Home | Subscribe To The Final Call | Books & Tapes e-Store| Letters/Contact Us | TV & Radio  

Last Updated: May 21st, 2008 

Front Page 
 
  Minister Louis Farrakhan
 
  National News
 
  World News
 
  Perspectives
 
  Columns
 
  Business & Money
 
  Entertainment News
 
  Health & Fitness
 
  Modern Technology
 
  Features
 
  Finalcall.com Español




Subscribe to FCN E-List

Enter email address:

Email Delivery Format:
HTML  Plain Text
Manage Your Subscription


The Unmasking
of New Orleans

The Untold Story
of Hurricane Katrina



Exclusive Webcast:
The Havana Cuba
Press Conference

FCN, March 27, 2006

 



Death penalty: U.S. states widen scope for executions
By Haider Rizvi
Updated Oct 5, 2006, 09:45 am

What's your opinion on this article?

Email this article
 Printable page

Graphic: MGN Online
Despite the warnings, two states, South Carolina and Oklahoma, this summer enacted laws that allow repeat child sex offenders to be put to death. They join Louisiana, Florida and Montana, which already have similar laws on their books.
NEW YORK (IPS/GIN) - Politicians in primarily southern U.S. states have passed laws that expand the use of the death penalty to include repeat child sex offenders—a move mental health professionals say is ineffective in stopping molestation and abolitionists believe ultimately will be ruled unconstitutional.

Despite the warnings, two states, South Carolina and Oklahoma, this summer enacted laws that allow repeat child sex offenders to be put to death. They join Louisiana, Florida and Montana, which already have similar laws on their books.

The governors of both Oklahoma and South Carolina argued that the sexual abuse of children is as bad as murder because molestation causes permanent damage to the life of the child.

“(It) is about sending a very clear message that there are some lines that you do not cross,” said South Carolina governor Mark Sanford in a statement, “and that if those lines are crossed, the penalties will be severe.”

Oklahoma State Senator Jay Paul Gumm echoed the sentiment. “We allow the death penalty for someone who has killed a body,” Mr. Gumm, who authored the Oklahoma bill, said in a statement. “Why would we allow someone to escape who has killed a soul?”

But critics dismiss such reasoning as irrational and unconstitutional, even though they acknowledge that child rape is a serious crime.

“Obviously, it’s a very, very serious crime,” said John Holdridge, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s (ACLU) capital punishment project, in an interview with IPS. “But this law is totally disproportionate to the crime, which does not involve a case of an eye for an eye.”

Along with the majority of lawmakers in South Carolina and Oklahoma who voted in favor of death penalty laws, Mr. Gumm reasoned that only an unusual punishment, such as execution, could deter those who repeatedly use sexual violence against minors.

One death penalty opponent called it “a very stupid message,” and Mr. Holdridge agreed. “This law is terrible for the victim,” he said. “It gives no incentive to the offender not to kill the victim.”

Moreover, in most child molestation cases, the victims and offenders know each other. Mr. Holdridge doubts family members would be willing to report the cases of child rape. Family members would not like to see the offender executed, they said.

Since the 1977 Supreme Court ruling, no one convicted of child molestation has been executed in the United States. One inmate in Louisiana, however, currently sits on death row for raping a child.

Patrick O. Kennedy was sentenced to die in 2003 for raping an eight-year-old girl and his case is working through appeals courts in Louisiana. It is not clear when or if it would come before the U.S. Supreme Court, but observers say it is likely.

Since the Supreme Court’s previous decision against using the death penalty in the rape case involved an adult victim, proponents of execution for child rape are hoping the high court will not take that ruling into consideration.

Opponents, however, say despite the fact that conservative judges now dominate the Supreme Court; the possibility that judges may decide the Louisiana case in the light of its 1977 decision cannot be ruled out.

“When it finally reaches the Supreme Court,” Richard Dieter of the Death Penalty Information Centre (DPI), and a long-time observer of capital punishment cases, told IPS, “It’s most likely to be struck down.”

Other critics of the death penalty laws say they fear that children may be forced by malevolent adults to make false statements against the innocent.

“There was a flurry of trials during the 1980s and 1990s of adults charged with sexual crimes against children in daycare centers,” according to Amnesty International, the London-based rights group. “(But) time has shown that all, or almost all, of the alleged perpetrators were innocent.”

Indeed, mental health professionals who work with repeat sex offenders say they do not believe the death penalty will deter a child molester.

“It’s a very simplistic way to deal with the issue of child molestation,” said Dr. Gerald Landsberg, professor of social work at New York University, in an interview with IPS.

Dr. Landsberg, who has authored several publications in the area of forensic mental health and violence, said various methods of treatment are available for child molesters, though there is a “very mixed” opinion about which are most effective. Sometimes, for instance, child molesters are treated with chemical castration.

(Aashti Bhartia contributed to this report.)


 


FCN is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third parties. Original content supplied by FCN and FinalCall.com News is Copyright © 2008 FCN Publishing, FinalCall.com. Content supplied by third parties are the property of their respective owners.

Top of Page

National News
Latest Headlines
U.S. Army says suicide; Parents seek investigation
The census is coming
After apology, will America repent?
Farrakhan: New educational solutions needed
Realtors to confront mortgage meltdown
Policy change gives LAPD chief more power
Respect My Vote goes after out-of-college youth
Urban League head pushes voter registration
Will stiff sentences stop body parts sales?
Media controversy highlights rift in Jewish community
Black journalists offer different view of Africa
Police checkpoints return to D.C. neighborhood
Muslims condemn Post’s 'Jihad Train' smear
Taser death ruled a homicide, family wants justice
Police shooting raises questions on review process