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Forme recherchée : MOTIF=\b([Pp]eine de mort)|([Pp]eine capitale)|([Dd]eath penalty)|([Cc]apital punishment)\b | اعدام | اﻻعدام | يعدم | عدم | أعدم | 死刑
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- Ligne n°1 : #TIME » The Death of the Death Penalty Comments Feed alternate
Ligne n°2 : alternate TIME WordPress.com ...- Ligne n°32 : Death Penalty
- Ligne n°34 : Why the era of capital punishment is ending
- Ligne n°59 : Death Penalty Time Magazine Cover Photograph by Lucinda Devlin, from
Ligne n°60 : her book The Omega Suites ...
Ligne n°64 : ... extraordinary efforts by the courts and enormous expense to taxpayers,- Ligne n°65 : the modern death penalty remains slow, costly and uncertain. For the
Ligne n°66 : overwhelming majority of condemned prisoners, the final step—that last ...
Ligne n°68 : ... few who are killed continue to be selected by a mostly random cull.- Ligne n°69 : Tsarnaev aside, the tide is turning on capital punishment in the U.S.,
Ligne n°70 : as previously supportive judges, lawmakers and politicians come out ...
Ligne n°76 : ... not Britain and France; it’s Iran and China. Most U.S. states authorize- Ligne n°77 : the death penalty, although few of them actually use it. We value
Ligne n°78 : tolerance and diversity—but certain outrages we will not put up with. ...
Ligne n°85 : ... On May 27, the conservative Nebraska state legislature abolished the- Ligne n°86 : death penalty in that state despite a veto attempt by Governor Pete
Ligne n°87 : Ricketts. A parallel bill passed the Delaware state senate in March and ...
Ligne n°106 : ... this year is precisely zero. There, as elsewhere, prosecutors, judges- Ligne n°107 : and jurors are concluding that the modern death penalty is a failed
Ligne n°108 : experiment. ...
Ligne n°112 : ... leader of the Georgia Republican Party, attorney David J. Burge,- Ligne n°113 : recently put it, “Capital punishment runs counter to core conservative
Ligne n°114 : principles of life, fiscal responsibility and limited government. The ...
Ligne n°114 : ... principles of life, fiscal responsibility and limited government. The- Ligne n°115 : reality is that capital punishment is nothing more than an expensive,
Ligne n°116 : wasteful and risky government program.” ...
Ligne n°121 : ... the fewest in modern American history, according to data collected by- Ligne n°122 : the Death Penalty Information Center. Only one state, Missouri, has
Ligne n°123 : accelerated its rate of executions during that period, but even in the ...- Ligne n°126 : Thirty-two states allow capital punishment for the most heinous crimes.
Ligne n°127 : And yet in most of the country, the penalty is now hollow. Since the ...
Ligne n°132 : ... For the first time in the nearly 30 years that I have been studying and- Ligne n°133 : writing about the death penalty, the end of this troubled system is
Ligne n°134 : creeping into view. ...
Ligne n°160 : ... Circuit Court of Appeals, recently wrote that Americans must either- Ligne n°161 : give up on capital punishment or embrace its difficult, brutal nature.
Ligne n°162 : Rather than pretend that execution is a sort of medical procedure ...
Ligne n°169 : ... “Of course, it does raise the question of whether we are really- Ligne n°170 : comfortable with having a death penalty that literally sheds blood,”
Ligne n°171 : Kozinski allowed in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “The thing ...
Ligne n°231 : ... Reason 2: The crime rate has plunged.- Ligne n°232 : Public support for capital punishment ebbs and flows. During the
Ligne n°233 : low-crime years of the late 1950s and early ’60s, surveys by Gallup ...
Ligne n°234 : ... charted a fairly steady drop in support—down to a nadir of 42%. That- Ligne n°235 : trend contributed to the brief abolition of the death penalty by order
Ligne n°236 : of the Supreme Court in 1972. But by then, a new crime wave was ...
Ligne n°236 : ... of the Supreme Court in 1972. But by then, a new crime wave was- Ligne n°237 : building, and states rushed to restore capital punishment by passing
Ligne n°238 : laws meant to eliminate arbitrary results and racial discrimination. ...
Ligne n°239 : ... After the Supreme Court approved the modern penalty in 1976, support- Ligne n°240 : for the death penalty skyrocketed in lockstep with the murder rate. By
Ligne n°241 : the time New York City recorded more than 2,200 murders in the single ...- Ligne n°251 : Gallup has measured the result: support for capital punishment has
Ligne n°252 : hovered in recent years at just above 60%, lower than at any time since ...
Ligne n°255 : ... eye on a dysfunctional system of punishment. Former Virginia attorney- Ligne n°256 : general Mark Earley supported the death penalty while presiding over
Ligne n°257 : the execution of 36 inmates from 1989 to 2001. In March he published an ...
