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27 Crim. L. Bull. 334 (1991)
Life without Parole: The View from Death Row

handle is hein.journals/cmlwbl27 and id is 336 raw text is: 




       Life   Without Parole: The View From

       Death Row

       By  Julian   H. Wright, Jr.*

       This article considers the suggestion that capital punishment be
    replaced with the sanction of LWOP and discusses this proposal
    from all available perspectives, especially those of the people on
    death row. The  author first covers some of the theoretical and
    practical problems inherent in applying capital punishment and then
    briefly describes LWOP. Next, the methodology of a Tennessee
    survey that included specific questions about LWOP is explained
    and the results of the survey examined. The author concludes with
    an analysis of what these views reflect about LWOP and the death
    row inmates themselves.

    Like  most  Americans,   Tennesseans seem to support over-
whelmingly the concept of capital punishment in the abstract.'
Having   murderers  pay for their crimes with their own lives seems
only  appropriate  to  most  Tennesseans,   especially when   those
murders   were   heinous  or especially  brutal or  involved  some
degree  of depravity of mind.2 Like most  states, however, Tennes-
see  flinches  when   it comes   right down   to killing someone.
Tennessee   has not executed anyone  since William  Tines in 1960.1
And   a case currently  before the  Supreme   Court  of Tennessee,
State v. Black,4  may  throw  out the sentences  of the eighty-five
people  currently on Tennessee's  death  row and force the General

   * Joint Program in Law and Divinity, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.;
former Editor in Chief, Vanderbilt Law Review.
   ' See, e.g., Grand Jury Supports Death Penalty, Nashville Tennessean, Sept.
4, 1989, at 1B, col. 3. Generally, 80 percent of all American favor capital punishment
for murderers. See text accompanying note 12 infra.
   2 See Williams, State Justices to Wrestle With Death Penalty, Nashville
Tennessean, Feb. 24, 1991, at 10 (remarks of Johnson City, Tenn., prosecutor
David E. Crockett that the only appropriate punishment is that the person should
forfeit his life for that crime).
    Id.; see also State v. Bomer, 205 Tenn. 572, 329 S.W.2d 813 (1959) (quashing
Tines's final writ of habeas corpus); Tines v. State, 203 Tenn. 612, 315 S.W.2d
111 (1958) (upholding Tines's conviction for rape and sentence of death). Note that
current death penalty statutes, including Tennessee's, apply only to first-degree or
capital murders and that, today, William Tines would not get the death penalty for
committing rape.
  I State v. Black, Davidson County Crim. Appeal No. 01-S-01-9002-CR-00007.


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