Are we witnessing the beginning of the end of the death penalty in America? All of it might come down to a basic issue of supply.
So, what do you do if you are a hangman who runs out of rope? To put it in more conventional terms, suppose you are a state that executes people by lethal injection, but you're running out of the lethal chemicals used to put people down like animals.
Perhaps you'd do what some states have done and buy your chemicals on the black market, so to speak.
Used to extinguish 1,100 lives in 35 states -- some of them most certainly innocent -- lethal injection is the prominent form of capital punishment in the U.S. Marketed as the clean, humane form of capital punishment, lethal injection was billed as the friendly, painless type of execution. But we should ask, how harmless can you really make a lynching?
If lethal injection falls out of favor, either through a dwindling supply of the poisonous cocktail of death, lack of public support or a court ruling, what do the states do after that? Do they return to the hangman's noose? That seems unlikely, reminds us too much of the strange fruit hanging from the trees that Billie Holiday used to sing about.
What about the electric chair, which has been known to cook people alive? Or the gas chamber, like the Nazis used to do?
Then there's the firing squad. Better yet, how about stoning, or drawing and quartering, which is really old school?
Here's a better idea. Just get rid of the death penalty for good.
Source: Huffington Post, David A. Love, April 16, 2012. David A. Love is the Executive Director of Witness to Innocence, a national nonprofit organization that empowers exonerated death row prisoners and their family members to become effective leaders in the movement to abolish the death penalty.
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