David Brener: Death penalty costly in hard economic times
David Brener - Guest Opinion • April 2, 2009
Recently, the Florida Bar News reported that a sitting circuit court judge in Seminole County recommended the abolition of the death penalty in Florida.
The reason for the jurist’s anti-death penalty stance was not grounded on moral repugnance of state-sponsored homicide. His opinion was not based on the fact that the death penalty is not a deterrent.
The judge’s views were not founded upon his observations of the often arbitrary way that some are selected for capital punishment, while the majority of others alleged to have committed equally heinous crimes are not charged with capital murder.
Despite numerous recent DNA exonerations, including 10 in Florida, the judge’s recommendation to abolish the death penalty was based on a much less lofty consideration — it’s expensive. That’s right — money.
As noted by Judge Clayton Simmons, in these tough budget times the Legislature could conceivably save millions of dollars by eliminating the death penalty. Contrary to popular belief, it costs considerably more to execute someone than to keep them in prison for life.
While an exact amount cannot by determined, credible reporters, such as the eminent judicial college death penalty teacher Judge O.H. Eaton, have cited studies that suggest that it costs six times more, or $3.2 million to execute someone.
While an exact amount cannot by determined, credible reporters, such as the eminent judicial college death penalty teacher Judge O.H. Eaton, have cited studies that suggest that it costs six times more, or $3.2 million to execute someone.
The Death Penalty Information Center maintains that Florida spends $51 million a year more to execute people convicted of first degree murder than to keep them in prison for life without parole.
A capital case involving a serial killer can cost several million dollars, up to the $12 million it reportedly cost to execute Ted Bundy in 1989. Given the relatively small number of actual executions, keeping the death penalty on the books cost Florida taxpayers $20 million to $24 million per execution. That’s big money!
As the recent cases involving double murderers Fred Cooper and David Patton demonstrate, the death penalty is not only arbitrarily imposed by juries, but may be arbitrarily sought or not sought by the prosecutor’s office.
Double murderer Cooper was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole after a Clearwater jury recommended against the death penalty, while Patton was offered a plea to life for brutally beating two elderly women to death with an oxygen tank.
Yet, other arguably less egregious cases in Lee County remain where the state is still seeking to execute the defendant. It is this lack of uniformity which creates tremendous unfairness in death penalty jurisprudence.
If considerations such as morality, fairness in implementation, holy mercy, or the absolute irrevocability of the death penalty will not succeed in moving the legislature to abolish state sanctioned homicide, maybe the bottom line will.
Those of us striving to put an end to capital punishment in Florida would no doubt much prefer if that occurs as a result of a new enlightenment and the vindication of our anti-death penalty views.
However, when it comes to the matter of life over death, we’ll take life over death for any darned reason whatsoever, even those devoid of substantive considerations.
I suspect those on death row too. And that is the bottom line.
— David A. Brener Esq. is a Fort Myers criminal defense lawyer who concentrates on homicide cases
He is the current Chairperson of the Criminal Law Practice Section of the Lee County Bar.
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