Oxford Round Table
U.S. Death Penalty and International Law, p. 21
federal judge in New York to declare the death penalty lacked due process. Judge
Rakoff held that the death penalty was unconstitutional:
In brief, the Court found that the best available evidence indicates
that, on the one hand, innocent people are sentenced to death with
materially greater frequency than was previously supposed and that, on
the other hand, convincing proof of their innocence often does not merge
until long after their convictions. It is therefore fully foreseeable that in
enforcing the death penalty, a meaningful number of innocent people will
be executed who otherwise would eventually be able to prove their
innocence.
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A similar conclusion was recently drawn by the Arizona Republic, a newspaper in
a staunchly pro-death penalty state, that editorialized for the death penalty for many
years. The risks associated with the death penalty have become so high that they
shifted the balance from support to opposition. The paper explained the basis for its
new position against the death penalty:
The argument against the death penalty has become more
profound and salient. Simply put, we now know beyond dispute that the
criminal-justice system wrongly sentences people to death. We
even know their names, because since 1970, 101 of them have
subsequently been found innocent.
Moreover, the pace of exonerations has been accelerating, due in
part to the wider use of DNA evidence. . . .
The theoretical argument that the criminal-justice system, being a
human institution, is bound to be fallible is no longer theoretical. It's a
reality, and public policy must confront it.
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It is at this point that the reformists and the abolitionists begin to come together.
Can the death penalty be sufficiently reformed, or must it be repealed to protect
innocent defendants? So, too, those in the U.S. who approach the death penalty from a
constitutional perspective are asking the same questions as those who approach it from
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. United States v. Quinones, No. 53 00 Cr.761 (JSR) (U.S. Dist. Ct., Southern Dist. of N.Y. 2002)
(Rakoff, J.) (the ruling, so far, only affects the defendants in this case).
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. Editorial, The Arizona Republic, July 28, 2002.