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Jeanne Woodford

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Let the Voters Decide

Posted: 06/14/2012 10:20 am

This November, California voters will make history as they decide -- for the first time ever -- between the death penalty and life in prison without the possibility of parole as the maximum punishment for murder.

There's only one problem: Prosecutors throughout the state are still seeking the death penalty. In fact, the AP just reported that five new people have been sent to death row this year.

That's why thousands of Californians are joining together to call on local district attorneys to stop seeking death sentences until voters get a chance to weigh in on this broken system. And they are not alone: the Los Angeles Times has joined the call for prosecutors to hold on death penalty trials until voters have a chance to choose life without parole in November.

In their June 5 editorial, "Don't seek the death penalty," they explained:

We favor replacing the death penalty with a sentence of life without the possibility of parole. A measure on the November ballot, the SAFE California Act, would do exactly that, and we hope voters will support it. Meanwhile, California prosecutors, in particular L.A. County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley, should stop pursuing capital cases until the voters have had their say.

Local District Attorneys, elected by each county in California, have the power to decide when to seek the death penalty and when to choose life without the possibility of parole. When they choose the death penalty, they start a process that costs millions of dollars and takes an average of 25 years to resolve. A life without parole trial can be over in a matter of weeks.

At the local level, counties usually pay $1 million extra for every death penalty trial -- over and above the cost of a trial seeking life without parole. That's because death penalty trial is drastically more extensive -- and expensive. Extra costs include highly-trained lawyers and judges, special investigators and experts, and additional appeals. Death penalty trials take more than three times longer than trials seeking life in prison without the possibility of parole.

And that's just the tip of the iceberg. Once a person is sentenced to death, their housing and constitutionally-guaranteed appeals cost hundreds of thousands of dollars more than an inmate imprisoned for life without parole. That's a big reason why 800,000 registered California voters signed on to put SAFE California on the ballot to stop the waste and replace the death penalty with a punishment of life without parole.

District Attorneys have a great deal of power and responsibility -- and so do we. We must make the DAs stop and listen so they can accurately speak for ALL the people instead of catering to special interests.

Let your D.A. know you are watching -- and ready to make history at the ballot box in November. Remind your D.A. to wait for the voters to speak before starting any new death penalty trials.

 
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08:40 PM on 08/07/2012
that sounds lovely. We can take all the prisoners that have been sentenced and gather them up, then lets get the friends and families of this victims so they can relive the whole sentencing again. Let them bring out the evidence and hear the testimonies, maybe show the photos of the victim or the scene. Keep the suffering fresh in thier mind so they never forget how it felt, because in the end it is not about the victims, their families or their friends, It is about the rights of the convicted murderer, What do you do when you run out of room for all the life sentences witout parole, start paroling them? You already went from death penalty to life sentence, that seems like the next step on the slope you are sliding down.
Did you know that in a capital murder trial, if the victims family cries, or happens to sob, they are askeds to leave. The show of emotion could predjudice the jury. The murder can fall asleep, laugh , yell or any number of other things but the family cant cry too loudly. Death penalty is only a deterrent if it is used, then it is a very effective one, otherwise it is just a hollow threat.
11:26 PM on 07/13/2012
DAs doe represent the people--those people who elected them, that is. Too often, there is no primary, and the "kill them all" DA is the only choice. There should be a progressive candidate in as many DA races as possible. Even if he/she has no chance of winning, just to put the issues of fairness, judicial discretion etc to the public during the election will help.
02:07 AM on 06/16/2012
It's time to stop this "if you kill someone we will kill you back" mentality. DAs don't represent "the people," they only represent their own self-interest. It's hard to believe that with this initiative still pending DAs are still pushing for capital punishment. Thank you, Ms. Woodford, for the courage to stand up to a justice system that is entirely corrupt, and for speaking out in favor of this good cause.