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         Capital Punishment Juveniles & Death Penalty:     more books (48)
  1. The Death Penalty (Ripped from the Headlines) by Sherri Devaney, 2007-09
  2. Death Penalty (Hot Topics) by Syd Golston, 2009-06-12
  3. Death Penalty (Lucent Overview) by Don Nardo, 1992-09
  4. The Debate About the Death Penalty (Ethical Debates) by Kaye Stearman, 2007-09-30
  5. Is the Death Penalty Fair ? (At Issue Series) by Mary E. Williams, 2003-03-26
  6. Contemporary Issues Companion - The Death Penalty (hardcover edition)
  7. Death Penalty, The by Ted Gottfried, 2002-04-01
  8. Teens and the Death Penalty (Issues in Focus) by Elaine Landau, 1992-02
  9. Death Penalty:Is It Justice? (Issues of Our Time) by Richard Steins, 1997-12-09
  10. The Death Penalty (Issues on Trial) by Samuel Brenner, 2006-06-02
  11. Furman V. Georgia: Debating the Death Penalty (Supreme Court Milestones) by Rebecca Stefoff, 2007-09
  12. Opposing Viewpoints Series - The Death Penalty (hardcover edition)
  13. Does the Death Penalty Deter Crime? (In Constroversy) by Peggy J. Parks, 2009-08-08
  14. Death Penalty (History of Issues) by Jean Alicia Elster, 2004-09-17

41. CUADP
www.abanet.org; Catholics Against capital punishment http//www.cacp death Row http//www.angelfire.com/al4/juveniles; Hopeto Abolish the death penalty http//www
http://www.cuadp.org/links.html
Home About Contact Volunteer ...
FADP

Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty Abolitionist Action Committee The Dr. Sam Sheppard Case Stop Capital Punishment Now
Supporting Governor George H.Ryan
of Illinois for the Nobel Peace Prize
More Abolitionist Related Websites
CUADP is pleased to provide the following links to other sites. CUADP takes no position on, nor responsibility for, the content of any site linked below. Happy surfing! To add a URL, click here.

42. My Experience Of The Death Penalty And Capital Punishment Objectively Began In O
thinking on why I am against capital punishment. prosecutors; criminalization andinequitable punishment schemes, ie crimes committed as juveniles since the
http://www.stormloader.com/waveatdeath/page1.html
zz Back Home Contact Me Next " A trial isn't a seach for truth; it's a contest to determine a winner." When you lose in the trial for the right for your own life, what else do you sacrifice until that time that your life ceases? And we are no longer natural born members of the human family? Is it not enough for you to simply kill me? (Michael L McBride, 11th March 2000.) read more Debased Guard Behaviour and Abuse Escalates Pending Death Row Transfers: By Michael L McBride My experience of the death penalty and capital punishment objectively began in October of 1985. I say objectively because subsequently I was not fully and completely aware of what could be considered most of the ramification and consequence of having been sentenced to death until two or three years after I was removed to the Texas death row housing section of the Ellis One Prison Unit in Huntsville, Texas. At the time of my conviction and sentencing I was numb, if only from the experience and trauma of the trial. Must I mention that the loss of my beloved and friend? What with the presentation of evidence and statements of government witnesses, all hell-bent on seeing that I receive the death penalty? I can't think of any person in this generation who has not been slandered or libeled if not simply berated and belittled. The hurt, as bad as it may be, is nothing in comparison to the effect of being made to sit and listen to such a monstrous conspiracy designed and with great effort carried through all for the purposes of killing you. It's incredible to look at all the resources devoted to that intent and grasp that they're tying rope to hang you while you watch them.

43. Victor L. Streib
A capital punishment ANTHOLOGY (editor) (Cincinnati Anderson Publishing Company)(1993). death penalty FOR juveniles (Bloomington, IN IU Press) (1987).
http://www.law.onu.edu/faculty/streib/streib.htm
Victor L. Streib
Professor of Law
Ohio Northern University
Pettit College of Law

E-Mail: v-streib@onu.edu
Tel: 419-772-2207
Fax: 419-772-1875
Course syllabi:
Victor L. Streib is a Professor of Law at Ohio Northern University and an attorney specializing in violent crime and the death penalty. Professor Streib has taught at six institutions and has served as the Visiting Fellow at the Association of American Law Schools, as well as authoring over 150 books, chapters, articles, and papers during his academic career. As an attorney, he has served as a prosecuting attorney and a defense attorney, and he has represented juveniles and women convicted of murder before the United States Supreme Court and several state supreme courts. He also has testified before committees of the United States Congress and of seven state legislatures on these issues. His media appearances include 60 Minutes, Larry King Live, All Things Considered, TIME, NEWSWEEK, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times Professor Streib also maintains current lists and reports of women on death row and juvenile offenders on death row . Those reports are also available in PDF format from femdeath.pdf

