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  • 6
    Mar
    2013
    3:16pm, EST

    Maryland moves close to abolishing death penalty

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Maryland’s Senate voted Wednesday to repeal the death penalty, moving the state one step closer to joining 17 others that ban capital punishment.

    The Senate voted 27-20 to pass legislation that would replace execution with a sentence of life without the possibility of parole. The bill must be approved by the House of Delegates before becoming law.

    Gov. Martin O'Malley said he was pleased with the vote.

    "We remain hopeful that we will see a similar outcome in the House," he said in a statement. "It's time to end this ineffective and expensive practice and put our efforts behind crime fighting strategies that work."

    Maryland has five inmates on death row, although no executions have been conducted since 2005. The state has carried out five executions since the death penalty was reinstated in 1978, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

    “The vote in the Maryland Senate to end the death penalty is in line with an emerging trend away from capital punishment around the country,” Richard Dieter, the center’s executive director, said in a statement. “Death sentences and executions have sharply declined, and now states are taking the final step toward eliminating the death penalty.”

    Last year, Connecticut lawmakers abolished the death penalty, replacing it with life without parole, but voters in California rejected a law that would have ended capital punishment.

    Some states are considering similar legislation, such as Montana, Colorado, Kentucky, Oregon and Delaware. The number of people sentenced to death in 2012 – 78 – marked a 75 percent decline from the 315 sentences imposed in 1996, the center said.

    Supporters believe it will pass the House, but opponents think the issue will ultimately be decided by popular vote, The Associated Press reported.

    42 comments

    Yeah Maryland. Moving into the current century not falling into the 3rd world thinking of Texas and others.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: connecticut, death, execution, california, maryland, penalty, capital, punishment
  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    2:27pm, EDT

    Court: Punishment over daughter's kiss was too harsh

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A woman who beat her 7-year-old daughter with a belt, leaving her with lacerations and bruises on parts of her body for at least a week, was not within her parental rights to mete out punishment that went beyond a “customary spanking,” a New Jersey court has ruled.

    The court’s decision reverses an earlier one in which another judge found the punishment was not extraordinary or excessive by K.T., the girl’s mother. (Only initials of family members were provided in the court documents.)


     

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    The girl, S.T., told a family services caseworker that her mother struck her with a belt after learning that she had kissed a boy during kindergarten class. The Division of Youth and Family Services had been alerted to the injuries on the girl by a teacher on June 7, 2011. The agency determined the beating occurred around May 31.

    Pictures submitted to the court showed bruises on the girl’s arms, back, buttocks and thighs. She also had lacerations to her buttocks and right thigh, probably caused by the prong of a belt buckle, the Appellate Division of New Jersey’s Superior Court said in its decision issued Tuesday in favor of the family services agency.

    “We hold that K.T.'s acts against her daughter are excessive corporal punishment and support a finding that S.T.'s ‘physical, mental, or emotional condition ... is in imminent danger of becoming impaired as the result of the failure of (K.T.) ... to exercise a minimum degree of care,’” Judges Mary Catherine Cuff and Alexander Waugh said in their decision.

    In a recorded interview, K.T. said she struck her daughter with a belt for "a couple of minutes" because she had been sitting on a boy's lap and had been disruptive in school. K.T. said she only meant to strike her daughter’s buttocks, but the girl’s squirming around led to the other bruises. She also said she had used a belt to discipline her daughter in the past, according to the judges’ decision.

    When asked if she knew what she did was wrong, she replied, "No, because that's pretty much how I was raised," the court documents said.

    K.T., citing a prior New Jersey court case, said her actions fell within her constitutional right to use this type of punishment, and the record was void of “any objective evidence” that she had, in spanking her child, “recklessly created a risk of serious injury to S.T.”

    The court said the law didn’t prohibit corporal punishment, and that a parent could inflict reasonable moderate correction, but that was not the case here.

