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Monday, August 10, 2015
“FACING FACTS ON THE DEATH PENALTY”
The death penalty is certainly an emotional issue that affects many people in lots 
of different ways.  So today’s column will address head on most of the common 
arguments that are used in favor of the death penalty, as well as some facts about and 
responses to them.  Then the following column will suggest some additional facts and 
arguments that should also be considered as we all decide how best to proceed in this 
emotional area.  Certainly all people are fully entitled to their own opinions in this or any 
other matter, but no people are entitled to their own facts. 
Typically the proponents of the death penalty present five justifications for its 
implementation.  They are that: 1) this is the appropriate punishment for the offender of 
such a serious crime, 2) rightful societal vengeance (often cited as an “eye for an eye”), 
3) reducing to zero the chances that the offender will return to society, 4) deterrence 
against future violations by other offenders, and 5) closure for the families of the victims.
Let’s first discuss the possibility of offenders returning to society.  As you know, 
when a person is convicted of a “special circumstance” murder, the only two sentences 
allowed under California law are the death penalty or life without the possibility of 
parole, otherwise known as “LWOP.”  In times past a person receiving a “life” sentence 
could still be paroled, but now if an offender receives an LWOP, that is simply not 
possible under the law without a pardon from the Governor – which is politically 
extremely unlikely.  Furthermore, to my knowledge no one serving such a sentence has 
ever escaped from prison.  As a result, this is probably no longer a reason for the death 
penalty to be invoked. 
Regarding the issue of closure for the families of the victims, consider that 
California has had only 15 executions since the death penalty was reinstated in 1978 
(while 54 people on death row died of other causes).  But as of this time there are more 
than 660 convicted offenders on death row.  Of those offenders, 30 have been there for 
more than 25 years, 119 for more than 20 years, and 408 for longer than 10 years.  The 
last two people executed were Clarence Ray Allen and Stanley “Tookey” Williams, both 
of whom were executed about 26 years after their offenses were committed.  As a result, 
“closure” for the families, if it comes at all, comes after keeping the books open for 
Not only does the death penalty not bring closure, it actually keeps the families of 
the victims on an emotional roller coaster.  Because of the appeals and occasional re-
trials, the families are forced for years to relive the grisly details of their loved-one’s 
death – over and over again.  In many ways, this is actually using the grieving families as 
bit-players in a long-continuing political drama.  And when it comes down to it, does it 
furnish much satisfaction to see the object of one’s hatred simply go to sleep when 
hooked up to a needle?  So for all of these reasons, maybe what we are doing is the 
opposite of closure for those victimized people. 
In addition, since it is deemed by many people to be an “insult” to the memory of 
the deceased victim not to invoke the maximum punishment possible, there is a perceived 
obligation to seek the death penalty regardless of the costs, either human or financial.  
But if the maximum punishment were to be a sentence to life without the possibility of 
parole, the families would be more likely to be satisfied with that result and get on with 
Well then, what about deterrence against future offenders?  Probably the only 
circumstances in which deterrence would be a factor would be offenses like murder for 
hire (both for the people paying for the deed to be done and for the killers themselves), 
murder after laying in wait, kidnapping in which the victim is killed, multiple murders or 
murders while already serving an LWOP sentence, and treason.  These involve situations 
in which the acts are usually planned and well thought out in advance.  
But the large majority of offenses for which the death penalty is imposed are for 
offenses that are not so planned.  That is to say, most burglars and robbers do not plan in 
advance to kill anybody, but things get out of control and people are killed as a result.  
And the offenders that do make prior plans are often involved in heavily emotional 
situations like being jilted lovers, or people with severe psychiatric disorders, so they are 
not focusing upon deterrence anyway.  Those realities, coupled with the fact that most 
offenders never feel that they will ever be caught at all, negate the effects of deterrence 
for most offenses.  
One more fact enters into this equation as well.  As a practical matter, if a person 
knows that he has committed an offense that would qualify him for the death penalty, that 
person tends to feel with some justification that he has nothing more to lose.  That belief 
in turn results in the perpetrators killing witnesses to the offense to keep them from 
testifying against him, and also killing the police officers who attempt to arrest them.  So 
in effect, what we end up with is the opposite of deterrence. 
Regarding the punishment of the offender, I have no particular wisdom to suggest 
to you other than saying that in many ways serving a sentence of life without the 
possibility of ever being released would in many ways be a more severe sentence for 
most offenders than actually being executed.  
That leaves the issue of societal vengeance.  Of course, this is a complicated and 
multifaceted issue.  On the one hand, there has been an historical and even biblical 
rationale that the proper penalty for wrongly taking the life of another is to forfeit one’s 
own life.  But on the other hand, it is hard to justify our country as being the world’s 
champion of human rights if it is so at odds with much of the rest of the world on the 
issue of capital punishment.  
For example, since California reinstated the death penalty in 1978, no fewer than 
60 other countries have chosen to abolish it.  Although there are dozens of countries that 
still have the death penalty on the books, only six of those countries, including the United 
States of America, are responsible for 90 percent of all of the executions.  The other five 
are China, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq and the Sudan.  As such we are keeping pretty lowly 
company in the area of human rights 
So that is a short discussion about the traditional arguments in favor of invoking 
the death penalty.  I realize that this can be an emotional subject, and that many people 
who present information like this are considered to be “bleeding heart liberals.”  But I 
was a trial court judge in Orange County from the time I was appointed by Governor 
Deukmejian at the end of 1983 until I retired in January of 2009, and I wanted to share 
with you for your consideration the facts as I have seen and observed them.  
James P. Gray is a retired judge of the 
Orange County Superior Court, works as a private 
mediator for ADR Services, Inc., is the author of “A 
Voter’s Handbook: Effective Solutions to 
America’s Problems (The Forum Press, 2010), and 
can be contacted at JimPGray@sbcglobal.net or 
through his website at www.JudgeJimGray.com
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