44. Criminal Justice In America--Links, Chp. 20--Juvenile Corrections
International Challenges to the death penalty. Conventions Covenants Prohibitingcapital punishment for juveniles Links to treaties banning capital punishment
http://www.crf-usa.org/links/cja/cja_ch20.htm
Criminal Justice in America
Chapter 20: Juvenile Corrections Options for Placing Juvenile Offenders The Question of Waiver
Wayne Thompson and the Death Penalty
Thompson v. Oklahoma ...
Current Trends and Controversies
Options for Placing Juvenile Offenders Boot Camps for Juvenile Offenders Text PDF ) A 1997 OJJDP report on boot camp programs. Juvenile Boot Camp Directory A listing of all the boot camps in the United States. Juvenile Boot Camps: Cost and Effectiveness vs. Residential Facilities This 1998 Koch Crime Institute report analyzes the effectiveness of juvenile boot camps. Juvenile Info Network News on juvenile justice corrections. Implementation of the Intensive Community-Based Aftercare Program Overview of intensive aftercare and description of its implementation in various sites. California Youth Authority The California Youth Authority is the largest youthful offender agency in the nation. Department of Youth Services The Department of Youth Services, the juvenile justice agency of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

45. Capital Punishment
Includes death row inmates, juveniles executed, and methods. capital Punishmentthe death penalty information from different religious perspectives.
http://dianedew.com/dthpnlty.htm
Capital Punishment What does the Bible say about The Death Penalty?
"And from each man, too, I will demand an accounting for the life of his fellow man. Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for in the image of God has God made man."
(Genesis 9:5, 6)
Compiled by Diane Dew
Electric chair - Sing Sing I. The death penalty is a deterrent against crime. Deuteronomy 21:21 "All the men of his town shall stone him to death. You must purge the evil from among you. All Israel will hear of it and be afraid."
II. Under the Mosaic Law, the death penalty was not only permissible but required. Genesis 9:5-6 "And for your lifeblood I will surely demand an accounting. I will demand an accounting from every animal. And from each man, too, I will demand an accounting for the life of his fellow man. Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed." Numbers 35:31 "Do not accept a ransom for the life of a murderer, who deserves to die. He must surely be put to death."

46. Death Penalty Websites
Links capital punishment Them without the capital get the punishment. John Spenkelink's AmnestyInternational juveniles and the death penalty http//www
http://www.uky.edu/~ksmill2/dplinks.htm
Death Penalty Links
"Capital punishment: Them without the capital
get the punishment."

John Spenkelink's last words at his electrocution, May 25, 1979 Juvenile Death Penalty Links
"I was 17 years old when I committed the offense for which I was sentenced to die,
and I didn't even start thinking and caring about my life until I was at least 20."

Charles F. Rumbaugh prior to his execution September 11, 1985. George Stinney , the youngest person executed in the 1900s. Juvenile Death Penalty by Victor Streib
http://www.law.onu.edu/faculty/streib/juvdeath.htm
The Juvenile Death Penalty by Gary W. Potter
http://dpa.state.ky.us/library/advocate/nov99/juvdp.html
List of Juveniles Currently under sentence of death in the United States
Also United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: http://www.pip.dknet.dk/~pip1019/dp/uk/juve-li.htm Amnesty International Juveniles and the Death Penalty: http://www.amnesty-usa.org/abolish/juve.html Speech given in commemoration of the 10th Anniversary of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: http://www.policestudies.eku.edu/KPOTTER/speech3.htm

47. Library Newsletter June 2001 Webography
death row inmate innocence, juveniles, race, women death penalty Information and Resourceshttp//www capital punishment the Ultimate Injustice http//d.witmer
http://notes1.morainepark.edu/appsinter/library/libryweb.nsf/338cc1b53c40e613862

