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March 18, 2005
Compromise can be painful . . .
My apologies for being so torturously late in weighing in on this one. (I should be particularly ashamed considering the poll on the right -- "What ancient form of execution would you LEAST prefer?") Hope my squeamishness isn't showing! We'll have to put an end to that. Anyway, as the Romans knew (and as Glenn Reynolds observed when he linked to Eugene Volokh's post) civilization is not for the squeamish. Here's Professor Volokh: Something the Iranian Government and I Agree on: I particularly like the involvement of the victims' relatives in the killing of the monster; I think that if he'd killed one of my relatives, I would have wanted to play a role in killing him. Also, though for many instances I would prefer less painful forms of execution, I am especially pleased that the killing — and, yes, I am happy to call it a killing, a perfectly proper term for a perfectly proper act — was a slow throttling, and was preceded by a flogging. The one thing that troubles me (besides the fact that the murderer could only be killed once) is that the accomplice was sentenced to only 15 years in prison, but perhaps there's a good explanation.Clayton Cramer disagrees vehemently, reminding us of the torture deaths of those implicated in the plot to kill Hitler: I can understand those who argue that making execution excruciatingly painful might act as a deterrent also. This assumes that those to be deterred are rational enough to be influenced by this threat; at least for most murderers, this is simply not the case. They are usually such damaged, short-term people that they are not going to be deterred by a remote and unlikely event. I also cringe at the thought of a government intentionally taking actions to add suffering; it is way too reminiscent of the bloodlust that has driven tyrants throughout history. (I think of Hitler's execution of German officers who participated in--or were simply thought to have been part of--the von Stauffenberg coup plot. He had them executed by being hung with piano wire--a slow and painful death. Hitler had it filmed, so that he could enjoy watching their suffering at a later time.)I don't think I'm any more squeamish than Professor Volokh, and it bothered me not at all to see victims' families obtaining vengeance. I understand the argument that some crimes are so horrible that the state ought to be able to at least take into account the inherent need for victims to have a hand at punishment. But I'd rather leave the state out of it. And might I be so bold as to offer a modest proposal from Classical Values as a sort of compromise? While it is true that the Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment, and it would have to be amended to allow such things as flogging (discussed infra) or slow hangings by crane, I have a question. If the state is not the actor, does Eighth Amendment apply? The ancient Romans had a peculiar punishment called proscription (popularized by Sulla) which allowed private citizens to kill anyone whose name appeared on certain official lists. The state paid bounties (but took the bulk of the estates of the proscribed) and the system operated through a corrupt bureaucratic network of informants. Eventually, things went too far, and the proscription system degenerated into a murder machine directed against Sulla's political opponents. One of them, Julius Caesar, survived: The new dictator introduced a judicial process called the proscription. Essentially this new concept was the open publication listing names of people he deemed to be undesirable. A reign of terror ensued with rewards offered for the death or capture of any name on the list. At first the proscriptions, including confiscation of property were mainly focused on Sulla’s direct enemies and supporters, but eventually the death toll would reach epidemic proportions. In the first series alone, as many as 40 senators and 1,600 members of the equestrian class were butchered. Before long, in order to exact extreme control the list grew exponentially. There was simply no place to hide or run. People taking refuge in the temples were murdered; others were lynched by the Roman mob. An intricate network of spies kept Sulla informed and tracked down anyone who might be considered an enemy of the state, at Sulla’s whim.A Machiavellian before the term was coined, Sulla became a reformer, improved the Roman Constitution, and lived his life out in retirement. Obviously, I'd never advocate an official system of proscription. For starters, it would be unconstitutional. But suppose the state simply didn't prosecute people who committed murder under certain special circumstances? Anti-abortion activists see abortion as murder, and if the fetus is a person, they may be right. (Especially, as I've argued before, if the fetus has a brain.) But even if the fetus is a person, most people would not call abortion cruel and unusual punishment, because the state has not acted. The state, by its laws, is merely barring