Capital punishment
or the death penalty
, is the execution of a person by judicial process for retribution, general deterrence, and incapacitation. Crimes that can result in a death penalty are known as capital crimes
or capital offences
.
The term capital
originates from Latin capitalis
, literally "regarding the head" (Latin caput
). Hence, a capital crime was originally one punished by the severing of the head.
Capital punishment has been practiced in virtually every society, and thus can be considered to be a cultural universal or close to it, excluding those with state religious proscriptions against it. It is a matter of active controversy in various countries and states, and positions can vary within a single political ideology or cultural region. In the EU member states, if the Treaty of Lisbon is ratified and implemented, Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union will prohibit capital punishment. [1]
Today, most countries are considered by Amnesty International as abolitionists, [2] which allowed a vote on a nonbinding resolution to the UN to promote the abolition of the death penalty. [3] But more than 60% of the worldwide population live in countries where executions take place insofar as the four most populous countries in the world (the People's Republic of China, India, United States and Indonesia) apply the death penalty and are unlikely to abolish it at any time soon. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
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CAPITAL PUNISHMENT TICKETS
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History
Execution of
criminals and political opponents has been used by nearly all societies—both to punish crime and to suppress
political dissent. In most places that practice capital punishment it is reserved for
murder,
espionage,
treason, or as part of
military justice. In some countries sexual crimes, such as
rape,
adultery,
incest and
sodomy, carry the death penalty, as do religious crimes such as
apostasy in
Islamic nations (the formal renunciation of the State religion). In many
countries that use the death penalty,
drug trafficking is also a capital offense. In China,
human trafficking and serious cases of
corruption are punished by the death penalty. In militaries around the world
courts-martial have imposed death sentences for offenses such as
cowardice,
desertion,
insubordination, and
mutiny.
[13]
thumb was dramatically punished in
Afghanistan. Thieves were imprisoned in suspended cages and left to die.
The use of formal execution extends to the beginning of recorded history. Most historical records and various primitive tribal practices indicate that the death penalty was a part of their justice system. Communal punishment for wrongdoing generally included compensation by the wrongdoer,
corporal punishment,
shunning,
banishment and execution. Within a small community, crimes were rare and murder was almost always a
crime of passion. Moreover, most would hesitate to inflict death on a member of the community. For this reason, execution and even banishment were extremely rare. Usually, compensation and shunning were enough as a form of justice.
[14]
However, these were viewed as ineffective responses to crimes committed by outsiders. Consequently, even small crimes committed by outsiders were considered to be an assault on the community and were severely punished. The methods varied from beating and enslavement to executions. However, the response to crime committed by neighbouring tribes or communities included formal apology, compensation or
blood feuds.
A
blood feud or
vendetta occurs when arbitration between families or tribes fails or an arbitration system is non-existent. This form of justice was common before the emergence of an arbitration system based on state or organised religion. It may result from crime, land disputes or a
code of honour. "Acts of retaliation underscore the ability of the social collective to defend itself and demonstrate to enemies (as well as potential allies) that injury to property, rights, or the person will not go unpunished."
[15] However, in practice, it is often difficult to distinguish between a
war of vendetta and one of conquest.
Severe historical penalties include
breaking wheel,
boiling to death,
flaying,
slow slicing,
disembowelment,
crucifixion,
impalement,
crushing (including
crushing by elephant),
stoning,
execution by burning,
dismemberment,
sawing,
decapitation,
scaphism, or
necklacing.
thumb (1883).
Roman Colosseum.
Elaborations of tribal arbitration of
feuds included peace settlements often done in a religious context and compensation system. Compensation was based on the principle of
substitution
which might include material (e.g. cattle, slave) compensation, exchange of brides or grooms, or payment of the blood debt. Settlement rules could allow for animal blood to replace human blood, or transfers of property or
blood money or in some case an offer of a person for execution. The person offered for execution did not have to be an original perpetrator of the crime because the system was based on tribes, not individuals. Blood feuds could be regulated at meetings, such as the
Viking things
.
[16] Systems deriving from blood feuds may survive alongside more advanced legal systems or be given recognition by courts (e.g.
trial by combat). One of the more modern refinements of the blood feud is the
duel.
thumb, executioner of the
Papal States between 1796 and 1865,
carried out 516 executions (Bugatti pictured offering snuff to a condemned prisoner)
.
Vatican City abolished
its capital punishment statute in 1969.
In certain parts of the world, nations in the form of ancient republics, monarchies or tribal oligarchies emerged. These nations were often united by common linguistic, religious or family ties. Moreover, expansion of these nations often occurred by conquest of neighbouring tribes or nations. Consequently, various classes of royalty, nobility, various commoners and slave emerged. Accordingly, the systems of tribal arbitration were submerged into a more unified system of justice which formalised the relation between the different "classes" rather than "tribes". The earliest and most famous example is
Code of Hammurabi which set the different punishment and compensation according to the different class/group of victims and perpetrators. The
Torah (Jewish Law), also known as the
Pentateuch (the first five books of the Christian
Old Testament), lays down the death penalty for murder,
kidnapping,
magic, violation of the
Sabbath,
blasphemy, and a wide range of sexual crimes, although evidence suggests that actual executions were rare.
[17] A further example comes from
Ancient Greece, where the
Athenian legal system was first written down by
Draco in about 621 BC: the death penalty was applied for a particularly wide range of crimes, though
Solon later repealed Draco's code and published new laws, retaining only Draco's homicide statutes.
[18] The word
draconian derives from Draco's laws. The
Romans also used death penalty for a wide range of offenses.
[19] [20]
Islam on the whole accepts capital punishment.
[21] The
Abbasid Caliphs in
Baghdad, such as
Al-Mu'tadid, were often cruel in their punishments.
[22] In the
medieval Islamic world, there were a handful of
sheikhs who were opposed to killing as a punishment. In the
One Thousand and One Nights
, also known as the
Arabian Nights
, the fictional storyteller
Sheherazade is portrayed as being the "voice of
sanity and
mercy", with her
philosophical position being generally opposed to punishment by death. She expresses this though several of her tales, including "The Merchant and the Jinni", "
The Fisherman and the Jinni", "
The Three Apples", and "The Hunchback".