    “Multiple strikes with a belt to a seven-year-old child, which left bruises and marks all over the child's body that were visible seven days after the incident, is hardly the occasional discipline of a wayward or incorrigible teenager condoned by the Court” in an earlier case, the judges said. “Neither the school nor K.T. asserts S.T. exhibited other behavioral problems or was generally a difficult child. The punishment inflicted by K.T. is hardly a ‘customary’ spanking.”

    The earlier trial judge, identified as Union County Superior Court Judge James Hely by the New Jersey Law Journal, had granted physical custody to the girl’s father, M.H., and joint legal custody to both parents. It’s not clear if the custody arrangements have changed with the appellate court’s decision. The family services agency said confidentiality laws prohibited it from commenting.

    K.T.'s lawyer, Justin Walker of Piekarsky & Associates, told the law journal that she "may have been angry but I don't believe (her actions) crossed into the realm of abuse."

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    361 comments

    One leaves VISIBLE marks such as laceratons, cuts etc that to me is way out of line. A red hand mark on the ass of a child is one thing but actual wounds? Come on...mom's got a bit of a temper that needs to be put into check.

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  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    1:47pm, EDT

    Connecticut Senate votes to repeal state's death penalty

    State Senators in Connecticut voted 20-16 on Thursday in favor of repealing the death penalty. WVIT's Liz Dalhem reports.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Updated at 10:00 a.m. ET: With the Connecticut Senate voting early Thursday to repeal the death penalty, the state is poised to become the fifth in five years to end the practice.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Legislative action was delayed last year amid the high-profile prosecution of a death penalty case involving a brutal home invasion that left a mother and her two daughters dead. But after a debate that stretched into the early morning hours Thursday, the Senate voted 20-16 to approve legislation that would replace the death penalty with life without parole.


    “Connecticut’s criminal justice system has taken a historic step forward. In a system of justice that is no(t) perfect, we must not employ a penalty that requires perfection. The punishment of life in prison without the possibility of release makes more sense,” Senate President Donald E. Williams, Jr., a Democrat, said in a statement. “These inmates will face conditions that are similar to and in some cases more severe than conditions on death row. It is a punishment and sentence that is certain and final.”

    The bill will now head to the House of Representatives, where observers say it is likely to pass. Gov. Daniel Malloy has said he would sign the legislation because it is forward looking, and not retroactive to those already sitting on death row.

    Senate leadership held a press conference at the Capitol Wednesday ahead of the vote, with families of murder victims joining them. Senate Republican opponents organized their own news conference, which was attended by the lone survivor of the home invasion case in Cheshire and families of other murder victims.

    “For those who say that we should execute those 11 (currently on death row) but none going further, the only way to keep that promise … is to keep our death penalty law,” Republican State Sen. John McKinney said. “I also think we need to talk about the message it sends that some who murder viciously the families in Connecticut should face the death penalty but others should not. Are we … saying that those families and the lives of those victims are somehow less important? For me, that is a wrong and terrible message to send.”

    A recent Quinnipiac University poll found that the state's voters are against repealing the death penalty by a margin of 62 percent to 31 percent. A 2011 poll showed that 48 percent of those surveyed preferred the death penalty over life in prison with no chance of parole (43 percent) in first-degree murder cases.

    "As we've seen in past Quinnipiac University polls, Connecticut voters still think abolishing the death penalty is a bad idea," said Douglas Schwartz, poll director. "No doubt the gruesome Cheshire murders still affect public opinion regarding convicts on death row."

    AP Photo/Jessica Hill

    Episcopal Bishops Laura Ahrens, left, and Bishop Ian Douglas rally at the state Capitol with religious leaders who oppose the death penalty in Hartford, Conn., on Tuesday.

    'Clear trend'
    If the legislation passes the House and is signed by the governor, Connecticut would be the fifth state in five years to repeal the death penalty, joining 16 others that have no capital punishment. California voters will decide in November whether to also do away with it.

    “This was a courageous and historic vote, but it was also in line with a growing trend away from the death penalty around the country. Connecticut’s legislature has come to the same conclusion that other legislatures have recently made: the death penalty is too risky, too expensive, and too unfair to continue," Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), said in a statement.