Ligne n°258 : ... essay calling for an end to capital punishment. He had “come to the- Ligne n°259 : conclusion that the death penalty is based on a false utopian premise.
Ligne n°260 : That false premise is that we have had, do have, and will have 100% ...
Ligne n°260 : ... That false premise is that we have had, do have, and will have 100%- Ligne n°261 : accuracy in death penalty convictions and executions.”
Ligne n°263 : ... The reduced political pressure has made it possible for six states to- Ligne n°264 : abolish the death penalty since 2007; Nebraska makes it seven. In a
Ligne n°265 : number of other state capitals, the energy is also moving in that ...
Ligne n°272 : ... Reason 3. Dwindling Justifications.- Ligne n°273 : The death penalty has been made to serve three kinds of purposes. One
Ligne n°274 : was highly practical. For most of American history, governments did not ...
Ligne n°285 : ... forever is a terrible punishment. Indeed, some argue it is a fate worse- Ligne n°286 : than death. Whatever deterrent capital punishment provides can likely
Ligne n°287 : be matched by the threat of permanent lockup. ...
Ligne n°308 : ... but the overt racism of the old order is now plainly unconstitutional.- Ligne n°309 : If there is a bias propping up today’s death penalty, it is one of
Ligne n°310 : class rather than race. The best defense lawyers cost a lot of money. ...
Ligne n°314 : ... This leaves only the question of justice, which is a visceral and- Ligne n°315 : compelling force. It’s the force that has kept the death penalty going
Ligne n°316 : as long as it has. Capital punishment is an expression of the principle ...
Ligne n°315 : ... compelling force. It’s the force that has kept the death penalty going- Ligne n°316 : as long as it has. Capital punishment is an expression of the principle
Ligne n°317 : that certain extreme boundaries cannot be crossed—that some crimes are ...
Ligne n°325 : ... wrong?” But they haven’t had much success in winning the philosophical- Ligne n°326 : battle. Momentum is moving away from the death penalty not because it
Ligne n°327 : offends the sense of justice but because it is a system that costs too ...- Ligne n°353 : When I examined the cost of Florida’s death penalty many years ago, I
Ligne n°354 : concluded that seeing a death sentence through to execution costs at ...
Ligne n°358 : ... North Carolina’s system and concluded that the Tar Heel State could- Ligne n°359 : save $11 million per year by abolishing the death penalty. California’s
Ligne n°360 : system incurs excess costs estimated at some $200 million per year. ...
Ligne n°368 : ... Taylor told a reporter last year that cost is a factor in deciding- Ligne n°369 : whether to pursue the death penalty. “You have to be very responsible
Ligne n°370 : in selecting where you want to spend your money,” he said. And if Texas ...
Ligne n°380 : ... Few issues have caused the U.S. Supreme Court more pain over the past- Ligne n°381 : half-century than the death penalty. The subject is never far from the
Ligne n°382 : court’s docket. This year’s biggest capital case involves the possible ...
Ligne n°390 : ... Amid the confusion, one principle has remained clear: death is- Ligne n°391 : different. The main reason the court abolished the old death penalty
Ligne n°392 : was that there were no standards for deciding who would live or die. ...
Ligne n°394 : ... being struck by lightning, as Justice Potter Stewart observed. The- Ligne n°395 : modern death penalty was designed to guide prosecutors, judges and
Ligne n°396 : juries toward the criminals most deserving of death. ...- Ligne n°398 : But after four decades of tinkering, capital punishment is still a
Ligne n°399 : matter of occasional lightning bolts. And judges are taking notice. ...
Ligne n°401 : ... appointee named Cormac J. Carney—issued an explosive ruling that the- Ligne n°402 : death penalty in America’s largest state has become unconstitutionally
Ligne n°403 : random. History is on his side. ...- Ligne n°405 : In 1972, when the Supreme Court found the death penalty to be
Ligne n°406 : “arbitrary and capricious,” there were about 600 prisoners condemned to ...
Ligne n°431 : ... is beginning to emerge. One by one, states will abandon their rarely- Ligne n°432 : used death penalty. At the same time, other judges will follow Carney’s
Ligne n°433 : lead. Here’s Judge Tom Price of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals—a ...
Ligne n°434 : ... red-state Republican member of what is probably the toughest court in- Ligne n°435 : the land when it comes to the death penalty: “Having spent the last 40
Ligne n°436 : years as a judge for the state of Texas, of which the last 18 years ...
Ligne n°437 : ... have been as a judge on this court, I have given a substantial amount- Ligne n°438 : of consideration to the propriety of the death penalty as a form of
Ligne n°439 : punishment for those who commit capital murder, and I now believe that ...
Ligne n°455 : ... standards” is deeply woven into Supreme Court tradition. The Justices- Ligne n°456 : all know that the modern death penalty is a failure. When they finally
Ligne n°457 : decide to get rid of it, “evolving standards” is how they will do it. ...