BusterAg said:
It costs that taxpayers more money to execute a person than it does to lock him up forever. For that reason, and that reason alone, I am against the death penalty.
The only fathomable good to come from the death penalty is the closure experienced by the families. I think that state money to kill someone is not really worth that.
If the family really wants the guy dead, hire someone to kill him in prison. No way they get convicted for that in Texas. Easy no-bill for me.
The cost is so high because of the way we've structured the appeals process.
Life w/o parole sentences don't cost "that much" because they generally just go to prison and stay there. There's medical care and such involved at the end, but ultimately that's it. They don't go appeal crazy on the taxpayer dime.
Death cases on the other hand get teams of lawyers billing the state/taxpayer on their clients behalf over every single detail.
It's very similar to our treatment of DWI. The cost of one is so great people will spend massive dollars to make it go away in any way possible. Guy/gal could be undoubtedly guilty as hell (murder or DWI) and they'll use anything they can to make it go away. I've heard of DWI's 3x the legal limit tossed because the county had moved to a new form and the cop used the old version. Look at Luigi Mangione, trying to get the gun tossed out because the cops found it while inventorying his backpack (that's not a 4th A issue).
I like the idea presented a few posts up. Appeal is immediate to a judiciary panel that reviews the facts and merits of the case. Was the defendant adequately and competently defended? Do the jury findings match the evidence presented? What evidence was tossed or withheld and were the grounds for doing so legally sound?
Those questions should not be allowed to be dragged out for 20 years of single issue appeals. The dragging it back out, bringing the victims family back to court, month after month, year after year... That's not justice.