    A bill to repeal Connecticut's death penalty passed in 2009, but then Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell vetoed it. Last year, the bill made it through the joint House and Senate Judiciary Committee. But it died before a full Senate vote after a few senators withdrew their support because a second man charged in the Cheshire home invasion case was about to go on trial, said Ben Jones, executive director of the Connecticut Network to Abolish the Death Penalty.

    But it is now possible to have the death penalty debate not amid the “heated nature of a capital trial," so "people are able to think about it more at a systematic level,” said Shari Silberstein, executive director of Equal Justice USA.

    Joshua Komisarjevsky and Steven Hayes were convicted in the 2007 Cheshire killings of Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11. The girls were tied to their beds and doused in gasoline before the house was set ablaze; they died of smoke inhalation; their mother was strangled.

    George Ruhe / AP

    Authorities outside the home of Dr. William Petit, a noted specialist in diabetes, in Cheshire, Conn., on Monday July 23, 2007. Intruders broke into his home, held the family hostage and killed his wife and two daughters.

    The lone survivor of the invasion, Dr. William A. Petit Jr., along with his sister, Johanna Petit-Chapman, oppose the repeal.

    “We believe in the death penalty because we believe it is really the only true just punishment for certain heinous and depraved murders. One thing you never hear the abolitionists talk about is the victims, almost never, the forgotten people. The people who died and can’t be heard to speak for themselves,” Petit said at a press conference. “I think prospective (not retroactive) repeal of the death penalty is false. There’ll be multiple appeals for people already on death row.”

    Williams, the Senate president, said before the vote that similar legislation has withstood judicial reviews.

    "We're very respectful of those who are in favor of the death penalty," he said. "Yet those folks who have already been convicted and are serving under the prior rules of conviction do not have their sentences altered."

    If the legislation becomes law, it would apply to capital offenses committed on or after the effective date of the act. It creates new conditions for those convicted of “murder with special circumstances” -- previously capital crimes -- including being moved to a new cell every 90 days and only having two hours a day out of their cell.

    There are 11 inmates on Connecticut's death row. The state has carried out one execution since 1976. Connecticut’s Office of Fiscal Analysis estimated that the state spends $5 million a year on the death penalty system, according to the DPIC.

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    808 comments

    A recent Quinnipiac University poll found that the state's voters are against repealing the death penalty by a margin of 62-31 percent.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: connecticut, death, home, california, penalty, invasion, capitol, punishment, petit
  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    9:55pm, EDT

    At one Florida school, students make the paddles used in spankings

    By Sevil Omer, msnbc.com

    At Holmes County High School in Florida’s rural north, not only do naughty students get spanked, but the woodshop class makes the paddles, according to reports in the media.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Eddie Dixon, the principal at the school in Bonifay, a small town 15 miles from the Alabama border, recently told a reporter from StateImpact about the shop class's product: a lightweight paddle made of ash wood, measuring about 16 inches long, 5 inches wide and half an inch wide. 

    “You can’t buy them anywhere,” Dixon said, according to StateImpact, a partnership of local public media and National Public Radio. “There’s not a market for them, so yeah, students make it.”


    The report didn't say how many paddles a school the size of Holmes County High, with about 500 students, might need. An attempt by msnbc.com to contact Dixon by telephone was not successful Thursday evening.

    Holmes apparently isn't the only Florida school making its own paddles. At Madison County Central's elementary and middle school, east of Tallahassee, townfolk make the paddles out of plexiglass, the dean of schools said, according to StateImpact.

    Florida is among 19 states that allow school staff to use corporal punishment, according to the Center for Effective Discipline. Other states allowing corporal punishment: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming.

    More than 220,000 school children nationwide were subjected to physical punishment during the 2005-2006 school year, according to the Ohio-based center, citing the most recent figures available.

    Florida defines corporal punishment as the “moderate use of physical force or physical contact by a teacher or principal as may be necessary to maintain discipline or to enforce school rule.”

