The Death Penalty's Bankruptcy
Many of you may know the statistics on the economic cost of the death penalty in various states (which is invariably higher everywhere than life without parole) but you may not realize just how high a financial cost capital cases can carry and what kind of impact it can have on the judicial system.
A case in Georgia has bankrupted the public defenders office, forcing Superior Court Judge Hilton Fuller to push jury selection back to September 10th. The Georgia Public defender Standards Council can no longer afford to pay Nichols' representation which means that any continued attempts at trial would likely be considered unconstitutional as all accused are entitled to public defense, especially so in the case of a looming death sentence.
So, we again ask ourselves, how much more is society willing to pay to kill someone rather than lock them up?
Here in Indiana, we pay 38% more to execute someone than lock them up for life without parole. Florida spends $51 million more each year, California spends a whopping $90 million annually, and Texas pays three times the cost of life imprisonment for capital cases.
What makes the DA's decision to purse the death penalty even more zealous and reckless is the fact that Nichols has offered to plead guilty as long as the death penalty is taken off the table as a possible sentence. How much is it worth to the taxpayers to see him killed rather than imprisoned for life? About $1.4 million thus far.
It's incredible that even when the moral and civil costs of the death penalty are put aside, the economic and judicial costs still point to a bankrupt system.