What was written on that page was done in 1998. The first statement I posted was from 1995 and the secon from 1997. Not much has changed regarding costs of capital punishment over the years.
A new report released by the Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury recommended changes to the stateŐs costly death penalty and called into question its effectiveness in preventing crime. The Office of Research noted that it lacked sufficient data to accurately account for the total cost of capital trials, stating that because cost and time records were not maintained, the Office of Research was unable to determine the total, comprehensive cost of the death penalty in Tennessee." Although noting that, "no reliable data exists concerning the cost of prosecution or defense of first-degree murder cases in Tennessee," the report concluded that capital murder trials are longer and more expensive at every step compared to other murder trials. In fact, the available data indicated that in capital trials, taxpayers pay half again as much as murder cases in which prosecutors seek prison terms rather than the death penalty. Findings in the report include the following:
* Death penalty trials cost an average of 48% more than the average cost of trials in which prosecutors seek life imprisonment.
* Tennessee District Attorneys General are not consistent in their pursuit of the death penalty.
* Surveys and interviews of district attorneys indicate that some prosecutors "use the death penalty as a 'bargaining chip' to secure plea bargains for lesser sentences."
* Previous research provides no clear indication whether the death penalty acts as a method of crime prevention.
* The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals reversed 29 percent of capital cases on direct appeal.
* Although any traumatic trial may cause stress and pain for jurors, the victims' family, and the defendant's family, the pressure may be at its peak during death penalty trials.
(July 2004) http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/arti...ancial%20facts
That's just one example from the above page, there are many more there.
Quote:
Originally posted by FormerlyLBFG
This statement shows that you do not know about Christianity. If you are a Christian, you will go to Heaven when you die, ALWAYS. |
I don't know tons about Christianity and I don't pretend to (sorry for a misinterpretation), but I was under the impression that if you were a good Christian and followed the "rules" that you would go to heaven and if not you went to hell. Either way, if Scott Peterson does not believe in heaven or hell [which I don't know if he does, I was making a hypothetical question], it's unfair for people to say he will go to one place or the other when he doesn't believe the same they do.