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Rise and Fall of the U.S. Death Penalty in the Twenty-First Century (From Visions for Change: Crime and Justice in the Twenty-First Century, Third Edition, P 161-197, 2002, Roslyn Muraskin and Albert R. Roberts, eds. -- See NCJ-192962)

NCJ Number
192967
Author(s)
Kenneth C. Haas Ph.D.
Date Published
2002
Length
37 pages
Annotation
This chapter analyzes the U.S. Supreme Court's past, present, and future role in monitoring the U.S. system of capital punishment.
Abstract
In Gregg v. Georgia (1976), the Court upheld the constitutionality of death penalty laws that permit a judge or a jury to impose a death sentence only after weighing all the relevant "aggravating" and "mitigating" factors concerning the defendant's crime and character. In the years following "Gregg," the Court proceeded cautiously, setting strict limits on the applicability of the death penalty by refusing to allow the executions of those who did not actually take another human life and by insisting that judges and juries give due consideration to all mitigating factors in the defendant's conduct and background. Since 1983, however, the Court has taken a much more aggressive and activist approach to death penalty cases, rejecting every major constitutional challenge to the fairness of death penalty laws and sanctioning the execution of 16-year-old offenders, mentally retarded defendants, and those who neither killed nor intended to kill. These kinds of decisions and George W. Bush's victory in the 2000 presidential election make it very likely that by the year 2010, the number of executions will have increased. Ironically, however, it is predicted that this increase in executions will ultimately convince the American people that the death penalty cannot be administered without error, caprice, and discrimination. Abolitionist movements will gain momentum in an increasing number of States, and the Supreme Court will declare the death penalty to be unconstitutional by the year 2050, if not sooner. 22 notes and 135 references