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Louisiana teachers' union concerned about educators' future; Supreme Court hears arguments in Trump immunity case; court issues restraining order against fracking waste-storage facility; landmark NE agreement takes a proactive approach to CO2 pipeline risks.

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Speaker Johnson accuses demonstrating students of getting support from Hamas. TikTok says it'll challenge the ban. And the Supreme Court dives into the gray area between abortion and pregnancy healthcare, and into former President Trump's broad immunity claims.

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The urban-rural death divide is widening for working-age Americans, many home internet connections established for rural students during COVID have been broken, and a new federal rule aims to put the "public" back in public lands.

Support for the Death Penalty Slowly Falling

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Monday, November 2, 2015   

CHARLESTON, W. Va. - The death penalty is in a long, slow decline nationally, according to opinion polls and how often it's being used.

Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center says surveys show support for the death sentence is at a 40-year low, and last year saw the lowest number of executions in two decades.

Dunham says people are seeing practical problems with putting people to death, including the costs and botched executions. There also has been what he calls "an innocence revolution," a wave of death-row inmates later proven not guilty.

"DNA has shown people have gone to death row who clearly didn't commit the offense," says Dunham. "Innocent people are being convicted. There are false confessions, there are fabricated confessions. That's causing people concern."

Dunham points out that support for executions nationwide has fallen among young evangelicals, and interestingly, among libertarians.

"The debate for them has moved from 'is the death penalty morally justifiable?' to 'is this another big government program that isn't working,'" he says.

Dunham says FBI figures, confirmed by several studies, show the death penalty doesn't deter crime in any measurable way.

"There actually is no demonstrable effect at all," says Dunham. "In fact, murder rates are higher in states that have the death penalty than in states that don't have the death penalty."

Death-penalty supporters argue harsh justice is a deterrent to crime, but West Virginia abolished it in 1965. However, with the election of a Republican majority to the state Legislature, some observers expect another attempt to reinstate it.




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