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Joe Amrine Speaks Out

Joe Amrine spent 17 years on death row waiting to be executed for a crime he didn't commit. He writes on behalf of Moratorium Now!, a campaign to bring about a national moratorium on executions. Before advances in DNA technology began to demonstrate the shockingly significant risk that an innocent person will be put to death, Amrine knew that mistakes happen. He's lucky to be living proof of that fact.

We know now that eye-witness testimony, jailhouse informants or “snitches,” and even confessions do not always result in a proper conviction. But what have we done to ensure that these potentially deadly mistakes aren’t made?

Missouri has never had a thorough examination of our death penalty system. The state set me free, acknowledging an innocent man had been in prison awaiting execution for nearly two decades. Five years have passed, and still no study has been done to guarantee that another person won’t be set to die for a crime he did not commit. This baffles and horrifies me.

The last sentence in his essay is inarguable:

The state can always set the innocent free; bringing the dead back to life is outside its capacity.

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    The threat to the innocent is a side attraction (5.00 / 1) (#2)
    by pluege on Sun Aug 03, 2008 at 12:07:40 PM EST
    Certainly there could not be much more horrible  than executing an innocent person, but the core of the death penalty argument is that humans and their manufactured societal and religious organizations and "norms" do not possess any inherent right to kill people - period. There just is no such human right to kill another human. There is no basis, no foundation in the organization of life for it - it does not exist. Any human or its society intentionally killing other humans is an abomination - there can be no justification for it under any circumstances because humans do not possess the right to conduct executions.

    In short, the death penalty is not about the executed, its about the executioner.

    i was a witness to a murder. (none / 0) (#1)
    by hellothere on Sun Aug 03, 2008 at 11:05:28 AM EST
    in fact i was in my car driving down the street minding my own business. this shooting took place on the sidewalk to my left. i sat there stunned really not sure at first what i had seen. of course i gave a statement to the police. i will say this the police made sure that the media couldn't get near me or get my name. i was never called so i don't know if they were ever caught or what. i did read in the paper that he died. the bottom line is i couldn't have picked them out in a lineup. it was so fast and i didn't get that good of a look.