    In September 2011, the Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act was introduced in Congress. But the bill, which would outlaw “paddling, spanking or other forms of physical punishment, however light, imposed upon a student," was referred to committee in the House and is seen as unlikely to become law. A state representative's attempt to pass a similar law also failed last year.

    So students like Lucas Mixon will face more spankings.

    “I been getting them since about first grade,” said Mixon, a junior at Holmes, National Public Radio reported. “It’s just regular. They tell you to put your hands up on the desk and how many swats you’re going to get.”

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    40 comments

    In Texas in first grade(1976) at the Gatesville Elementary School I was taken into the hallway every single day by an evil,nasty woman named Mrs. Springston and hit with the paddle for problems getting my work done. I wasn't being willful or insubordinate by not getting it done. I just happen to ha …

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    Explore related topics: florida, spanking, paddling, punishment, corporal-punishment, paddles
  • 9
    Mar
    2012
    12:49pm, EST

    Cops: Boy flees after couple forces him to kneel 9 hours a day for 10 days

    Polk County Sheriff's Office / Polk County Sheriff's Office

    Albert Cusson, 57, and his wife, Nancy, 47, in booking photos released by the Polk County, Fla., Sheriff's Office.

    By msnbc.com staff

    LAKELAND, Fla -- A Florida couple has been charged with child abuse after allegedly forcing a 13-year-old boy to kneel nine hours a day for 10 days in a row as a punishment for being bad at schoolwork, police said.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The boy ran down a road to a neighbor’s house on Wednesday afternoon, hobbled by blistered knees, reported the Lakeland Ledger.

    According to the paper and other local news reports, Albert Cusson, 57, and his wife Nancy, 47, were jailed on child abuse charges Thursday after allegedly forcing the teen to kneel on a hard bathroom floor with his hands behind his back from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. every day and beating him with a stick if he moved, the Polk County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.


    During the ordeal, according to a report in the New York Post, they made him sleep in a bathtub and fed him one "protein shake" a day containing meat, vegetables and other foods, the statement added.

    According to the paper, officers said the boy had blistered knees, red marks on his back and struggled to walk when they found him. He was taken to the Lakeland Regional Medical Center for treatment.

    The boy, who was home-schooled, told cops that the couple planned to enforce the punishment for 20 days in a row, the Post reported. They denied the kneeling ordeal caused him injuries, and told detectives it was, "the only punishment that works for him."

    Further charges
    The Post reported that the pair may face further charges after a nine-year-old girl also claimed they forced her to kneel for two days straight.

    Deputies withheld the name of the boy and girl and their relationship to the Cussons because of the nature of the allegations. However, News 13 TV in Orlando reported that he is the grandson of the couple.

    "There is no excuse for this type of deplorable behavior," Sheriff Grady Judd said. "People who mistreat children are the worst of the worst. Jail is too good for them -- the Cussons will be more comfortable in the county jail than this little boy was when he was in their care."

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    279 comments

    Holy Roller's gone wild again?

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  • 23
    Feb
    2012
    6:14am, EST

    Cops: Grandmother, stepmom charged with murder after girl is forced to run for 3 hours

    The stepmother and grandmother of a 9-year-old Alabama girl, who died after she was forced to run for 3 hours as punishment, face murder charges. WVTM-TV reports.

    By msnbc.com news services

    ATTALLA, Ala. -- Roger Simpson said he looked down the road and saw a little girl running outside her home but didn't give it another thought. Police, however, said the man witnessed a murder in progress.

    Authorities say 9-year-old Savannah Hardin died after being forced to run for three hours as punishment for having lied to her grandmother about eating candy bars.


    Severely dehydrated, the girl had a seizure and died days later. Now, her grandmother and stepmother, who police say meted out the punishment, were taken to jail Wednesday and face murder charges.

    Witnesses told deputies Savannah was told to run and not allowed to stop for three hours on Friday, an Etowah County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman said. The girl's stepmother, 27-year-old Jessica Mae Hardin, called police at 6:45 p.m., telling them Savannah was having a seizure and was unresponsive.

