a three-year stretch of
record-breaking murder rates, a decline which police readily attribute to two
federal drug-fighting programs and beefed-up police patrols in high-crime
areas.
Between 1960 and 1976,the number of reported murders in the
United States more than doubled- from 9,060 to 18,780- and between 1960 and 1980
the rate of ,,index crimes" listed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation rose
by mare than 230 percent.
Despite high pro-death-penalty sentiment, however, public
support seems stronger in the abstract than in the concrete. Most juries, for
example, faced with actually imposing death in capital trials, choose life
imprisonment, even in ,,Death Belt" states, and a growing number of public
opinion surveys show that it is protection from criminals rather than executions
that most citizens want. A 1986 Gallup Pall reveals that while 70 % say they
favour the death penalty if they are given new data that shows that capital
punishment does not deter crime and are offered the alternative of life
imprisonment without parole, support for execution drops to 43
percent.
An execution of a prisoner costs mare than life
imprisonment. That`s because capital trials require more expert witness and mare
investigators, a longer jury-selection process (those who oppose the death
penalty must be screened out), the expenses of sequestering a jury, not one but
two trials because of the required separate sentencing trial, and appeals in
state and federal courts.
PUNISHMENT
Punishment describes the imposition by same authority of a
deprivation-usually painful-an a person who has violated a law, rule, or other
norm. When the violation is of the criminal law of society there is a formal
process of accusation and proof followed by imposition of a sentence by a
designated official, usually a judge. Informally, any organised group-most
typically the family, in rearing children-may punish perceived
wrongdoers.
Because punishment is bath painful and guilt producing, its
application calls for a justification. In Western culture, four basic
justifications have been given: retribution, deterrence, rehabilitation, and
incapacitation. The history of formal punitive systems is one of a gradual
transition from familial and tribal authority to the authority of organised
society.
Criminal sentences ordinarily embrace four basic modes of
punishment. In descending order of severity these are: incarceration, community
supervision, fine, and restitution. The death penalty is new possible only far
certain types of atrocious murders and treason. Most states provide for a wide
discretion in choosing which type of sentence to impose. This discretion is
usually vested in the judge, although it may be shared by other officials, such
as probation and parole authorities. Only general guidelines exist for the
selection of sentences, based upon individual facts of each case. The problem of
widely differing sentences given for the same crime, however, has led to an
attack upon individualised sentences based an the offender`s perceived
characteristics. Limitations an sentencing discretion have been proposed (and
enacted in same jurisdictions-for example, at the U.S. federal level in 1984) in
the forms of mandatory sentences, explicit guidelines for judges, and the
abolition of parole.
Criticism of the present PRISON system of punishment has
focused mainly an its rehabilitative and preventive functions. Critics paint out
that recidivism- the commission of another crime after the offender has served a
sentence for the first-is high. Thus the system seems in-effective as a cure
far, or a restraint upon, those factors in offenders which may lead to criminal
acts. Further more, because there is no way to predict the future behaviour of
individuals, the length of sentence and the release date may have no
relationship to the prison time necessary to effect a cure in, or rehabilitate,
an offender. Many criminologists insist that there is no adequate body
of
empirical evidence to demonstrate that any punishment,
CAPITAL PUNISH-MENT included, has a restraining effect an potential criminal
behaviour.
Punishment is an ancient practice whose presence in modern
cultures may appear to be out of place because it purposefully inflicts pain. In
the minds of most people, however, it continues to find
justification.
PROBATION AND PAROLE
Probation is a conditional sentence imposed an a convicted
offender by the court, which requires supervision by a probation officer in lieu
of incarceration. Parole, the early prison release of an offender after the
completion of a portion of the sentence, is a key factor in the indeterminate
sentence. Like probation, release an parole is conditional and if the offender
violates the conditions or commits a new crime, the parole can be revoked and
the offender returned to prison to complete the sentence. The parole decision is
made by a parole board, an administrative body consisting of persons who usually
have a back- ground in criminal justice and have been appointed for a fixed
term.
Critics of probation and parole contend that such practices
are too lenient and permit the offender to escape deserved punishment. Such
criticisms have led to laws that forbid the imposition of probation when
offenders are convicted of violent crimes and that limit the use of
parole.
FINISH
|