[23]
Similarly, in
medieval and early modern Europe, before the development of modern
prison systems, the death penalty was also used as a generalised form of punishment. For example, in 1700s
Britain there were 222 crimes which were punishable by death, including crimes such as cutting down a tree or stealing an animal.
[24] Thanks to the notorious
Bloody Code, 18th century (and early 19th century) Britain was a hazardous place to live. For example, Michael Hammond and his sister, Ann, whose ages were given as 7 and 11, were reportedly hanged at
King's Lynn on Wednesday, September 28, 1708 for
theft. The local press did not, however, consider the executions of two children newsworthy.
[25]
Although many are executed in China each year in the modern age, there was a time in
Tang Dynasty China when the death penalty was abolished.
[26] This was in the year 747, enacted by
Emperor Taizong of Tang (r. 712–756), who before was the only person in China with the authority to sentence criminals to execution. Even then capital punishment was relatively infrequent, with only 24 executions in the year 730 and 58 executions in the year 736.
Two hundred years later there was a form of execution called Ling Chi (
slow slicing), or death by/of a thousand cuts, used in China from roughly 900 CE to its abolition in 1905.
left
Despite its wide use, calls for reform were not unknown. The 12th century
Sephardic legal scholar, Moses
Maimonides, wrote, "It is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent man to death." He argued that executing an accused criminal on anything less than absolute certainty would lead to a slippery slope of decreasing
burdens of proof, until we would be convicting merely "according to the judge's caprice." His concern was maintaining popular respect for law, and he saw errors of commission as much more threatening than errors of omission.
The last several centuries have seen the emergence of modern nation-states. Almost fundamental to the concept of nation state is the idea of citizenship. This caused justice to be increasingly associated with equality and universality, which in Europe saw an emergence of the concept of
natural rights. Another important aspect is that emergence of standing police forces and permanent penitential institutions. The death penalty became an increasingly unnecessary
deterrent in prevention of minor crimes such as theft. The argument that deterrence, rather than retribution, is the main justification for punishment is a hallmark of the
rational choice theory and can be traced to
Cesare Beccaria whose well-known treatise
On Crimes and Punishments
(1764), condemned
torture and the
death penalty and
Jeremy Bentham who twice critiqued the death penalty.
[27] Additionally, in countries like Britain, law enforcement officials became alarmed when juries tended to acquit non-violent felons rather than risk a conviction that could result in execution. Moving executions there inside prisons and away from public view was prompted by official recognition of the phenomenon reported first by Beccaria in Italy and later by
Charles Dickens and
Karl Marx of increased violent criminality at the times and places of executions.
The 20th century was one of the bloodiest of the human history. Massive killing occurred as the resolution of war between nation-states. A large part of execution was summary execution of enemy combatants. Also, modern military organisations employed capital punishment as a means of maintaining military discipline. The Soviets, for example, executed 158,000 soldiers for desertion during
World War II.
[28] In the past,
cowardice, absence without leave,
desertion,
insubordination,
looting, shirking under enemy fire and disobeying orders were often crimes punishable by death (see
decimation and
running the gauntlet). One method of execution since firearms came into common use has almost invariably been
firing squad. Moreover, various authoritarian states—for example those with fascist or communist governments—employed the death penalty as a potent means of political oppression. Partly as a response to such excessive punishment, civil organisations have started to place increasing emphasis on the concept of human rights and abolition of the death penalty.
Among countries around the world, almost all European and many Pacific Area states (including Australia, New Zealand and
Timor Leste), and Canada have abolished capital punishment. In
Latin America, most states have completely abolished the use of capital punishment, while some countries, such as
Brazil, allow for capital punishment only in exceptional situations, such as treason committed during wartime. The
United States (the federal government and 35 of the states),
Guatemala, most of the
Caribbean and the majority of democracies in Asia (e.g. Japan and India) and Africa (e.g.
Botswana and
Zambia) retain it. South Africa, which is probably the most developed African nation, and which has been a democracy since 1994, does not have the death penalty. This fact is currently quite controversial in that country, due to the high levels of violent crime, including murder and rape.
[29]
thumb in
Ceylon. Drawing from
An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon
by Robert Knox (1681)
Advocates of the death penalty argue that it deters crime, is a good tool for police and prosecutors (in
plea bargaining for example),
[30] improves the community by making sure that convicted criminals do not offend again, provides closure to surviving victims or loved ones, and is a just penalty for their crime. Opponents of capital punishment argue that it has led to the execution of
wrongfully convicted, that it discriminates against minorities and the poor, that it does not
deter criminals more than
life imprisonment, that it encourages a "culture of violence", that it is more expensive than life imprisonment,
[31] and that it violates
human rights.
Movements towards humane execution
70px.
In early
New England, public executions were a very solemn and sorrowful occasion, sometimes attended by large crowds, who also listened to a Gospel message
[32] and remarks by local preachers and politicians. The
Connecticut Courant records one such public execution on December 1, 1803, saying, "The assembly conducted through the whole in a very orderly and solemn manner, so much so, as to occasion an observing gentleman acquainted with other countries as well as this, to say that such an assembly, so decent and solemn, could not be collected anywhere but in New England."
[33]
Trends in most of the world have long been to move to less painful, or more humane, executions. France developed the
guillotine for this reason in the final years of the 18th century while Britain banned
drawing and quartering in the early 19th century.
Hanging by turning the victim off a ladder or by kicking a stool or a bucket, which causes death by suffocation, was replaced by "hanging" where the subject is dropped a longer distance to dislocate the neck and sever the
spinal cord. In the U.S., the
electric chair and the
gas chamber were introduced as more humane alternatives to hanging, but have been almost entirely superseded by
lethal injection, which in turn has been criticised as being too painful. Nevertheless, some countries still employ slow hanging methods, beheading by sword and even
stoning, although the latter is rarely employed.
