The Supreme Court has ruled 7-2 that the death penalty by lethal injection
in Kentucky, which uses a cocktail of three drugs, is not a violation of the
Constitution's prohibition against "cruel and unusual punishment." Other
states, which had placed their lethal injection methods on hold pending a
court ruling, are now expected to proceed. No news report I saw appreciated
the irony of the 7-2 vote, the same margin by which the court decided in
1973 that unborn babies could be killed in any manner, with or without drugs
to dull their pain.
As death penalty opponents on and off the court lament the execution of
convicted murderers who are getting their just desserts, some definitions
might be helpful. The two phrases associated with this procedure are "death
penalty" and "capital punishment." The word penalty is defined by
Dictionary.com as "a punishment imposed or incurred for a violation of law
or rule." Another definition includes the word "consequence." Punishment is
defined as "a penalty inflicted for an offense."
It is this last one that gets to the heart of the conflict in a culture that
takes as its foundational principle, "It can't be wrong if it feels so
right." Fewer of us recall a time when a standard for distinguishing right
from wrong and evil from good enjoyed wide acceptance. Now bad behavior
enjoys nonstop TV coverage and evil is what the other political party does.
The idea that a death penalty might be deserved seems foreign.
In self-defense, most see nothing wrong with taking a life if another person
is about to take theirs. It is only if the killer succeeds that some strange
notion kicks in that the killer's life suddenly inherits value and comes
under constitutional protection. Conversely, the unborn child, according to
the same court, only has a right to live if the woman carrying it gives it
that right. Should she decide not to give birth, any method, including drug
cocktails, is allowed. It mocks life when anti-death penalty people advocate
for the guilty, while caring nothing for the unborn.
Justice John Paul Stevens, who voted with the majority that restored capital
punishment in 1976, announced in his dissenting opinion in the Kentucky case
his reliance on his "own experience" in reaching his decision to now oppose
the procedure in all instances. This sums up the tension between those who
believe in what the Constitution says and those who believe in their own
feelings as to what it should say. This is why elections matter and this
year's election matters more than any in recent years.
Here's another gem from the written opinions of the justices. Justice Samuel
Alito referred to the ethics rules of the medical profession, which, he
said, bar them from taking part in executions. This was one of the issues in
the Kentucky case where it was argued that nonprofessionals might not
administer the drugs properly and thus might inflict excruciating pain. Two
things about this: first, "medical ethics" have not prevented a good number
of doctors from performing abortions and a few from engaging in "assisted
suicide" at the other end of life; second, I like what Chief Justice Roberts
said in his majority opinion: "Some risk of pain is inherent in any method
of execution - no matter how humane - if only from the prospect of error in
following the required procedure. Š It is clear, then, that the Constitution
does not demand the avoidance of all risk of pain in carrying out
executions."
As the court leans more conservative, it is beginning to take into
consideration the pain inflicted by murderers on victims and the lifelong
emotional pain on victims' families.
DNA is aiding in reducing the likelihood that those wrongly convicted will
be executed. Death penalty opponents are correct when they note that not all
capital cases enjoy even minimally competent counsel. That needs to be
corrected, but the court majority is right in the Kentucky case. As states
begin again to execute the guilty, perhaps the concept of "just desserts" is
making a comeback, even in our feel-good culture.
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