This
post is on the judgment in a case of murder by burning – three people sentenced
to death for burning to death of a woman. As per the news item I read [1].
The
last reason (?) standing in favor of death penalty is revenge.
Capital
punishment violates balance between the crime and punishment except through the
meaningless arithmetic of revenge – a life for life. Deterrence has not worked.
The cost factor, besides being frivolous, still favors incarceration without
chance for parole. If there are additional reasons, I can only say that
stupidity knows no bounds. Therefore, let us take that revenge is the only
sustainable reason for maintaining this barbarity on our statute books.
Now,
the current judgment – the 3 for 1 case - has made even that reason
unsustainable. Three people have been condemned to death for the single life
murdered. Two people (men) brought the victim down from her room to the scene
of the crime, one man “tied her neck with an elastic rope”, the lone woman “caught
hold of her hands”, one man “poured kerosene on her body, lit a matchstick, and
set her on fire …” From this, it has been judged that the murder deserved to be
treated as one of the rarest-of-the-rare cases. I am no one to dispute that.
All the three have been handed down the ultimate, the irrevocable punishment.
It is now three lives for one life. Revenge gone crazy.
There
is no denying that all three were proximately guilty to nearly, and not exactly,
the same extent and this is where the problem lies. Could the judge have graded
the death penalty among the three? “You, who set her on fire, go first; you,
who helped bring the victim to the scene of the crime, enjoy life for two more
days; and you, go last, say after a week after the second, because you did not do
much more than catching hold of the victim’s hands.”
Pouring
kerosene on a person and setting her on fire is not the same as catching hold
of the victim’s hands, you will agree. This can only mean that the judgment
applies the rarest-of-the-rare tag to the planning of the crime, the
premeditated nature rather than to the act of the crime. The judgment opens up
some aspects of criminal cases that offer possibilities to be judged rarest-of-the-rare.
Anyone
involved in planning of crimes which may even unintentionally turn into
rarest-of-the-rare should be held accountable to the same degree as the actual
perpetrators. If the deterrence theory is valid, after these three are murdered
by the state, planning for rarest-of-the-rare will be deterred and we can hope
murders too, including those by the state, will be reduced.
And,
as it is established that deterrence does not work, holding on to death penalty
can only mean that 3 for 1 is true justice.
Thus
speaks revenge.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
P.S
Isn’t this a nice coincidence that the judgment came just days before Good Friday,
where three people (Jesus and two common criminals) were crucified?
Reference
1.
Death
penalty for three of a family in murder case, The Hindu, April
4, 2012
6 comments:
Raghuram, I don't think arithmetic works in the case of human lives... Let hundred persons be hanged if the case is just, that's my view.
Matheikal,
Arithmetic is part of the metric of rarest-of-the-rare. Otherwise why do people invoke, without fail, the number of people killed by a terrorist? The case may not be equally just for all the hundred persons. Then, do you hang a few on the first days, a few more on the next and so on - the scenario I sketched out in the post.
Unless one admits to, honestly and within oneself that death penalty hangs by the thread of revenge, there can be no arguments in favor. And, if one admits to that, there IS no argument.
RE
such people should not be hanged they should undergo hard labor till their death..
I agree DS sir, and it should be under most severe restrictions of freedom.
RE
yes, i agree with Sampath Sir and your comments to his comment
Thanks pala
RE
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