48. Capital Punishment: Guide To Library Resources
KF9227.C2, capital punishment. REFERENCE RESOURCES. Day, Nancy. (Hot Pro/Con Issues)REF HV8699.U5.D3 2000. Examines the death penalty for juveniles from all
http://www.msjc.cc.ca.us/sjclibrary/research/capitalpun.htm
MT. SAN JACINTO COLLEGE LIBRARY - SAN JACINTO CAMPUS - LIBRARY PATHFINDERS; 1
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: GUIDE TO LIBRARY RESOURCES
"Death for whatever crime and all circumstances is truly an awesome punishment. The calculated killing of a human being by the state involves, by its very nature, a denial of the executed person's humanity… an executed person has indeed 'lost' the right to have rights." William Brennan Gregg v. Georgia
CLASSIFICATION AREAS
SOCIAL PATHOLOGY. WELFARE. CRIMINOLOGY Criminal justice administration Capital punishment Arguments in favor of capital punishment Arguments against capital punishment Imprisonment LAW OF THE UNITED STATES (FEDERAL) Criminal law Capital punishment
REFERENCE RESOURCES
Day, Nancy. The Death Penalty for Teens: a Pro/Con Issue . Berkeley Heights, CA: Enslow Publishers, 2000. (Hot Pro/Con Issues) REF HV8699.U5.D3 2000 Examines the death penalty for juveniles from all points of view, including a history of the topic and how societies all over deal with the issue. Includes a bibliography and index. Death Penalty: Opposing Viewpoints / Paul A. Winters, ed. 3rd ed. San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press, 1997. (Opposing Viewpoints) REF HV8694.D385 1997

49. Washingtonpost.com: For Justices, Doubts On Death Penalty
deterred by the threat of death nor fully consensus repudiating executions of juveniles,in part of whom joined in banning capital punishment for mentally
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A61678-2002Oct21?language=printer

50. Prison Activist Links: Death_Penalty
the public with analysis and information on issues concerning capital punishment. DNA,to Religion, Bush and Gore, juveniles, and death penalty Humor; Also
http://www.prisonactivist.org/links/Death_Penalty/
Top : Death Penalty
Prison Activist Links: Death Penalty
Home Add a Site Modify a Site What's New ... Search
Links:

51. No Alla Pena Di Morte - NO To The Death Penalty  - Comunità Di Sant'Egidio
A 2001 Gallup Poll revealed that 68 % of Americans supported capital punishment. ofstates that authorize death by No. of juveniles executed since 1976 18.
http://www.santegidio.org/pdm/news2002/22_05_02_b.htm
The commitment of the Community of Sant'Egidio Abolitions,
commutations,
moratoria, ... Archives News Other news from the Community of Sant'Egidio NO alla Pena di Morte
Campagna Internazionale Toronto Globe
MAY 12, 2002: USA: Digging a grave for capital punishment? - State moratoriums have some in the U.S. predicting the end is near They killed Lynda Block yesterday. The state of Alabama strapped her into Yellow Mama, as the chair is called, and poured 2,200 volts of electricity through her until a doctor pronounced her well and truly dead. The day before, the Governor of Maryland had put a temporary halt to executions in his state, joining what many believe is a swelling tide of government restraint that could see the death penalty eliminated in the United States, not in one grand gesture, but state by state, act by humanitarian act. "It's much more than a blip," Dennis Elliott of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty said in an interview yesterday. "The entire terrain on which the debate is being waged has shifted. Now the death-penalty proponents have to defend a system that is irreparably broken.

52. No Alla Pena Di Morte - NO To The Death Penalty  - Comunità Di Sant'Egidio
juveniles and the death penalty. Ginsberg, John Paul Stevens and Stephen G. Breyer— have evinced a desire to chip away at capital punishment by playing
http://www.santegidio.org/pdm/news2002/04_10_02.htm
The commitment of the Community of Sant'Egidio Abolitions,
commutations,
moratoria, ... Archives News Other news from the Community of Sant'Egidio NO alla Pena di Morte
Campagna Internazionale Los Angeles Times
COMMENTARY Abolish the Death Penalty for Youths By VINCENT SCHIRALDI Three U.S. Supreme Court justices have said that the court should consider abolishing the death penalty for people who committed their offenses as minors, setting up the juvenile death penalty as the newest frontier in our nation's debate over capital punishment. "Given the apparent consensus that exists among the states and in the international community against the execution of a capital sentence imposed on a juvenile offender," Justice John Paul Stevens wrote, "I think it would be appropriate to revisit the issue at the earliest possible opportunity." Justices Stephen G. Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg agreed. Over the last three years, aside from the United States, only Pakistan, Iran and the Republic of Congo have executed juvenile offendershardly the kind of human rights company we should be keeping.

