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Jury hears Trump and Cohen Discussing Hush-Money Deal on secret recording; Nature-based solutions help solve Mississippi River Delta problems; Public lands groups cheer the expansion of two CA national monuments; 'Art Against the Odds' shines a light on artists in the WI justice system.

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President Biden defends dissent but says "order must prevail" on campus, former President Trump won't commit to accepting the 2024 election results and Nebraska lawmakers circumvent a ballot measure repealing private school vouchers.

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Study: Executions Fail to Deliver Closure for Victims' Families

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Thursday, April 21, 2011   

PHOENIX - Arizona is one of 34 states with the death penalty on its books, but a new study finds that family members of murder victims are increasingly rejecting capital punishment.

The report, written by capital-punishment researchers who are sociologists at the University of Louisville, finds that death-penalty supporters are relying less on traditional arguments of crime deterrence, perceived cost-savings and public safety to justify executions, and more on the notions of serving justice and offering closure to the surviving families of those murdered. However, the study, published in the Western Criminology Review, shows a backlash against that rationale in a growing victims' clemency movement - and that a death sentence rarely eases the emotional pain for family members.

Study co-author Ryan Schroeder says states justify executions by shifting the onus onto the victims.

"Instead of abandoning their support for the death penalty, they've now turned to the justification of closure - that we need the death penalty to help the families, that the families need the death penalty in order to obtain this emotional catharsis that we call closure."

Studies reveal that most victims' families don't earn that peace of mind during the death penalty process, Schroeder says, or even after an execution. The researchers analyzed newspaper accounts of capital-offense trials from 1992 to 2009 to track the trends.

The study's main researcher, Thomas Mowen, says a murderer's execution isn't a soothing salve for many surviving family members because they still feel victimized. He cites a 2007 study that makes that point.

"Only 2.5 percent of co-victims actually reported that the death penalty brought them closure. That includes people that were advocates for the death penalty from the very beginning. At the conclusion, it turns out that almost no one experienced closure at the end of the death-penalty process."

Mowen says the expectation of closure from a death sentence is shown to cause even more suffering by surviving family members, who often turn against the practice.

"And so there's been this rise of co-victim opposition, but it's gone relatively unnoticed by the justice system and the American public."

Illinois recently repealed the death penalty, and several other states have considered bills to do the same during their legislative sessions this year. Arizona is not one of them.

The study can be found online at wcr.sonoma.edu.


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