Support for capital punishment is at a 40-year low. According to some polls, less than half of Americans favor its use. Since 2007, the death penalty has been eliminated in six states, bringing the number that have the death penalty down to 31. And actual use of the death penalty is increasingly limited to a small geographic slice of the nation: Four states—Florida, Georgia, Missouri, and Texas—are responsible for 90 percent of America’s executions.
We all benefit from a criminal justice system that creates a safer society with less crime. That’s not what the death penalty is doing. Murder rates are lowest in the Northeast—the region with the fewest executions. The South carries out the most executions and has high murder rates.
Finally, there’s the fact that the system is prone to human error and discrimination. Since 1976, at least 156 people have been freed from death row after evidence of their innocence emerged. And death sentences are more likely to be given if the murder victim is white or if the defendant is poor.
There are better ways to punish the guilty and keep our communities safe. It’s time for the U.S. to join the international community by abandoning this medieval form of punishment.
—DIANN RUST-TIERNEY,
National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty