August 5, 2007
New Jersey
Death penalty
Re: "Punishment can prevent brutal crimes" (Forum, July 29).
Wrongful convictions in the death-penalty system are anything but rare, as
the writer suggested in her column.
Since 1972, 125 men and women have been released from death row after
evidence of their innocence was revealed. To suggest, as the writer does,
that persons convicted of murder should be allowed only one appeal when
their lives are on the line is both naive and outrageous.
Many of these prisoners eventually found to be innocent saw their
convictions erroneously upheld through multiple appeals, and some came
perilously close to execution. The one-appeal-fits-all approach flies in the
face of what we have learned from DNA technology: Our criminal-justice
system errs.
With life without parole, there is no reason to resort to the irreversible
punishment of death.
ERIC E. WACHTER
Palmyra
---
Source : Courier Post, letters
http://www.courierpostonline.com/apps/p ... 50339/1047