53. Testimony On The Death Penalty In Texas (Human Rights Watch Press Release, New Y
worldwide consensus that the death penalty should not be imposed for crimes undertakenas juveniles. party, expressly forbids capital punishment for offenders
http://www.hrw.org/press/2001/04/usdp0417.htm

Africa
Americas Asia Europe/Central Asia ...
HRW World Report 2001: United States
FREE Join the HRW Mailing List Testimony on the Execution of Juvenile Offenders in Texas
Testimony of Michael Bochenek,
Counsel, Children's Rights Division, Human Rights Watch,
in support of H.B. 2048,
Texas House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee
April 17, 2001
On behalf of Human Rights Watch, I urge the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee to report favorably on H.B. 2048, which would raise the minimum age for capital punishment to eighteen.
A majority of states have recognized that putting people to death for crimes they committed as children is contrary to our evolving standards of decency. Of the thirty-eight states that retain the death penalty, twenty-three permit its imposition on juvenile offenders. Of those twenty-three states, only sixteen have juvenile offenders on their death rows. And of those sixteen states, only seven have actually carried out executions of child offenders since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976.
In Arizona, Florida, Indiana, and several other states that now permit the execution of juvenile offenders, legislatures are considering measures that would restrict the death penalty to adult offenders. The Montana legislature passed such a measure in 1999. Similarly, juvenile offenders charged with federal crimes may not be sentenced to death, with the narrow exception of those charged in U.S. military courts.

54. Amnesty International: Program To Abolish The Death Penalty
a), 1995, states Neither capital punishment nor life known to have executed juvenilesDemocratic Republic recently abolished the death penalty for juvenile
http://www.amnesty-usa.org/abolish/juveniles.html

Death Penalty Home
Featured Death Penalty Action
Abolition Flashcard

Subscribe
to AIUSA's email newsletter on the death penalty
About the Program

Death Penalty in The U.S.
AI Reports

Fact Sheets
Death Penalty

Juveniles
Deterrence
Mental Retardation Mental Illness Federal Death Penalty ... Death Penalty Links
JUVENILES THE DEATH PENALTY GIVES UP ON JUVENILE OFFENDERS. An almost universal prohibition exists on the execution of persons who were under the age of 18 at the time of the crime. In August 2000, the UN Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights resolved that the execution of people who were under the age of 18 at the time of the crime "is contrary to customary international law." A principle of customary international law is a general practice accepted as law. It is binding on all countries, regardless of which treaties they have or have not ratified. When the U.S. ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) in 1992, it entered a reservation to Article 6, which prohibits the use of the death penalty for those who were under the age of 18 at the time of the crime. Numerous European countries have voiced their objection to this U.S. reservation on the grounds that it is incompatible with the Covenant's object and purpose. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child [Article 37 (a)], 1995, states:

55. Washingtonpost.com: Justices Spurn Case On Juvenile Executions
Dieter, executive director of the anticapital punishment death penalty InformationCenter a case proponents of the death penalty for juveniles have seized
http://www.nlada.org/DMS/Documents/1043777814.02/WP juv dp no cert.htm
washingtonpost .com Justices Spurn Case On Juvenile Executions
Action Suggests Five Back Current Law By Charles Lane
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 28, 2003; Page A04 The Supreme Court announced yesterday that it will not hear a constitutional challenge to capital punishment for juvenile offenders, a decision that implies the court will not soon strike down state laws permitting the execution of felons who were 16 or 17 at the time of their crimes. The court's refusal to hear the case of Scott Allen Hain, 32, who is on death row in Oklahoma for his role in the kidnapping, robbery and murder of a Tulsa couple 15 years ago, came without comment or recorded dissent, as is customary. But legal analysts said recent events at the court suggest that, in the internal battle over the issue, those who favor eliminating the death penalty for juveniles have been defeated, at least for now. In October, the court refused to hear a case brought by Kentucky death row inmate Kevin Nigel Stanford. Four justices John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer signed a dissenting opinion, saying that juveniles lack the maturity to warrant the ultimate criminal sanction and that the court should have intervened to stop what they called a "shameful practice." Normally, four votes are enough to grant a hearing, but because it came up through a little-used legal channel known as original habeas corpus, Stanford's case would have required five votes.