Abolitionism
The death penalty was banned in China between 747 and 759. In England, a public statement of opposition was included in
The Twelve Conclusions of the Lollards, written in 1395. Sir Thomas More's
Utopia
, published in 1516, debated the benefits of the death penalty in dialogue form, coming to no firm conclusion. More recent opposition to the death penalty stemmed from the book of the Italian
Cesare Beccaria Dei Delitti e Delle Pene
("
On Crimes and Punishments"), published in 1764. In this book, Beccaria aimed to demonstrate not only the injustice, but even the futility from the point of view of
social welfare, of
torture and the death penalty. Influenced by the book,
Grand Duke Leopold II of Habsburg, famous
enlightened monarch and future Emperor of Austria, abolished the death penalty in the then-independent
Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the first permanent abolition in modern times. On November 30, 1786, after having
de facto
blocked capital executions (the last was in 1769), Leopold promulgated the reform of the
penal code that abolished the death penalty and ordered the destruction of all the instruments for capital execution in his land. In 2000 Tuscany's regional authorities instituted an annual holiday on November 30 to commemorate the event. The event is commemorated on this day by 300 cities around the world celebrating
Cities for Life Day.
thumb
The
Roman Republic banned capital punishment in 1849.
Venezuela followed suit and abolished the death penalty in 1863 and
San Marino did so in 1865. The last execution in San Marino had taken place in 1468. In Portugal, after
legislative proposals in 1852 and 1863, the death penalty was abolished in 1867.
In the United Kingdom, it was abolished for murder (leaving only
treason,
piracy with violence,
Arson in royal dockyards and a number of wartime military offences as capital crimes) for a five year experiment in 1965 and permanently in 1969, the last execution having taken place in 1964. It was abolished for all peacetime offences in 1998.
[34]
France abolished it in 1981, Canada abolished it in 1976 and Australia in 1985. In 1977, the United Nations General Assembly affirmed in a formal resolution that throughout the world, it is desirable to "progressively restrict the number of offenses for which the death penalty might be imposed, with a view to the desirability of abolishing this punishment".
[35]
In the United States,
Michigan was the first state to ban the death penalty, on May 18, 1846.
[36] Currently, as of
March 18,
2009, 15 states of the U.S. and the
District of Columbia ban capital punishment.
The latest country to abolish the death penalty for all crimes was
Togo, on June 23, 2009.
[37] Human Rights activists oppose the death penalty, calling it "cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment".
Amnesty International considers it to be "the ultimate denial of Human Rights".
[38]
Contemporary use
Global distribution
Since
World War II there has been a consistent trend towards abolishing the death penalty. In 1977, 16 countries were abolitionist. Currently, 94 countries had abolished capital punishment, 10 had done so for all offences except under special circumstances, and 35 had not used it for at least 10 years or were under a moratorium. 58 actively retained the death penalty.
[39]
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According to Hands Off Cain, at least 5,727 executions were carried out in 26 States in 2008
[40]. Six of whom are considered as "electoral democracies" by the
Freedom House.
Country
| Number
|
China
| At least 5000
|
Iran
| At least 346
|
Saudi Arabia
| At least 102
|
North Korea
| At least 63
|
United States of America
| 37
|
Pakistan
| At least 36
|
Iraq
| At least 34
|
Vietnam
| At least 19
|
Afghanistan
| At least 17
|
Japan
| 15
|
Yemen
| At least 13
|
Indonesia
| 10
|
Libya
| At least 8
|
Sudan
| At least 5
|
Bangladesh
| 5
|
Belarus
| 4
|
Somalia
| At least 3
|
Egypt
| At least 2
|
United Arab Emirates
| At least 1
|
Malaysia
| At least 1
|
Mongolia
| At least 1
|
Singapore
| At least 1
|
Syria
| 1
|
Bahrain
| 1
|
Botswana
| 1
|
Saint Kitts and Nevis
| 1
|
The use of the death penalty is becoming increasingly restrained in retentionist countries. Singapore, Japan and the U.S. are the only fully developed countries that have retained the death penalty. The death penalty was overwhelmingly practiced in poor and authoritarian states, which often employed the death penalty as a tool of political oppression. During the 1980s, the democratisation of Latin America swelled the rank of abolitionist countries. This was soon followed by the fall of
communism in
Central and
Eastern Europe, which then aspired to enter the
EU. In these countries, the public support for the death penalty varies but it is decreasing.
[41] The
European Union and the
Council of Europe both strictly require
member states not to practice the death penalty (see
Capital punishment in Europe). On the other hand, rapid industrialisation in Asia has been increasing the number of developed retentionist countries. In these countries, the death penalty enjoys strong public support, and the matter receives little attention from the government or the media. This trend has been followed by some African and Middle Eastern countries where support for the death penalty is high.
Some countries have resumed practicing the death penalty after having suspended executions for long periods. The United States suspended executions in 1967 but resumed them in 1977; there was no execution in India between 1995 and 2004; and
Sri Lanka recently declared an end to its
moratorium on the death penalty, although it has not yet performed any executions. The
Philippines re-introduced the death penalty in 1993 after abolishing it in 1987, but abolished it again in 2006.
Execution for drug-related offences
Some countries that retain the death penalty for murder and other violent crimes do not execute offenders for drug-related crimes. The following is a list of countries that currently have statutory provisions for the death penalty for drug-related offences.
United States (Although Federal Law provides the death penalty for certain drug offences, no one is on death row for such offences)
Iran
Singapore
India (no execution carried out for such offences)
Kuwait
Bangladesh
Indonesia
Egypt
Saudi Arabia
Malaysia
Pakistan
Afghanistan
Zimbabwe
Brunei
Vietnam
Laos
Iraq
Oman
Republic of China
In specific countries
thumb (as of June 2009).
Abolished for all offenses (94)
Abolished for all offenses except under special circumstances (10)
Retains, though not used for at least 10 years (35)
Retains death penalty (58)*
- Note that, while laws vary between U.S. states, it is considered retentionist because the federal death penalty is still in active use.
For further information about capital punishment in these countries or regions, see:
Australia ·
Canada ·
People's Republic of China (excluding Hong Kong and Macau) ·
Europe ·
India ·
Iran ·
Iraq ·
Japan ·
New Zealand ·
Pakistan·
Philippines ·
Russia ·
Singapore ·
Taiwan ·
United Kingdom ·
United States
Juvenile offenders
The death penalty for
juvenile offenders (criminals aged under 18 years at the time of their crime) has become increasingly rare. Since 1990, nine countries have executed offenders who were juveniles at the time of their crimes: The
People's Republic of China (PRC),
Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Iran,
Nigeria,
Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia,
Sudan, the United States and
Yemen.
