Listen to "Execution is still a random justice"
(The September 20 Compassionate Living Tip from Interfaith Paths to Peace)
http://m.npr.org/programs/all/ 13/221451565
(The September 20 Compassionate Living Tip from Interfaith Paths to Peace)
http://m.npr.org/programs/all/
In the mid-1970s, Arkansas' electric chair was being used by the prison barber to cut hair, and the execution chamber in New Hampshire was being used to store vegetables. That's because in 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court shocked the nation by striking down Georgia's death penalty law, effectively ending executions in the United States. But the decision provoked a strong backlash among those who favored the death penalty, and within four years the high court reversed course and issued a set of rulings that would permit the resumption of executions.
Evan Mandery, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a former capital defense attorney, has written a new account of the tumultuous legal and political battles over the death penalty. Mandery is sympathetic to those who tried to outlaw capital punishment, but his account focuses on attorneys for both sides in the battle, as well as the views and deliberations of the justices who decided the cases. His book is called A Wild Justice: The Death and Resurrection of Capital Punishment in America.
He tells Fresh Air's Dave Davies about how the Supreme Court decisions of the '70s changed capital punishment.
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