56. Death Penalty FAQS - ASC's Critical Criminology Division
juveniles and capital punishment (Victor Streib); juveniles and Executions; JuvenileDeath penalty Today; Are there treaties against executing juveniles?
http://sun.soci.niu.edu/~critcrim/dp/faq/juv.html
Juveniles and the Death Penalty
Return to the Critical Criminology Homepage Maintained by: Jim Thomas - critcrim@sun.soci.niu.edu

57. Rethinking Death For Juveniles
to improve the death penalty system. One was to stop executing juveniles. Oregonprosecutor Joshua Marquis, an ardent supporter of capital punishment who is on
http://scaec.org/rethinking.htm
Rethinking Death for Juveniles
Napoleon Beazley and two others approached a Texas couple one night in 1994 in their driveway, demanding keys to their Mercedes. In the haunting moments that followed, Beazley transformed himself from a popular and bright 17-year-old with no criminal record and a promising future to a murderer destined for death row. The youth hadn't planned on killing anyone when they set out looking for a car to heist. But their carjacking turned tragic the moment Beazley panicked and fired two shots into the head of 63-year-old John Luttig as the war veteran's wife looked on. One of Beazley's co-offenders, who provided the evidence that convicted and sent Beazley to death row, also remarked in an affidavit that Beazley was immediately remorseful and had to be talked out of committing suicide.
That doesn't come close to excusing Beazley's act. But as awful as this murder was, his scheduled execution in Texas on Aug. 15 isn't warranted. Offenders who were under 18 at the time of their crimes deserve punishment, but not the ultimate, irreversible kind.
Experience and common sense say that many adolescents haven't completely developed control of their actions. That assessment is given credence by scientific studies showing how pre-frontal brain tissue governing impulse and emotion continues developing into the early 20s. As horrible as the acts teenagers commit might be, this science suggests

58. Capital Punishment Links
Prodeath penalty.com. juveniles and the death penalty. capital Punishmentin Maryland. Texas Department of Corrections' death row information.
http://pages.towson.edu/msealock/capitalpunishment.htm
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
A sampling of sites focusing on capital punishment in the United States. Death Penalty Information Center Focus on the Death Penalty ACLU Death Penalty Campaign Pro-Death Penalty.com ... Capital Punishment in Maryland Texas Department of Corrections' death row information Capital punishment statistics and publications from BJS Baltimore Sun articles about Maryland's moratorium

59. Death Penalty - Faith And Values
Should death penalty apply to 16year-olds? October 31, 2002 Florida voteson the issue, while capital punishment for juveniles draws attention in the
http://www.faithandvalues.com/channels/death-penalty.asp

WEBMEDLEY

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A guide for accepting change and viewing it as a blessing My Only Comfort : Death, Deliverance, and Discipleship in the Music of Bach
Writtent to help modern listerners understand, also contains great commentary. Can You Drink the Cup?
This question has the power to crack open the hardened heart and lay bare the tendons of the spiritual life. Sign up for email newsletters from Faith and Values .com First Name: Email: Ministry on the Web: Tips and techniques
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We can understand why victims' families would look to the death penalty as a justifiable punishment for convicted terrorists, but we feel that it is wrong to take a life. If any good can come out of the disaster of Sept. 11, perhaps it will include examination of how we can maintain our humanity in the face of terrorists' threats. Orlando and Phyllis Rodriguez, whose son Greg died in the terrorist attacks on September 11, from a letter to the

60. Juvenile Capital Punishment
A very hot topic concerning the death penalty is the juveniles are not spared inthe United States and Yemen which has recently outlawed capital punishment.
http://putnam.k12.il.us/Juv1.html
Juvenile Capital Punishment
A very hot topic concerning the death penalty is the age at wish this punishment may be imposed. People under the age of 18 are legally considered to be juveniles. Juveniles are not spared in the United States legal system. The United States is one of only six countries with recorded executions of child offenders since 1990. The only other countries which have recorded executions include Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen which has recently outlawed capital punishment. Since 1990, nineteen people who committed crimes under the age of eighteen have been executed. The US accounts for ten of those nineteen executions. Heath Wilkins was sixteen at the time he stabbed and killed Nancy Allen during a robbery. He was convicted and sentenced to die less than a year later. The jury decided that he committed an adult crime and should be punished accordingly. In his many appeals, Wilkins’s lawyer argued that he had been abused severely as a child and that he was in a psychotic state at the time of the murder. The prosecutor argued that Wilkins was aware of committing the murder and he should be punished for his crime regardless of whether or not he was a juvenile basically saying that Wilkins committed an adult crime and should be punished as an adult. Don Nardo made a good point when he said:
“Society considers juveniles too immature to vote, buy liquor, serve on juries, or join the armed forces. When it comes to murder, however, many people believe juveniles should be punished as adults - even if that means death.”

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