Sorry to chime in so late, but I am against the death penalty. Litig8tr is from Texas, a state, previously, where the option of life without parole was not a sentencing option. So in a capital case, the jurors had the choice of the death penalty or life with the chance of parole (guy would serve about 40 years). Many Texas jurors who were polled said that had the option of life without parole been presented, they would have opted for that sentence in lieu of the death penalty.
In many other U.S. jurisdictions, life without parole is a sentencing option. That is why Texas is the death penalty capital of the world.
So when litig8tr says that a jury agreed with him on the death penalty, it may not be that the jurors really felt that death was appropriate. Rather, death was the better alternative than giving the defendant a chance to get out on parole.
Let us not forget that many death row inmates have been vindicated and that 22% of those vindications involved false confessions. I believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the U.S. has executed an innocent person. Our system of proof beyond a reasonable doubt does not assure us of convicting only guilty defendants. Obviously, prosecutors have obtained convictions and death sentences against innocent people. So when litig8tr claims that the rules of evidence are designed "to protect those rare instances where an innocent man is charged," obviously the rules of evidence don't do that. The jury system in the U.S. does not perform its function so well that innocent people are not executed. I believe that it is the best system (in theory) in the world, but it is not equipped to determine whether the state should execute someone.
I am not in any way attempting to flame or to attack litig8tr. He is doing what he believes to be correct. I am only rebutting his posts. I am sure that he is deeply disturbed by the decisions he has to make in capital cases. And for that, I offer my sympathies. But I could not ask that someone be executed. To me, that is playing God--saying who deserves to live and who deserves to die. Yes, juries make the final decision on the death penalty, but someone asked and persuaded them. That's a job I refuse to do.
Litig8tr is correct that there are some extremely dangerous people out there. I have several clients that truly deserve life without parole, because they seem to me to be very evil. But as I said, I could not ask for the death penalty against them, because it requires me to judge my fellow man and determine whether he lives or dies. I'd rather leave that up to God come Judgment Day.