no,absolutely no
yep
Louisiana has always had the death penalty going back to when the land was a French possession.
No. In fact, Wisconsin was the first state in the US to abolish the death penalty, back in 1853.
i think it depends on what kind of thing they have burgled. if its something big then it should have a death penalty otherwise they should have probation for a long time. they could also be put on tag. which means they have a certain time for a curfew and if they are not back by the time they police will check to see were they are and eventually find them.
The United States has had the death penalty since 1608 when George Kindle was killed. A moratorium on the death penalty was enacted in 1972 with the case of Furman v. Georgia and was brought back with the case of Gregg v. Georgia in 1976.
The United States has not always had the death penalty. In 1972 the United States Supreme Court called for a moratorium on the death penalty with the case of Furman v. Georgia and brought it back in 1976 with the case of Gregg v. Georgia.
because if someone does a terrible crime... obviously they should be punished for it. It has nothing to do with restoring anyone to life.
Depends on what you did. I honestly think that if you raped or killed someone, the death penalty wouldn't be too harsh. i agree with this how would you like it if someone killed your brother or something you would want pay back i kno i would
No, it is a death penalty case.
DEATH PENALTY HAVE CHANGED OVER YEARS BECAUSE THEY VIOLET HUMANS RIGHTS LONG BACK PEOPLE WHERE SENTENCED TO DEATH PERNALTY BUT NOW ITS DIFFERENT VIEWS AND CHALLENGES AND OLSO THEE CHANGE OF TECHnology there are now injectoins that can put you to death unlike long back when we used to stone,boil,strangle and even hang the persons
I'm not going to go back that far. As October 2009 35 states had the death penalty still on their books. !5 states plus the District of Columbia - did not.
Yes, in 1972, the case of Furman v Georgia made the death penalty unconstitutional. By a vote of 5 to 4 the Supreme Court found the death penalty cruel and unusual as practiced. They said it was arbitrary and capricious in the way it was administered. Justices Marshall and Brennan found the death penalty cruel and unusual per se. Justice Douglas, Justice Stewart, and Justice White found capital punishment cruel and unusual as practiced. In 1976 Gregg v. Georgia brought back the death penalty.