[42] The PRC, Pakistan, the United States and Yemen have since raised the minimum age to 18.
[43] Amnesty International has recorded 61 verified executions since then, in several countries, of both juveniles and adults who had been convicted of committing their offenses as juveniles.
[44] The PRC does not allow for the execution of those under 18, but child executions have reportedly taken place.
[45] The United States Supreme Court abolished capital punishment for offenders under the age of 16 in
Thompson v. Oklahoma
(1988), and for all juveniles in
Roper v. Simmons
(2005). Between 2005 and May 2008, Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Yemen were reported to have executed child offenders, the most being from Iran.
[46]
Starting in 1642 within
British America, an estimated 365
[47] juvenile offenders were executed by the states and federal government of the United States.
[48] In 2002, the United States Supreme Court declared unconstitutional the execution of individuals with
mental retardation, in
Atkins v. Virginia
.
[49]
The
United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which forbids capital punishment for juveniles under article 37(a), has been signed by all countries and
ratified, except for
Somalia and the United States.
[50] The UN Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights maintains that the death penalty for juveniles has become contrary to a
jus cogens of
customary international law. A majority of countries are also party to the U.N.
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (whereas under Article 6.5 also states that "Sentence of death shall not be imposed for crimes committed by persons below eighteen years of age...").
In Japan, the minimum age for the death penalty is 18 as mandated by the internationals standards. But under Japanese law, anyone under 20 is considered a juvenile. There are
three men currently on death row for crimes they committed at age 18 or 19.
Iran
Iran, despite its ratification of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, is currently the world's biggest executioner of juvenile offenders, for which it has received international condemnation; the country's record is the focus of the
Stop Child Executions Campaign.
Iran accounts for two-thirds of the global total of such executions, and currently has roughly 140 people on death row for crimes committed as juveniles (up from 71 in 2007).
[51] [52] The past executions of
Mahmoud Asgari, Ayaz Marhoni and Makwan Moloudzadeh became international symbols of Iran's child capital punishment and the judicial system that hands down such sentences.
[53] [54]
Somalia
There is evidence that child executions are taking place in the parts of Somalia controlled by the
Islamic Courts Union. In October, 2008, a girl, Aisho Ibrahim Dhuhulow was buried up to her neck at a
football stadium, then
stoned to death in front of more than 1,000 people. The stoning occurred after she had allegedly pleaded guilty to
adultery in a
shariah court in
Kismayo, a city controlled by
Islamist insurgents. According to the insurgents she had stated that she wanted shariah law to apply.
[55]
However, other sources state that the victim had been crying, that she begged for mercy and had to be forced into the hole before being buried up to her neck in the ground.
[56] Amnesty International later learned that the girl was in fact 13 years old (i.e., a
child) and had been arrested by the al-Shabab militia after she had reported being gang-raped by three men.
[57]
Methods
Methods of execution include
electrocution, the
firing squad or other sorts of
shooting,
stoning in
Islamic countries, the
gas chamber, hanging, and
lethal injection.
Controversy and debate
Capital punishment is often the subject of controversy. Opponents of the death penalty argue that it has led to the
execution of innocent people, that life imprisonment is an effective and less expensive substitute,
that it discriminates against minorities and the poor, and that it violates the criminal's
right to life. Supporters believe that the penalty is justified for murderers by the principle of
retribution, that life imprisonment is not an equally effective deterrent, and that the death penalty affirms the right to life by punishing those who violate it in the strictest form.
Wrongful executions
Wrongful execution is a
miscarriage of justice occurring when an innocent person is put to death by capital punishment.
[58] Many people have been proclaimed innocent victims of the death penalty.
[59] [60] [61] Some have claimed that as many as 39 executions have been carried out in the U.S. in face of compelling evidence of innocence or serious doubt about guilt. Newly-available
DNA evidence has allowed the
exoneration of more than 15
death row inmates since 1992 in the U.S.,
[62] but DNA evidence is only available in a fraction of capital cases. In the UK, reviews prompted by the
Criminal Cases Review Commission have resulted in one pardon and three exonerations with compensation paid for people executed between 1950 and 1953, when the execution rate in
England and Wales averaged 17 per year.
Public opinion
In
Canada,
Australia,
New Zealand,
Latin America, and
Western Europe, the death penalty has become relatively unpopular, with the majority of the population opposing it, however certain cases of mass murder, terrorism, and child murder occasionally cause waves of support for reinstitution, such as the
Greyhound bus beheading,
Port Arthur massacre and
Bali bombings, though these are generally emotionally based and fade away.
Abolition was often adopted due to political change, as when countries shifted from authoritarianism to democracy, or when it became an entry condition for the European Union. The United States is a notable exception: some states have had bans on capital punishment for decades (the earliest is
Michigan, where it was abolished in 1847), while others actively use it today. The death penalty there remains a contentious issue which is hotly debated. Elsewhere, however, it is rare for the death penalty to be abolished as a result of an active public discussion of its merits.
In abolitionist countries, debate is sometimes revived by particularly brutal murders, though few countries have brought it back after abolishing it. However, a spike in serious, violent crimes, such as murders or terrorist attacks, has prompted some countries (such as
Sri Lanka and
Jamaica) to effectively end the moratorium on the death penalty. In retentionist countries, the debate is sometimes revived when a miscarriage of justice has occurred, though this tends to cause legislative efforts to improve the judicial process rather than to abolish the death penalty.
A
Gallup International poll from 2000 said that "Worldwide support was expressed in favor of the death penalty, with just more than half (52%) indicating that they were in favour of this form of punishment."
A number of have been done in recent years with various results
In a poll completed by Gallup in October 2008, 64% of Americans supported the death penalty for persons convicted of murder, while 30% were against and 5% did not have an opinion.
[63]
In the U.S., surveys have long shown a majority in favor of capital punishment. An
ABC News survey in July 2006 found 65 percent in favour of capital punishment, consistent with other polling since 2000.
[64] About half the American public says the death penalty is not imposed frequently enough and 60 percent believe it is applied fairly, according to a
Gallup poll from May 2006.
[65] Yet surveys also show the public is more divided when asked to choose between the death penalty and
life without parole, or when dealing with juvenile offenders.
