Amongst the many criminal acts one may commit, cold-blooded murder bares the most severe punishment by law. In Truman Capote's 1966 non-fiction novel, In Cold Blood, the punishment of such an act is argued due to the amount of verification needed to authorize the death in the court of law. It assesses the plea for insanity as being the main action taken by Perry Edward Smith and Richard Eugene Hickock during the trial for the four murders of the Clutter Family, and the most common act for murder…
Supporters of life imprisonment tells that life in prison without parole and lives for decades in prison is like living in cage. Giving the criminals death sentence is like not giving them a change to learn a lesson and the pain sufferings that the victim and their family come a cross. With the death sentence, their suffering is over very quickly but life sentence, they will realize their mistake every second of their life in prison. If the government really want to punish the criminal then…
Identification… A crime in any magnitude is a social conflict. As an individual grows and develops, he or she is introduced to certain ideals such as right and wrong. The central ethical issue in “Obtaining the Confession” is justice, and the techniques in police interrogations in order to produce a confession which include lying to suspects, empathizing with him or her to lead them to tell the truth, offering leniency and inferring that there is a small window in which to confess in order for…
Capital Punishment in Case of an Intentional Murder Capital punishment or death sentence is a practice whereby a person is punished for a committed crime by death. There are several crimes, depending on a country law, which are punishable by death sentence such as intentional murder, murder of a child, rape crime, war crimes, mass killing, genocide, treason, in some countries even political protest, etc., which are called capital crimes or capital offences. Capital punishment is a controversial…
Prison farming is a penal facility where prisoners are put to work doing manual labour. Prison farms serve a number of functions. According to Magezi,(2013)the following are the functions of prison farming: - Prisoners acquire skills and knowledge which becomes useful in their future. - They produce food for the prisoners and allow them to benefit from a good diet, - Prisoners benefit from good farming practices, and get rehabilitated, such that, when they are through with their terms, they…
period.2 In the United States, there are two justice systems, juvenile and criminal.3 According to the National Gang Center, the juvenile court places individuals under the age of 18 in a detention center. Although juvenile detention has a prison-like atmosphere to house…
“For the survivor who chooses to testify, it is clear: his duty is to bear witness for the dead and for the living. He has no right to deprive future generations of a past that belongs to our collective memory. To forget would be not only dangerous but offensive; to forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time” (Wiesel 3). The book "Night" is a memoir written by Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel. Elie shares the gruesome experiences that Jews experienced during the early 1900s. Elie…
I would like to ask you, what would you feel if a relative or family member of yours was accused wrongly of doing a crime he did not commit and then given capital punishment? Even if he were proven innocent later on, would that be enough compensation for taking his life away? Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. I firmly believe that death penalty or capital punishment should not be legalized. First, it is inhumane. Second, there is no credible evidence that the death penalty deters crime more…
short story written by Anton Chekhov, who writes based on realistic characters and situations. A wealthy banker and a young lawyer make a bet with each other based on capital punishment and whether the death penalty is better or worse than life in prison. This bet carried out at a party held in autumn. The host – the banker, did not agree with the views against capital punishment and said that although he had not tried…
DNA, written by Dennis Kelly in 2008, is about a group of teenagers trying to cover up their accidental crime by entwining themselves with a series of calamitous lies. This extract is from act three scene three and four where Phil instructs Cathy to kill Adam by using Brian, whilst Leah tries to convince Phil to get back on a morally right track. However, she fails and “storms off” (line 43). This essay will analyse how the writer explores the theme of morality in the extract by using the…