the criminal prosecution of either the woman who goes to a doctor for the procedure, or the doctor who performs it. So, it doesn't matter whether the fetus's arms and legs are slowly ripped off, or if the procedure takes hours. There's simply no way to claim that the state has administered cruel or unusual punishment. How about affording convicted perpetrators of particularly heinous crimes the same legal protection afforded fetuses? Is that politically incorrect enough for the squeamish? I realize that this compromise will not please everyone, and there's a lot of squeamishness around a lot of these issues. But we have to start somewhere. And I'm for a limited government role in all things. Especially when it hurts. UPDATE: Eugene Volokh carefully considers the views of many of his critics -- and this post by Mark Kleiman convinced him that he was wrong: Whatever one's abstract judgments about the proper severity of punishments, this is a punishment that will not fit with our legal and political culture.Eichmann is also mentioned: Maimon asks "if you 'execute' the serial killer of twenty children in this way, what do you do to criminals who are worse still? . . . What would Eugene wish the State of Israel to have done with Adolf Eichmann?" Yet this seems to me to support my original point rather than to undermine it. It seems to me an occasion for regret that Eichmann was executed by hanging. Such a decision was likely politically necessary; but I think it slighted the enormity of what he had done. He deserved a far worse death, and it would have been good had he received it.While I probably ought to take things like this more seriously, I do worry that if I become too serious I might begin to take myself seriously. Considering some of the horrors I have been through in life, the latter might prove unendurable -- so I tend to go with gallows humor. Anyway, I had hoped not to get serious about any of this, but now I'm reminded of of my childhood reaction to the Eichmann trial. I was in something like the second grade, and this very sour, very ordinary looking older man was on TV sitting in the locked glass booth, answering questions which were being translated into God knows how many languages. I asked my dad why he was locked in the glass booth, and he said that there were thousands of people who'd love to kill him. Why? Because he had killed their fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, grandparents. This made little sense to me, and I asked my father why they were protecting him even though he was there because they were (apparently) going to execute him. He said this was because the Israelis, the Jews, were going to show the world that they were more civilized than the Nazis. And all they could do was hang him. All they could do was hang him? That didn't seem enough, considering the enormity of what he'd done. As I learned later in life, justice often isn't "enough." It isn't supposed to be. MORE: Ricardo Eichmann was around my age when his father became the only person ever to be executed by the state of Israel: Ricardo Eichmann, the youngest of four brothers, was seven years old at the time of his father's execution.Might feel very differently had his father been given the kind of punishment he truly deserved. posted by Eric on 03.18.05 at 09:34 AM
Comments
Interesting argument Eric; so you're suggesting that those who commit certain heinous crimes be declared "fetuses" and assigned to an appropriate "mother" the result of an unwanted, court ordered "ectopic pregnacy"... then "aborted." Seems to me that the State would still be a significant "actor" in this scheme. But seriously, I well understand the satisfaction of hearing that individuals like this Iranian serial killer have suffered a slow painful death, but anyone who advocates limited government should feel "squeamish" at the idea of government license to kill its own citizens that do not pose an immediate threat to human life. I don't cry for convicted murderers when they are put to death, but I do deeply regret the power this ultimate irrecoverable penalty affords the state. Todd · March 18, 2005 03:01 PM I think painless executions are the way to go. What about the people who are later found innocent of their crimes (happens all the time). Not only would we have to deal with the fact that were life was rounded by an honest mistake, but we'd also have to deal with the fact that their life ended horribly, horribly painfully. alchemist · March 18, 2005 05:06 PM On the subject of punishments painful enough for Eichmann, I think Uday and Qusay might have (had) some ideas. Feet first into a chipper-shredder, slow immersion in acid, bastinado.... Aaron Davies · March 20, 2005 02:03 PM |
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It's worth noting that the Vikings had a similar system that by all accounts worked quite well. One of the punishments available to juries was to declare the accused "outlaw". At that point the person was no longer entitled to legal protection. His enemies were free to kill him and take his property.