[66] Roughly six in 10 tell Gallup they do not believe capital punishment
deters murder and majorities believe at least one innocent person has been executed in the past five years.
[67]
International
The
United Nations introduced a
resolution during the General Assembly's 62nd sessions in 2007 calling for a universal ban.
[68] [69] The approval of a draft resolution by the Assembly's third committee, which deals with human rights issues, voted 99 to 52, with 33 abstentions, in favour of the resolution on November 15, 2007 and was put to a vote in the Assembly on December 18.
[70] [71] [72] Again in 2008, a large majority of states from all regions adopted a second resolution calling for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty in the UN General Assembly (Third Committee) on November 20. 105 countries voted in favour of the draft resolution, 48 voted against and 31 abstained. A range of amendments proposed by a small minority of pro-death penalty countries were overwhelmingly defeated. It had in 2007 passed a non-binding resolution (by 104 to 54, with 29 abstentions) by asking its member states for "a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty".
[73]
thumb affirms the prohibition on capital punishment in the
EU
A number of regional conventions prohibit the death penalty, most notably, the Sixth Protocol (abolition in time of peace) and the Thirteenth Protocol (abolition in all circumstances) to the
European Convention on Human Rights. The same is also stated under the Second Protocol in the
American Convention on Human Rights, which, however has not been ratified by all countries in the Americas, most notably Canada and the United States. Most relevant operative international treaties do not require its prohibition for cases of serious crime, most notably, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This instead has, in common with several other treaties, an optional protocol prohibiting capital punishment and promoting its wider abolition.
[74]
Several international organisations have made the abolition of the death penalty (during time of peace) a requirement of membership, most notably the
European Union (EU) and the
Council of Europe. The EU and the Council of Europe are willing to accept a
moratorium as an interim measure. Thus, while Russia is a member of the Council of Europe, and practices the death penalty in law, it has not made public use of it since becoming a member of the Council. Other states, while having abolished
de jure the death penalty in time of peace and
de facto in all circumstances, have not ratified yet and therefore have no international obligation to refrain from using the death penalty in time of war or imminent threat of war (Armenia, Latvia, Poland and Spain
[75]). Italy is the most recent to ratify it, on March 3, 2009.
[76]
Turkey has recently, as a move towards EU membership, undergone a reform of its legal system. Previously there was a
de facto
moratorium on the death penalty in Turkey as the last execution took place in 1984. The death penalty was removed from peacetime law in August 2002, and in May 2004 Turkey amended its constitution in order to remove capital punishment in all circumstances. It ratified Protocol no. 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights in February 2006. As a result, Europe is a continent free of the death penalty in practice, all states but Russia, which has entered a moratorium, having ratified the Sixth Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights, with the sole exception of
Belarus, which is not a member of the Council of Europe. The
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has been lobbying for Council of Europe observer states who practice the death penalty, the U.S. and Japan, to abolish it or lose their observer status. In addition to banning capital punishment for EU member states, the EU has also banned detainee transfers in cases where the receiving party may seek the death penalty.
Among non-governmental organisations (NGOs),
Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch are noted for their opposition to capital punishment. A number of such NGOs, as well as trade unions, local councils and bar associations formed a
World Coalition Against the Death Penalty in 2002.
Religious views
Buddhism
There is disagreement among Buddhists as to whether or not Buddhism forbids the death penalty. The first of the
Five Precepts (Panca-sila) is to abstain from destruction of life. Chapter 10 of the
Dhammapada states:
Everyone fears punishment; everyone fears death, just as you do. Therefore do not kill or cause to kill. Everyone fears punishment; everyone loves life, as you do. Therefore do not kill or cause to kill.
Chapter 26, the final chapter of the Dhammapada, states, "Him I call a
brahmin who has put aside weapons and renounced violence toward all creatures. He neither kills nor helps others to kill." These sentences are interpreted by many Buddhists (especially in the West) as an injunction against supporting any legal measure which might lead to the death penalty. However, as is often the case with the interpretation of scripture, there is dispute on this matter. Historically, most states where the official religion is
Buddhism have imposed capital punishment for some offenses. One notable exception is the abolition of the death penalty by the
Emperor Saga of Japan in 818. This lasted until 1165, although in private manors executions continued to be conducted as a form of retaliation. Japan still imposes the death penalty, although some recent justice ministers have refused to sign death warrants, citing their
Buddhist beliefs as their reason.
[77] Other Buddhist-majority states vary in their policy. For example,
Bhutan has abolished the death penalty, but
Thailand still retains it, although
Buddhism is the official religion in both.
Judaism
The official teachings of
Judaism approve the death penalty in principle but the standard of proof required for application of death penalty is extremely stringent, and in practice, it has been abolished by various Talmudic decisions, making the situations in which a death sentence could be passed effectively impossible and hypothetical. "Forty years before the destruction" of the
Temple in Jerusalem in 70
AD, i.e. in 30
AD, the
Sanhedrin effectively abolished capital punishment, making it a hypothetical upper limit on the severity of punishment, fitting in finality for God alone to use, not fallible people.
[78]
Most followers of
Judaism either oppose the death penalty altogether or support it only in extreme cases with absolute proof, such as well-documented cases of
genocide.
In law schools everywhere, students read the famous quotation from the 12th century legal scholar,
Maimonides,
"It is better and more satisfactory to acquit a thousand guilty persons than to put a single innocent one to death."
Maimonides argued that executing a defendant on anything less than absolute certainty would lead to a slippery slope of decreasing burdens of proof, until we would be convicting merely "according to the judge's caprice." Maimonides was concerned about the need for the law to guard itself in public perceptions, to preserve its majesty and retain the people's respect.
[79]
Islam
Scholars of
Islam hold it to be permissible but the victim or the family of the victim has the right to pardon. In
Islamic jurisprudence (
Fiqh
), to forbid what is not forbidden is forbidden. Consequently, it is impossible to make a case for abolition of the death penalty, which is explicitly endorsed.
Sharia Law or Islamic law may require capital punishment, there is great variation within Islamic nations as to actual capital punishment.
Apostasy in Islam and
stoning to death in Islam are controversial topics.
