Saturday, July 20, 2019
Capital Punishment Essay - The Death Penalty :: Argumentative Persuasive Essays
     The Death Penalty                 The death penalty is a very controversial issue.  Many people have     different opinions about how a criminal should be disciplined. Over 80% of     Americans favor the death penalty.    Presently, thirty-eight states have the death penalty, but is the concept of "a    life for a life" the best way to castigate a criminal?  Of the thirteen states    that do not have the death penalty, is crime more likely to occur there than in    states that have the death penalty?  (The Economist, April 1, 1995, p. 19)  Have    there been criminals wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death row?  Does the    death penalty really scare criminals off and make them think twice about    committing a crime?  Is the death penalty fair to everyone, even the minorities    and the poor?  How does mental illness and retardation come into play?                       When a person is sentenced to death by lethal injection in New Jersey,    the provisions of N.J.S. 2C:  11-3 say that the "punishment shall be imposed by    continuous, intravenous administration until the person is dead of a lethal    quantity of an ultrashot acting barbiturate in combination with a chemical    paralytic agent in a quantity sufficient to cause death."  Prior to the lethal    injection, the person shall be sedated by a licensed physician, registered nurse,    or other qualified personnel, by either oral tablet or capsule or an    intramuscular injection of a narcotic or barbiturate such as morphine, cocaine,    or demerol.  In the provisions of the N.J.S.  2C:  49-3, it says that the    Commissioner of the Department of Corrections determines the substances and    procedure to be used in execution.  The Commissioner shall also designate    persons who are qualified to administer injections and who are familiar with    medical procedures, other than licensed physicians.  Also, persons conducting    the execution must be unknown to the person being executed.  Under the N.J.S.    2C:  49-7, only certain people are allowed to be present at the execution.  They    include:  the Commissioner, execution technicians, two licensed physicians, six    adult citizens, no more than two clergymen not related to the person, two    representatives from major news wire services, two television representatives,    two newspaper representatives, and two radio representatives.  No one related    either by blood or by marriage to the person being executed or to the victim is    permitted to be present during the execution.  (New Jersey Statutes Annotated:    Title 2C Code of Criminal Justice:  2C:  37 to 2C:  End)                 There are two very important Supreme Court cases dealing with capital    punishment.  In 1972, in the case of Furman vs. Georgia, the Supreme Court ruled    that under then existing laws, "the imposition and carrying out of the death    					    
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