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If a future court were to rule that his rights and those of others of his ilk were violated, he may indeed walk. If a future court rules that LWOP or is unconstitutional or older or infirm inmates should be released, he may indeed walk. I believe the families have a right to a punishment that fits the crime perpetrated on their loved ones and not to have to worry about changing beliefs altering a sentence. If this murderer was dead, they wouldn’t have to worry about even the remote possibility he could walk free.
Since he has no right of appeal, how do you envision this coming about?
Idaho has a very consistent set of laws around both DP and LWOP.
In this case, the four families were divided. Ethan's family said from the beginning that they did not want the DP. Families do not have "rights" when it comes to justice and sentencing, at least not in America.
If we added in the need to give each of the victims' families their own "right" to decide punishment, it would have been a "hung" process. What then? There are good reasons we can't do it that way. We don't even know what Mrs. G feels about the matter.
People have been known to escape from Death Row (very rare, always recaptured or suicided, IIRC). The possibility of Idaho's Supreme Court or SCOTUS vacating this sentence are vanishingly remote and the incredibly complex system we'd have to have in place for mass murders would slow justice down to a mere crawl. Not everyone wants the DP for such people.
It's about 50/50 in the US, as to whether people think the DP should even exist. Keeping things in the courts for decades is not the option I would personally choose.

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According to October 2024 polling produced by Gallup, support for capital punishment remains at a five-decade low in the United States. Overall,...
IMO.