Furthermore, as expressed in the Qur'an, capital punishment is condoned. Although the Qur'an prescribes the death penalty for several
hadd
(fixed) crimes—including rape—murder is not among them. Instead, murder is treated as a civil crime and is covered by the law of
qisas
(retaliation), whereby the relatives of the victim decide whether the offender is punished with death by the authorities or made to pay
diyah
(
wergild) as compensation.
[80]
"If anyone kills person—unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land—it would be as if he killed all people. And if anyone saves a life, it would be as if he saved the life of all people" (Qur'an 5:32). "Spreading mischief in the land" can mean many different things, but is generally interpreted to mean those crimes that affect the community as a whole, and destabilise the society. Crimes that have fallen under this description have included: (1) Treason, when one helps an enemy of the Muslim community; (2) Apostasy, when one leaves the faith; (3) Land, sea, or air piracy; (4) Rape; (5) Adultery; (6) Homosexual behaviour.
[81]
Christianity
Although some interpret that
Jesus' teachings condemn the death penalty in
The Gospel of Luke and
The Gospel of Matthew regarding
Turning the other cheek, and in which Jesus intervenes in the
stoning of an adulteress, rebuking the mob with the phrase "may he who is without sin cast the first stone", others consider to support it. Also, has a whole list of situations in which execution is supported. Christian positions on this vary.
[82] The sixth
commandment (fifth in the
Roman Catholic and
Lutheran churches) is preached as 'Thou shalt not kill' by some denominations and as 'Thou shalt not murder' by others. As some denominations do not have a hard-line stance on the subject, Christians of such denominations are free to make a personal decision.
[83]
Roman Catholic Church
The
Church classes capital punishment as a form of "lawful slaying", a view derived from the thought of theological authorities such as
Thomas Aquinas, who accepted the death penalty as a necessary
deterrent and prevention method, but not as a means of vengeance. (See also
Aquinas on the death penalty). The
Roman Catechism states this teaching thus:
Another kind of lawful slaying belongs to the civil authorities, to whom is entrusted power of life and death, by the legal and judicious exercise of which they punish the guilty and protect the innocent. The just use of this power, far from involving the crime of murder, is an act of paramount obedience to this Commandment which prohibits murder. The end of the Commandment is the preservation and security of human life. Now the punishments inflicted by the civil authority, which is the legitimate avenger of crime, naturally tend to this end, since they give security to life by repressing outrage and violence. Hence these words of David: In the morning I put to death all the wicked of the land, that I might cut off all the workers of iniquity from the city of the Lord
. [84]
In
Evangelium Vitae,
Pope John Paul II suggested that capital punishment should be avoided unless it is the only way to defend society from the offender in question, opining that punishment "ought not go to the extreme of executing the offender except in cases of absolute necessity: in other words, when it would not be possible otherwise to defend society. Today however, as a result of steady improvements in the organization of the penal system, such cases are very rare, if not practically non-existent."
[85] The most recent edition of the
Catechism of the Catholic Church restates this view.
[86] That the assessment of the contemporary situation advanced by John Paul II is not binding on the faithful was confirmed by
Cardinal Ratzinger when he wrote in 2004 that,
if a Catholic were to be at odds with the Holy Father on the application of capital punishment or on the decision to wage war, he would not for that reason be considered unworthy to present himself to receive Holy Communion. While the Church exhorts civil authorities to seek peace, not war, and to exercise discretion and mercy in imposing punishment on criminals, it may still be permissible to take up arms to repel an aggressor or to have recourse to capital punishment. There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty, but not however with regard to abortion and euthanasia. [87]
While all Catholics must therefore hold that "the infliction of capital punishment is not contrary to the teaching of the Catholic Church, and the power of the State to visit upon culprits the penalty of death derives much authority from revelation and from the writings of theologians", the matter of "the advisabilty of exercising that power is, of course, an affair to be determined upon other and various considerations."
[88]
Anglican and Episcopalian
The
Lambeth Conference of Anglican and Episcopalian bishops condemned the death penalty in 1988:
"ref">[89]
United Methodist Church
The
United Methodist Church, along with other
Methodist churches, also condemns capital punishment, saying that it cannot accept retribution or social vengeance as a reason for taking human life.
[90] The Church also holds that the death penalty falls unfairly and unequally upon marginalised persons including the poor, the uneducated, ethnic and religious minorities, and persons with mental and emotional illnesses.
[91] The
General Conference of the United Methodist Church calls for its
bishops to uphold opposition to capital punishment and for governments to enact an immediate moratorium on carrying out the death penalty sentence.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
In a 1991 social policy statement, the ELCA officially took a stand to oppose the death penalty. It states that revenge is a primary motivation for capital punishment policy and that true healing can only take place through repentance and forgiveness.
[92]
The Southern Baptist Convention
In 2000 the
Southern Baptist Convention updated
Baptist Faith and Message. In it the convention officially sanctioned the use of capital punishment by the State. It said that it is the duty of the state to execute those guilty of murder and that God established capital punishment in the
Noahic Covenant.
Other Protestants
Several key leaders early in the
Protestant Reformation, including
Martin Luther and
John Calvin, followed the traditional reasoning in favour of capital punishment, and the
Lutheran Church's
Augsburg Confession explicitly defended it. Some Protestant groups have cited
Genesis 9:5–6,
Romans 13:3–4, and
Leviticus 20:1–27 as the basis for permitting the death penalty.
[93]
Mennonites,
Church of the Brethren and
Friends have opposed the death penalty since their founding, and continue to be strongly opposed to it today. These groups, along with other Christians opposed to capital punishment, have cited
Christ's
Sermon on the Mount (transcribed in
Matthew Chapter 5–7) and
Sermon on the Plain (transcribed in
Luke 6:17–49). In both sermons, Christ tells his followers to
turn the other cheek and to love their enemies, which these groups believe mandates
nonviolence, including opposition to the death penalty.
Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Eastern Orthodox Christianity generally has a negative view of the death penalty, but there is little said either way in this religion.
Esoteric Christianity
The
Rosicrucian Fellowship and many other
Christian esoteric schools condemn capital punishment in all circumstances.
[94] [95]
In arts and media
Literature
- The Gospels describe the execution of Jesus Christ at length, and these accounts form the central story of the Christian faith. Depictions of the crucifixion are abundant in Christian art.
