The blurb in The New York Times today caught my eye, and proved a point. Americans — right or left — need to clear their heads about capital punishment.
Today’s blurb (A21) reports that Richard Cooey, convicted of raping and killing two women in 1986, unsuccessfully appealed his execution to the United Sates Supreme Court. His reason: he is 5-foot-6 and weighs 267 pounds, so a lethal injection under Ohio law might cause Cooey agonizing pain, in violation of the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
Because most Americans really condone capital punishment (by secret ballot, the vote would be overwhelming, I speculate), but many people, pro and con, are troubled by the reality of the prospect, there is endless litigation about the practice. As a result, the Supreme Court has micromanaged the matrices of what is and isn’t permitted. Until the Supreme Court outlaws the practice as unconstitutional (not likely in the foreseeable future, given the composition of the court), the states should have the right to enact their laws — outlawing or permitting capital punishment and defining its means — with appeals limited to wrongful convictions. Those laws should be liberally and rigorously enforced to ensure that innocent people are not mistakenly executed. But the justice system shouldn’t be cluttered with fat killers claiming it is cruel to execute them, if their convictions are legitimate and permissible state trial and sentencing laws are followed.
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