Search Helium

Home > Politics, News & Issues > US Law & Justice > Justice System

Do you believe that the Supreme Court was right in their decision that it would be cruel and unusual punishment to use the death penalty for a child rapist?

Results so far:

Right
37% 119 votes Total: 322 votes
Wrong
63% 203 votes

Right

by Chris Markel

Created on: August 21, 2008   Last Updated: July 02, 2011

The US Supreme Court's decision in the overturning of the death penalty for child rape in the case of Kennedy v. Louisiana is a correct decision. It was the majority decision of the court that the crime of rape is not proportional to the penalty of death. And if executed, it would violate the Constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

In 1976, with the case of Coker v. Georgia, 433 US. 584, the US Supreme Court felt that the death penalty was "unconstitutionally excessive for rape of women and, by implication, for any crime where a death does not occur". The court's majority decision went on further to state that, "rape by definition does not include the death of or even the serious injury to another person". But the minority in the decision felt that the issue "takes too little account of the profound suffering the crime imposes upon the victims and their loved ones".

Be that as it may, its not the US Supreme Court's function to measure the emotional impact a crime has on victims. Its duty is to determine the constitutionality of laws passed by state and federal legislature and court verdicts and decisions relating to criminal and civil case. It must be removed from public opinion that is so easily swayed by emotions. It makes decisions upon points of law as they relate to the US Constitution and secures the rights of every citizen in relation to laws that are passed by legislatures and decisions dealt by lesser courts.

Too often, has the appointments of justices to fill empty judicial seats, been political footballs that has influenced a president's decision; when a candidates credentials and record of judicial competence should be the primary criterion in his decision in filling the seat.

It is the Supreme Court's overturning of a decision like this case, that curbs the lynch mob mentality that many citizens of the United States are so prone to act upon when emotions such as hate motivate actions that violate other citizen's rights guaranteed by constitutional law.

Historically, people were hanged for stealing live stock and these "acts of justice" were executed by posies and vigilantes without due process, which is guaranteed by the Eighth amendment and later the fourteenth amendment. The Eighth Amendment addressed federal jurisdiction for due process. Then it was discovered that there was a the need for individual states to have the same definition of the right. Therefore the fourteenth amendment was written and ratified to secure the right of due process in the courts on the state level.

In 1993, with Herrea v. Collins, 506 U.S. 390, the US Supreme Court elaborated upon the definition of Due Process in the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, holding that cases relating to the death penalty required extra procedural protections, even in such cases that involved the murder of a police officer as in the Herrea case. Homicide cases of a police officer always incite public concern and outrage. Nonetheless, it would appear that the Supreme Court's decision demanding more precise adherence to the right of a citizen was outweighed by the public's opinion.

But a question of even greater magnitude awaits the U.S. Supreme Courts decision. That is the Constitutional violation of the popular Patriot Act that clearly ignores the rights of every U.S. citizen.

Learn more about this author, Chris Markel.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.

Wrong

by Kenzy England

Created on: August 20, 2008   Last Updated: October 04, 2008

When I first learned of the Supreme Courts decision concerning the Death Penalty as it applies to child rapists, I was shocked and mortified. Anyone who commits such a violent act on a child deserves to die for it. It is proven that many offenders, upon release from jail, will continue to prey on children. It certainly wouldn't be beneficial for society at large to continue to cover the cost of a lifetime incarceration, and chemical castration doesn't rid the perpetrator of the thoughts or feelings which cause them to rape children. It appears that our Supreme Court is slipping in judgement. Aren't they supposed to make decisions for the greater good of the people?

They say that it would be in violation of the Eighth Amendment, that it would be "cruel and unusual punishment". Isn't it cruel what these people, these rapists, are doing to our children? Isn't the lifelong trama associated with such an act a sort of an unusual punishment for the victim? The death penalty shouldn't apply only to Capital Murder cases. When a child has been raped, the only justice we can provide for that child is to put their attacker to death.

The truth is that just about every offender incarcerated will be released at some point. Does it really matter whether they have to register as a sex offender in their community of choice? Their presence still puts our communities at risk each and every day.

The Supreme Court no longer has my trust. Once upon a time, our Justices made very rational, thought out decisions. I don't understand their thinking on this, and given it was a 5-4 decision, we know that at least some of them were not in the same thought as the five that won out on this argument.

Anthony Kennedy wrote that there "...is a national consensus against capital punishment for the crime of child rape." Interesting, I don't remember any of them asking me what I thought. Come on, child rape is a sick and heinous crime against an innocent. It simply sickens me.

The Supreme Court has basically sided with the offenders on this. Who, exactly, are they really looking out for? Society should come first when they are making their decisions. It is up to them to take our Constitution and interpret it in order to ensure that our rights are being protected.

Prior to the Kennedy vs. Louisiana case of which the Supreme Court heard, there was a federal law that allowed for the death penalty in child rape cases. Patrick Kennedy's sentence has been commuted to life without the possibility of parole. I would wager that most, if not all, offenders who had been previously sentenced to die for their heinous acts on children will receive the same sentence.

It's illogical, it's not fair. Thats our US Supreme Court for you.

Learn more about this author, Kenzy England.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


CONNECT WITH US

Read
our blog
Helum for writers

Write and get published
Share with other writers
Polish your freelancing skills

Join our active writing community
Helium Content Source for Publishers

Quality articles from proven freelancers
Exclusive rights, fast turnaround
Brand engagement, business blogging -- our writers do it all

Get custom content today!

INFORMATION


Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA