boyfalldown
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 17,486
- Name
- Hugh
- Edit My Images
- No
What we need is to just dump prisoners on a large Island somewhere and let them fend for themselves
tiler65 said:
The likes of that? The answer to the question is yes.
Colarado has the death penalty and the killings still happened.It's more expensive to administer the death penalty than keep him in for life. It's one of the reasons Colorado (and other states) were considering abolishing it.
SpikeK6 said:I do not understand or maybe I am missing something but how can it cost more to give some one a leathal injection than it does to keep them locked up for the next 30-40 years or how ever long it would take them to die of natural causes???
spike
I do not understand or maybe I am missing something but how can it cost more to give some one a leathal injection than it does to keep them locked up for the next 30-40 years or how ever long it would take them to die of natural causes???
spike
If you look back I quoted figures explaining. But principally the trial costs lots more, death row imprisonment costs about 4 times as much per year, and the execution itself costs.
Jury selection, trials, appeals, observation and seclusion of death row inmates is highly costly. Then if you do get to execute the person a decade or two decades later after last minute appeals etc you've got another few hundred/thousand prisoners clogging up the system behind them. It's not even a deterrent, it's costs an absolute fortune and goes against the European Human Rights we've urged others to comply with. The death penalty has had its day for us.
It's more expensive to administer the death penalty than keep him in for life. .
big soft moose said:that I'm afraid is absolute garbage - administering the death penalty hardly costs anything at all - its all bleeding heart inspired repeated appeal process thats expensive - however even that isnt as expensive as keeping someone in prison for 50 or 60 years
(it may not be quite as clear cut as to whether it is cheaper than keeping in for 5 yeasrs then releasing him on a badly supervised parole - but only if you don't count the costs of subsequent reoffending and reaprehension)
big soft moose said:but if you only keep him for 6 months maximum because you don't go into the two decade ridiculous appeal process, even if thats true that only equates to the cost of 2 years normal imprisonment and thus its about one thirtieth of a the cost of a whole life term.
When Britain used to have capital punishment we didnt have any of that garbage, and theres no reason why we should have it again, if we went back to CP
Thats because we didnt have human rights lawyers.
Equally has it decreased in those countries that regularly carry it out?
when an offender comes out of prison they need to be of the mindset that they never want to go back there again.
Chain gangs, hard labour etc - Alabamba have the right idea IMO
plus basic amenities only - bed, toilet and thats it no tvs, computer, xbox, sports facilities etc - if they want extras they have to earn the money to pay for them working 40 hours a week doing nasty ****** manual work like road ganging, and shovelling crap out of ditches
Chain gangs, hard labour etc - Alabamba have the right idea IMO
plus basic amenities only - bed, toilet and thats it no tvs, computer, xbox, sports facilities etc - if they want extras they have to earn the money to pay for them working 40 hours a week doing nasty ****** manual work like road ganging, and shovelling crap out of ditches
ding76uk said:The question isn't how to treat people when they have committed crime, but to figure out how to stop people becoming involved in crime in the first place.
The Denver situation. I am sure he will be found sane enough to answer the charges and be put to death, many of you will believe rightly. I have 2 questions though. Do you really think the notion of a death penalty would effect the thoughts a person who believed he was perfectly entitled to dress up as The Joker, throw a gas canister into a movie theatre and shoot people at random? Or was he simply severely mentally ill?
You don't think easy access to weapons makes the US an unsuitable comparison to the UK ... I mean he just walked into a store and bought 4 guns!
Switzerland has very high gun ownership levels. Nearly that of the US fact, but nothing like the homicide rate, in fact the homicide rate compares to the UK (all per capita)
You don't think easy access to weapons makes the US an unsuitable comparison to the UK ... I mean he just walked into a store and bought 4 guns!
I really wouldn't compare the average Swiss with the average Yank though ... comparisons again.