- Valerius Maximus' story of Damon and Pythias was long a famous example of fidelity. Damon was sentenced to death (the reader does not learn why) and his friend Pythias offered to take his place while Damon went to say his last farewells.
- "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" is a short story by Ambrose Bierce originally published in 1890. The story deals with the hanging of a Confederate sympathiser during the American Civil War.
- Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities
ends in the climactic execution of the book's main character.
- Victor Hugo's The Last Day of a Condemned Man
(Le Dernier Jour d'un condamné
) describes the thoughts of a condemned man just before his execution; also notable is its , in which Hugo argues at length against capital punishment.
- Anaïs Nin's anthology Little Birds included an erotic depiction of a public execution.
- William Burroughs' novel Naked Lunch also included erotic and surreal depictions of capital punishment. In the obscenity trial against Burroughs, the defense claimed successfully that the novel was a form of anti-death-penalty argument, and therefore had redeeming political value.
- In The Chamber
by John Grisham, a young lawyer tries to save his Klansman grandfather from being executed. The novel is noted for presentation of anti-death penalty materials.
- Bernard Cornwell's novel Gallows Thief
is a whodunit taking place in early 19th century England, during the so-called "Bloody Code" a series of laws making several minor crimes capital offenses. The hero is a detective assigned to investigate the guilt of a condemned man, and the difficulties he encounters act as a harsh indictment of the draconian laws and the public's complacent attitude towards capital punishment.
- A Hanging, by George Orwell, tells the story of an execution that he witnessed while he served as a policeman in Burma in the 1920s. He wrote, "It is curious, but till that moment I had never realised what it means to destroy a healthy, conscious man. When I saw the prisoner step aside to avoid the puddle, I saw the mystery, the unspeakable wrongness, of cutting a life short when it is in full tide. This man was not dying, he was alive just as we were alive..."
- Discipline and Punish: The Birth of The Prison, by Michel Foucault deals with capital punishment relative to how torture has been eradicated for the most part, and punishment is now quick and painless. Foucault believes that punishment is now directed more toward the soul than toward the body.
- A Lesson Before Dying
follows a wrongly convicted man on death row.
- The Stranger
(L'Étranger
/The Foreigner
, The Outsider
), by Albert Camus, imaginatively describes a murderer sentenced to the guillotine, based on a trial that Camus attended in Algeria. At the end, the murderer accepts his coming death, and looks forward to the howls of execration from a huge crowd of spectators at his execution.
Film, television, and theatre
- Capital punishment has been the basis of many motion pictures, including Seed
, Dead Man Walking
based on the book by Sister Helen Prejean, The Green Mile
, The Life of David Gale
and Dancer in the Dark
.
- The stage play (and later film) The Exonerated by Erik Jensen and Jessica Blank
- The HBO series Oz
focused on counter-perspectives for/against the death penalty.
- Prison Break
is a 2005 television series, whose protagonist attempts to save his brother from execution by devising a plan that will help them escape from prison.
- The Film Let Him Have It
Is the True Story of a Young Understood Male, who after being controversially accused, is executed by hanging.
- Polish filmmaker Krzystof Kieslowski's 1988 film A Short Film About Killing
offers a stark look into the event of a cold-blooded murder and the eventual hanging of the killer.
- The Stoning of Soraya M.
is a 2009 film about a girl who is subjected to capital punishment by stoning.
Music
- "16 on Death Row", a song from 2Pac's Posthumous Album R U Still Down? (Remember Me)
- "Women's Prison", song from Loretta Lynn's Van Lear Rose album
- "25 Minutes to Go" is a song written by Shel Silverstein and sung by Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison and The Brothers Four.
- "The Mercy Seat" by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds (also performed by Johnny Cash) describes a man being executed via the electric chair who maintains his innocence until he is about to die, when he admits to his guilt.
- "Ride The Lightning" by Metallica is also about a man being executed via an electric chair, although he is not ultimately culpable, as through insanity or loss of autonomy.
- "Hallowed Be Thy Name" by Iron Maiden is about a man about be executed by hanging.
- In "Green Green Grass of Home", the singer who is apparently returning home is actually awaiting his execution.
- "Shock rock" star Alice Cooper will use three different methods of capital punishment for his stage shows. The three are the guillotine, the electric chair (retired) and hanging (first method, then retired, then used on the 2007 tour).
- Freedom Cry
is an album of songs performed by condemned prisoners in Uganda, recorded by prisoners' rights charity African Prisons Project and available online. [96]
- "Gallows Pole" is a centuries old folk song, popularised by Lead Belly, which has seen several cover versions. Led Zeppelin covered the song in the 70's, and was subsequently revived by Page and Plant during their No Quarter acoustic tours.
- The Bee Gees song "I've Gotta Get a Message to You" deals with a man who is about to be executed who wants to get one last message to his wife.
- The song "The Man I Killed" by NOFX from their album Wolves in Wolves' Clothing is sung from the perspective of a death row inmate during his execution by lethal injection.
- Ellis Unit One – Steve Earle (from the movie, Dead Man Walking) is a movie that looks at capital punishment from the perspective of the jail guards.
- Dead Man Walking – Bruce Springsteen (from the movie, Dead Man Walking) is written from the perspective of the inmate about to be killed
- "Long Black Veil" is a 1959 song which has become a country and folk standard in the US
- "Capital Punishment" by Dutch rock band Sandy Coast, which was recorded in 1968.
See also
- Eye for an eye
- Amnesty International
- Palestinian Land Law
- The Death Penalty: Opposing Viewpoints (2002)
(book)
References
- Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union
- Amnesty International
- moratorium on the death penalty
- Asia Times Online – The best news coverage from South Asia
- Coalition mondiale contre la peine de mort – Indonesian activists face upward death penalty trend – Asia – Pacific – Actualités
- No serious chance of repeal in those states that are actually using the death penalty
- AG Brown says he'll follow law on death penalty
- lawmakers-cite-economic-crisis-effort-ban-death-penalty
- death penalty is not likely to end soon in US
- Death penalty repeal unlikely says anti-death penalty activist
- A new Texas? Ohio's death penalty examined – Campus
- THE DEATH PENALTY IN JAPAN-FIDH > Human Rights for All / Les Droits de l'Homme pour Tous
- Shot at Dawn, campaign for pardons for British and Commonwealth soldiers executed in World War I
- So common was the practice of compensation that the word ''murder'' is derived from the French word ''mordre'' (bite) a reference to the heavy compensation one must pay for causing an unjust death. The "bite" one had to pay was used as a term for the crime itself: "Mordre wol out; that se we day by day." – Geoffrey Chaucer (1340–1400), The Canterbury Tales, ''The Nun's Priest's Tale,'' l. 4242 (1387-1400), repr. In ''The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer'', ed. Alfred W. Pollard, et al. (1898).