    Simpson said he saw a little girl running at around 4 p.m., but didn't see anybody chasing or coercing her.

    "I saw her running down there, that's what I told the detectives," Simpson said from his home on a hill overlooking the Hardins. "But I don't see how that would kill her."

    'Ran her until she dropped'
    Natalie Barton, Etowah County, Alabama Public Information Officer, told Reuters that a call placed to a 911 emergency operator reported an unresponsive child having seizures.

    "It appears they ran her until she dropped," Barton added.

    However, authorities were still trying to determine whether Savannah was forced to run by physical coercion or by verbal commands. Deputies were told the girl was made to run after lying to her grandmother, 46-year-old Joyce Hardin Garrard, about having eaten the candy, sheriff's office spokeswoman Natalie Barton said.

    Savannah died Monday at Children's Hospital in Birmingham, according to a news release from the sheriff's office. The sheriff's release said an autopsy report showed the girl was extremely dehydrated and had a very low sodium level. A state pathologist ruled it a homicide.

    The sheriff's office received calls from concerned citizens who witnessed the girl running. An official with the local volunteer fire department also said rescuers thought something seemed odd when they responded to a call about the child.

    "One of the ones who were down there said he didn't feel like everything was right," said Ruby Ward, vice president of the Mountainboro Volunteer Fire Department.

    AP

    Joyce Hardin Garrard, 46, left, and Jessica Mae Hardin, 27, have been charged with murder.

    Garrard and Jessica Mae Hardin were being held in the Etowah County Detention Center, each on a $500,000 cash bond.

    Savannah was a third-grader at Carlisle Elementary School. Superintendent Alan Cosby said her desk had been turned into a makeshift memorial where her classmates could leave notes and mementos. He said counselors and social workers were made available for students.

    "This is obviously a very tragic, devastating, heartbreaking situation," Cosby said. "Nothing like this has ever happened before."

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    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    1415 comments

    This is insane! Where do these idiots come from? I hope these 2 women spend the rest of their sorry lives in jail!

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  • 15
    Dec
    2011
    4:01am, EST

    Death sentences, executions take 'historic drop,' report says

    Erik S. Lesser / AFP - Getty Images file

    A Georgia State Patrol trooper watches over demonstrators calling for Georgia state officials to halt the scheduled execution of Troy Davis on Sept. 21. The protests were unsuccessful.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The number of death sentences imposed in the U.S. has taken an “historic drop” -- about 75 percent -- over the last 15 years, accompanied by a nearly 60 percent decline in the number of executions, a death penalty awareness group reported Thursday.  

    The release of the annual report by the Death Penalty Information Center follows recent polls showing a withering of support for capital punishment over controversial cases like that of Troy Davis, who was executed in Georgia in September. The decline in the use of the death penalty also has likely been influenced by states’ worsening financial conditions, said Richard Dieter, the center’s executive director.


    Capital punishment was imposed in 78 cases this year, down from 315 in 1996 -- the first time that number was below 100 since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, the report said. There were also 43 executions -- including that of Davis -- in 13 states, down from 98 in 1999, according to the report.

     

     

    Untitled Document
    Executions by state
     
    State
    2011
    2010
      Texas
    13
    17
      Alabama
    6
    5
      Ohio
    5
    8
      Georgia
    4
    2
      Arizona
    4
    1
      Oklahoma
    2
    3
      Mississippi
    2
    3
      Florida
    2
    1
      Virginia
    1
    3
      South Carolina
    1
    0
      Missouri
    1
    0
      Delaware
    1
    0
      Idaho
    1
    0
      Louisiana
    0
    1
      Utah
    0
    1
      Washington
    0
    1
      Total
    43
    46
    SOURCE: Death Penalty Information Center
    msnbc.com

    "This is a historic drop in death sentences and I think it’s indicative of deep concerns about the death penalty in the public and it’s mirrored in falling executions, falling support in polls and even in legislation which has abolished the death penalty in a number of states," Dieter said.

