While waiting for jury selection to continue next week. . .
My main thoughts are how much $$$$$$$ is spent by Florida taxpayers on death penalty cases...
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the cost of executing a prisoner in Florida averages about $3.2 million, mostly in trial costs. Keeping that same person in prison for life costs only about $600,000 [...]
A recent study by Professor Michael Radelet and Traci Lacock of the University of Colorado found that 88% of the nation’s leading criminologists do not believe the death penalty is an effective deterrent to crime. The study, Do Executions Lower Homicide Rates? The Views of Leading Criminologists ,…
deathpenaltyinfo.org
Study: 88% of criminologists do not believe the death penalty is an effective deterrent
Posted on Jul 28, 2009
A recent study by Professor Michael Radelet and Traci Lacock of the University of Colorado found that 88% of the nation’s leading criminologists do not believe the death penalty is an effective deterrent to crime. The study,
Do Executions Lower Homicide Rates? The Views of Leading Criminologists, published in the
Journal of Criminal Law and Crimonology, concluded, “There is overwhelming consensus among America’s top criminologists that the empirical research conducted on the deterrence question fails to support the threat or use of the death penalty.” A previous study in 1996 had come to similar conclusions.
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news.ufl.edu
Experts Agree: Death Penalty Not A Deterrent To Violent Crime
JANUARY 15, 1997
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“Deterrence means that we execute people to send a message to others,” Radelet said. “After a while, increases in the severity of punishment have decreasing incremental deterrent effect. So if you haven’t deterred somebody by life, you re not going to deter them by death.
“If you want to deter people from leaning on your stove, medium heat works just as well as high heat.”
Radelet said a large segment of the pro-death penalty community and numerous politicians regularly — and incorrectly — cite the death penalty’s supposed deterrent effect in their arguments for continued executions.
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Radelet said the cost of executing a prisoner in Florida averages about $3.2 million, mostly in trial costs. Keeping that same person in prison for life costs only about $600,000, and the millions of dollars spent on executing prisoners could be put to much better use, he said.
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