In
loving memory of William J. Buckley, JR. who died on this date, 27 February
2005. I will post the article on the death penalty of the week.
NOTICE: The following
article is written by the author itself and not by me, I am not trying to
violate their copyright. I will give some information on them.
ARTICLE
TITLE:
Michael Ross Dead? Capital punishment in Connecticut.
DATE: 11 January 2005
AUTHOR: William F. Buckley, Jr.
AUTHOR
INFORMATION: William F. Buckley, Jr. (November 24, 1925 -
February 27, 2005) was an American Conservative author and commentator. He
founded the political magazine National Review in 1955, which had a major
impact in stimulating the conservative movement. He hosted 1,429 episodes of
the television show Firing Line from 1966 until 1999, where his public persona
was famous for a sesquipedalian vocabulary. He also wrote a nationally
syndicated newspaper column, and wrote numerous spy novels.
George H. Nash, a historian of the modern
American Conservative movement, states that Buckley was "arguably the most
important public intellectual in the United States in the past half century...
For an entire generation, he was the preeminent voice of American conservatism
and its first great ecumenical figure." Buckley's primary contribution to
politics was a fusion of traditional American political conservatism with laissez-faire
economic theory and anti-communism, laying groundwork for the new American
conservatism of U.S. presidential candidate Barry Goldwater and President Ronald
Reagan.
Buckley wrote God and Man at Yale
(1951) and over 50 other books on writing, speaking, history, politics and
sailing, including a series of novels featuring CIA agent Blackford Oakes.
Buckley referred to himself as either a libertarian or conservative. He resided
in New York City and Stamford, Connecticut. He was a practicing Roman Catholic,
regularly attending the traditional Latin Mass in Connecticut.
In the late 1960s, Buckley joined the Board
of Directors of Amnesty International USA. He resigned in January 1978 in
protest over the organization's stance against capital punishment as expressed
in its Stockholm Declaration of 1977, which he said would lead to the
"inevitable sectarianization of the amnesty movement".
William F. Buckley Jr. in 1985 |
January
11, 2005, 2:13 p.m.
Michael Ross Dead?
Capital punishment in Connecticut.
Michael Ross Dead?
Capital punishment in Connecticut.
Catholics who attend mass in Fairfield County,
Connecticut, on Sunday, January 16, will know that in doing so they are being
dutiful, it being church law that the sabbath should be observed. But this
Sunday, the faithful will be asked to declare themselves as dutiful also in a
different sense — by signing a petition posted at the door at the behest of the
Most Reverend William Lori, who is the bishop of Bridgeport.
The proximate cause of the current commotion is the
impending death of Michael Ross on January 26. Much attention fastens on him
because he would be the first person executed in the State of Connecticut in 44
years, and incidentally the first ever to be executed by injection.
There is a lot that is special about Mr. Ross,
other than his singularity as a condemned man this side of Texas whose
execution might actually take place. Most notably different about him is that
he has requested that the State get on with the execution. This confounds
everybody, and is tangentially inconvenient for the defense squadron who have
kept him alive for 20 years, which is when he committed his most recent murder.
That was the 8th girl he killed, and one of several
he also raped. The Hartford Courant sent a reporter down to Huntsville,
Texas, to accompany the Connecticut official who wanted firsthand knowledge of
how actually to implement the law on the books. The two were among the
witnesses at the execution of James Scott Porter, and the Courant noted
that between the time he was led out from his prison cell and the time he was
pronounced dead, only 12 minutes had gone by. Porter was already in jail for
murder, but had now attacked a fellow inmate in a prison day room and smashed
him to death with a rock. Porter was the 337th person to die in Texas of the
lethal injection: the 337th murderer to die, not the 337th Texan to die at the hands
of a murderer — that number is many times larger.
What Bishop Lori is asking churchgoers to do is
sign a petition to repeal the death penalty in Connecticut. The Connecticut
bishops are of course hoping that Michael Ross's life can yet be saved,
notwithstanding that he wants to die, that the Connecticut courts have found
nothing to invalidate the sentencing, that the U.S. Supreme Court declines to
intervene, and that the governor of Connecticut has said she finds no reason to
commute the sentence. "As a community of faith and reason," Bishop
Lori has said, "as believers and as citizens, we need to ponder carefully
what is about to take place and then to make our voices heard."
But of course capital punishment has been
pondered, and it is the deliberated law of the state. The bishop's assumption
that such punishments do not deter isn't verified. An important article in the
Stanford Law Review in 1988 by Stephen Markman and Paul Cassell cited
the research of Professor Stephen Layson of the University of North Carolina,
which ”concluded that increases in the probability of execution reduced the
homicide rate." Markman and Cassell took that research and wrote that
"we can estimate that the death penalty has deterred roughly 125,000
murders in this country in this [the 20th] century." Moreover, Layson’s
research “demonstrates rather starkly that under any realistic risk assessment
the presence of capital punishment saves more innocent lives than it
jeopardizes."
The bishop goes on to cite Pope John Paul's
disapproval of capital punishment as expressed in his encyclical letter Evangelium
Vitae. But the bishop does not pause over the critical point here, which is
that the pope's encyclical does not condemn capital punishment in absolute
moral terms; what the encyclical asks is that the death penalty be exercised
only in cases of "extreme gravity." That means that prudence is to be
consulted. This is sharply different from the church's position on abortion,
which is categorically rejected. A Catholic can in good conscience approve
capital punishment for the guilty, but never capital punishment for the
innocent.
Those who favor capital punishment do so in part
because they fondle the deterrent claims of the penalty, but mostly because
they wish to legislate the gravity that attaches to the government's
responsibility to preserve human life — by being willing to execute those who
take innocent lives. In the case of Michael Ross, the only reason to fail to
execute him is that he wishes to be executed.
QUOTE: “If we fail to execute a convicted murderer whose execution might
have deterred an indefinite number of prospective murderers, our failure
sacrifices an indefinite number of victims of future murderers."
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