    Dieter was referring to the abandonment of the death penalty in Illinois, New Mexico, New Jersey and New York in recent years. Three other states – California, Connecticut and Maryland – are considering doing away with capital punishment, he said, and Oregon's governor recently declared a moratorium on executions during his tenure.

    Dieter said that the legislative action and decline in public support is the result of people being freed from death row because of DNA testing, investigative work by the media and the international outcry over the Davis case, in which seven of the nine eyewitnesses changed their stories.

    “I think that shook the confidence that some people had about the death penalty, that it really does risk innocent lives -- even though many are guilty -- there’s still the danger and so juries are returning less death sentences, prosecutors are seeking it less,” he said. “Courts are looking at these cases more closely and governors are sometimes granting clemency, all because of the doubts and disfavor of the death penalty as it has been applied in the past 10 years.”

    Texas led the way in executions in 2011 with 13, followed by Alabama at six, Ohio, 5, and Georgia and Arizona each with four. The South and West accounted for 87 percent of the death sentences, while the Midwest and Northeast made up 12 percent. Meanwhile, many death penalty states, such as Indiana, Maryland and South Carolina, did not impose it during the year, the center said.

    A Gallup poll released in mid-October showed that 61 percent of Americans approve of capital punishment as a sentence for those convicted of murder -- the lowest level of support since 1972, when the Supreme Court voided state death penalty laws since they were seen as "being infrequently applied in an unpredictable and arbitrary way," the center said. (The court allowed executions to restart in 1976 after some states revised their death penalty statutes to "limit the haphazardness of the death penalty," the center said.)

    Scott Burns, executive director of the National District Attorneys Association, said Wednesday that he “strongly” disagreed that public sentiment against the death penalty was growing.

    “I think that the numbers show that the majority of the public still believe that in those rare and outrageous cases that the death penalty is an appropriate sanction,” he said, noting that murders were down about 50 percent nationwide in the last 20 years. “One of the reasons for that, I believe, is because … the criminal justice system has done a good job at targeting those violent offenders nationwide” and handing out “long and stiff sentences.”

    “It hasn’t been a revolving door for the last 20 years, they’re out of commission and as such, crime in every category has gone down,” he added.

    Burns also noted that the number of life-without-parole sentences imposed began to grow in the late 1990s, which could account for any decrease in death sentences.

    “There were a number of states that passed … for lack of a better term, a ‘truth in sentencing’ (law), which said life or life without parole really does mean life without parole,” he said. So in those states, that "could also be a reason as (to) why we are seeing fewer death penalties. Frankly, there are some people that think it’s a more severe penalty to have somebody sit in prison for their entire life than be executed.”

    Dollars and cents were another factor contributing to states shuttering their death penalty program, Dieter said. In California, the state’s former prison director and the former prosecutor who penned California's current death penalty statute are pushing to end it, with a citizens’ initiative expected to be on the ballot next year. A recent study there found that the state has spent more than $4 billion on its capital punishment system since 1978, under which there have been 13 executions.

    “All of the states are facing the questions of cutting back on schools, libraries, even police forces and so they’re trying to find programs that are expensive and aren’t really serving the public well or aren’t working, and I think the death penalty fits into that category,” Dieter said. “This is not a system that ... makes practical sense and it’s still costly.”

    The problems with the death penalty could lead to attempts to fix the system or to abandon it entirely, said Dieter, noting his group is not necessarily opposed to capital punishment, only to what he termed its unfair and inaccurate application in the U.S. As for its future, he noted: “I think we’ll see ... not any one grand move, but probably a continuation in 2012 of declining use of the death penalty.”

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    352 comments

    I once read a book called The Last Face You'll Ever See: The Culture of Death Row by Ivan Soltaroff. It discusses the lives of some executioners and how they were affected by their job. It also talks about those who have been have put to death, the controversies surrounding the death penalty, and th …

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    Explore related topics: death, execution, penalty, capital, punishment, troy-davis, crime-and-courts

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