- Translated from Waldmann, ''op.cit.'', p.147.
- Lindow, ''op.cit.'' (primarily discusses Icelandic ''things'').
- The Abolition of the Death Penalty in International Law
- Greece, A History of Ancient Greece, Draco and Solon Laws
- capital punishment, Encyclopædia Britannica
- Capital punishment in the Roman Empire
- Islam and capital punishment
- ''The Caliphate: Its Rise, Decline, and Fall.'', William Muir
- When Dreams Came True: Classical Fairy Tales and Their Tradition
- Almost invariably, however, sentences of death for property crimes were commuted to transportation to a penal colony or to a place where the felon was worked as an indentured servant/Michigan State University and Death Penalty Information Center{{Dead link|date=April 2009}}
- History of British judicial hanging
- Benn, Charles. 2002. China's Golden Age: Everyday Life in the Tang Dynasty. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-517665-0. Page 8.
- JSTOR: The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1973-)Vol. 74, No. 3 (Autumn, 1983), pp. 1033-1065
- Patriots ignore greatest brutality. ''The Sydney Morning Herald.'' August 13, 2007.
- Definite no to Death Row – Asmal
- [1]
- The High Cost of the Death Penalty
- Article from the ''Connecticut Courant'' (December 1, 1803)
- The Execution of Caleb Adams, 2003
- History of Capital Punishment
- Death Penalty
- See Caitlin pp. 420-422
- Togo abolishes the death penalty
- Abolish the death penalty | Amnesty International
- Abolitionist and Retentionist Countries
- [1]
- International Polls & Studies
- Juvenile executions (except US)
- Amnesty International
- Amnesty International
- Stop Child Executions! Ending the death penalty for child offenders
- HRW Report
- Execution of Juveniles in the U.S. and other Countries
- Rob Gallagher, Table of juvenile executions in British America/United States, 1642–1959
- Supreme Court bars executing mentally retarded CNN.com Law Center. June 25, 2002
- UNICEF, Convention of the Rights of the Child – FAQ: "The Convention on the Rights of the Child is the most widely and rapidly ratified human rights treaty in history. Only two countries, Somalia and the United States, have not ratified this celebrated agreement. Somalia is currently unable to proceed to ratification as it has no recognised government. By signing the Convention, the United States has signaled its intention to ratify, but has yet to do so."
- Iranian activists fight child executions{{Dead link|date=April 2009}}, Ali Akbar Dareini, Associated Press, September 17, 2008; accessed September 22, 2008.
- Iran rapped over child executions, Pam O'Toole, BBC, June 27, 2007; accessed September 22, 2008.
- Iran Does Far Worse Than Ignore Gays, Critics Say, ''Fox News'', September 25, 2007; accessed September 20, 2008.
- Iranian hanged after verdict stay; BBCnews.co.uk; 2007-12-06; Retrieved on 2007-12-06
- Somali woman executed by stoning
- BBC NEWS | World | Africa | Stoning victim 'begged for mercy'
- Somalia: Girl stoned was a child of 13
- Innocence and the Death Penalty
- Capital Defense Weekly{{Dead link|date=April 2009}}
- Executed Innocents
- Wrongful executions
- The Innocence Project – News and Information: Press Releases
- 2008 Gallup Death Penalty Poll
- ABC News poll, "Capital Punishment, 30 Years On: Support, but Ambivalence as Well" (PDF, July 1, 2006)
- Crime
- [1]{{Dead link|date=April 2009}} [1]{{Dead link|date=April 2009}}
- [1]{{Dead link|date=April 2009}} [1]{{Dead link|date=April 2009}}
- Journée contre la peine de mort : le monde décide!
- Amnesty International
- UN set for key death penalty vote
- Directorate of Communication – The global campaign against the death penalty is gaining momentum – Statement by Terry Davis, Secretary General of the Council of Europe
- UN General Assembly – Latest from the UN News Centre
- U.N. Assembly calls for moratorium on death penalty
- Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR
- Amnesty International
- Italy abolishes the death penalty in all circumstances
- Japan hangs two more on death row (see also paragraph 11
- Jerusalem Talmud (Sanhedrin 41 a)
- Moses Maimonides, ''The Commandments, Neg. Comm. 290'', at 269–271 (Charles B. Chavel trans., 1967).
- capital punishment – Britannica Online Encyclopedia
- Capital Punishment in Islam
- What The Christian Scriptures Say About The Death Penalty – Capital Punishmen
- BBC – Religion & Ethics – Capital punishment: Introduction
- http://www.cin.org/users/james/ebooks/master/trent/tcomm05.htm
- Papal encyclical, Evangelium Vitae, March 25, 1995
- Assuming that the guilty party's identity and responsibility have been fully determined, the traditional teaching of the Church does not exclude recourse to the death penalty, if this is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives against the unjust aggressor.
- http://www.priestsforlife.org/magisterium/bishops/04-07ratzingerommunion.htm
- http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12565a.htm
- Lambeth Conference of Anglican Bishops, 1988, Resolution 33, paragraph 3. (b), found at Lambeth Conference official website page. Accessed July 16, 2008.
- The United Methodist Church: Capital Punishment
- The United Methodist Church: Official church statements on capital punishment
- ELCA Social Statement on the Death Penalty
- [1]{{Dead link|date=April 2009}} http://www.equip.org/free/CP1304.htm
- Heindel, Max (1910s), ''The Rosicrucian Philosophy in Questions and Answers – Volume II: Question no.33: Rosicrucian Viewpoint of Capital Punishment'', ISBN 0-911274-90-1
- The Rosicrucian Fellowship: ''Obsession, Occult Effects of Capital Punishment''
- Condemned Choirs from Luzira Prison, Uganda