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Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?
FindLaw ^ | Sept. 10, 2003 | Sherry F. Colb

Posted on 09/11/2003 6:39:06 AM PDT by ZULU

---- Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists? A Louisiana Jury Sentences a Child's Rapist to Death By SHERRY F. COLB ---- Wednesday, Sep. 10, 2003

Last month, in Louisiana, Patrick O. Kennedy was sentenced to death for the rape of an eight-year-old child. The state law under which he was sentenced, passed in 1995, permits the death penalty for the rape of a child under the age of 12.

If the sentence withstands appellate challenges in state court, the U.S. Supreme Court is likely to grant review, because the issue presented is both important and relatively untested within our federal jurisprudence: Does the Eighth Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishments prohibit the imposition of capital punishment upon those whose crimes do not cause a victim's death?

In 1977, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Coker v. Georgia that the rape of an adult woman may not constitutionally be punished by execution. A plurality of the Court reasoned that such a punishment would be "grossly disproportionate" to the crime of rape, because the rapist does not take the life of his victim. The opinion explained that "[l]ife is over for the victim of the murderer; for the rape victim, life may not be nearly so happy as it was, but it is not over and normally is not beyond repair."

By specifying the question presented as concerning the "rape of an adult woman," the Court left open at least two questions: May a state execute the rapist of a child (of either sex)? And, may the rapist of an adult man be legitimately punished with death?

The Louisiana child rape case plainly raises the first question. But it also implicitly invites us to reconsider the Coker decision regarding the execution of rapists more generally.

Why Reconsider Coker?

At this point, readers may wonder why I would propose revisiting Coker, when the Supreme Court could simply leave that decision in place and limit itself to exploring the questions left open there.

One reason is that nothing about the Court's arguments in Coker provides convincing grounds for distinguishing between rapists, based on the age or identity of their victims. If the death penalty is excessive because adult rape victims survive their victimization, then the very same logic should hold true in the case of child rape. People might view one crime as worse than the other, but neither, by definition, entails a victim's death.

It is arbitrary, moreover, to treat child rape as qualitatively more heinous than the "rape of an adult woman," for death penalty purposes. To do so minimizes the devastation of rape for women, because it suggests that although the rape of one category of people is bad enough to call for execution, adult women do not qualify - as a matter of constitutional law - for inclusion in that category.

Put another way, predators of adult female victims - by contrast to predators of children - can claim that what they did is not really bad enough to merit death, that death is actually "grossly disproportionate" to rapes against these victims.

Disturbingly, it is not only the rape of adults, but the rape of women in particular, that Coker specially exempts from the death penalty. None of the Justices in Coker explicitly mentioned male victims of rape. One wonders, however, whether the homophobia of Justice Byron White might have led him to conclude that male-on-male, but not male-on-female, rape could merit death. (White authored Bowers v. Hardwick, a decision finally overruled last term in Lawrence v. Texas). After all, why would the Justices in Coker have emphasized the gender of a victim, if not to imply that it might carry some significance?

Imagine, for illustrative purposes, an opinion in which the Court identified the question it faced as whether the death penalty is grossly disproportionate punishment for the rape of white Mormons, or of black Baptists, and declared that it was limiting its discussion to that issue alone. It is difficult, in 2003, even to imagine the Court framing the issue in these ways.

The Role of Race in Coker

For another reason to revisit Coker, consider the role that race played in that decision. Without ever mentioning the word "race" explicitly, the main opinion is widely regarded as representing a response to the toxic history of interracial rape accusations in this country. Lynch mobs, for example, often cited, in defense of their atrocities, the need to protect the "purity" of white women from black rapists.

False accusations of black-on-white rape abounded during the post-Civil-War era, with often-deadly results for the black men accused. And the men convicted of rape and sentenced to death were typically black, and their victims white.

In reacting to a purportedly "gross disproportion" in the imposition of penalties for rape, then, the Court could not have avoided the stunning disparity between the criminal justice system's response to black-on-white rape, on the one hand, and to all other instances of rape, on the other. Due to such differential treatment, moreover, the image of punishing a black man for raping a white woman has come to exemplify white supremacy in the United States.

The history of racism in accusations and punishments for rape is sordid and shameful. It calls for serious introspection on the part of our nation. The opinions in Coker, however, fail to address that history at all. Instead, the plurality fixates on how much less serious rape is than murder. By doing so, it effectively attempts to remedy racist injustice by trivializing misogynist violence.

To similar effect, then-Judge Clarence Thomas accused the Senate of engaging in a "high-tech lynching" for calling him to task in connection with his alleged sexual harassment of Anita Hill. Thomas testified that he did not even listen to Hill's testimony and thereby suggested that for the Senate even to consider such an allegation, when leveled at a black man, itself constitutes racism. As readers may recall, the accusation had its intended effect, and the arch-conservative Justice Thomas was subsequently confirmed by a Senate dominated by Democrats who might otherwise have opposed him.

The Role of Race in the Death Penalty More Generally

It is, of course, not exclusively in cases of rape that the death penalty has been disproportionately visited upon African-American defendants for interracial crimes. As studies have demonstrated, the death penalty has for a long time been disproportionately applied to black-on-white murder as well.

Notwithstanding this disparity, however, the Supreme Court has not declared the death penalty unconstitutional under all circumstances. Unless the Court is prepared to do so across the board, it is therefore not appropriate to try to protect one vulnerable group (African-Americans) by minimizing the outrages committed against another (adult females). It is not, in other words, inherently racist to execute rapists, any more than it is inherently racist to execute murderers.

Certainly, the imposition of criminal penalties generally may be racially determined, to some extent. Harvard Law Professor Randall Kennedy has persuasively argued, for instance, that jurors selectively empathize with victims of their own race. But this problem transcends the crime of rape, and thus its consideration must similarly extend beyond and leave behind this country's history of overlooking misogynist violence and female subordination.

Proportionality: Is Death Always Too Great a Punishment For Rape?

So far, I have focused on potentially dubious distinctions implicitly drawn by the Coker plurality and on the potentially flawed displacement of the majority's proper outrage about racial injustice onto the improper target of punishment for the crime of rape. But on the merits, how strong is the argument that death is too harsh a punishment for a crime of rape that does not end in murder?

Perhaps the retributive philosophy of "an eye for an eye" precludes the taking of a life for a rape. The disproportion between rape and death, however, is by no means self-evident. And as the dissent in Coker explains, a punishment that is no more severe than the crime it punishes often has little power to deter the crime in question, because many criminals can count on avoiding apprehension. "For example," argues the dissent, "hardly any thief would be deterred from stealing if the only punishment upon being caught were return of the money stolen."

In the particular case at issue in Coker, the defendant was already serving a term of life imprisonment when he escaped and raped the 16-year-old Mrs. Carver (the "adult woman" in question). Coker had previously been convicted of murder, rape, kidnapping, and aggravated assault. Short of executing him, it is hard to imagine either deterring or incapacitating this man from further violent behavior. Without a death penalty, in fact, the State was not in a position to impose any punishment upon Coker at all.

One might, of course, take the view that proportionality in sentencing trumps the need to serve instrumental objectives such as deterrence and incapacitation. Even on the basic question of retributive justice, however, murder is not necessarily the only or even the most heinous crime that one person might commit against another. Many consider torture, for example, to be worse than murder. For that reason, U.S. law rejects physically brutal but non-lethal penalties such as limb amputation, even as it permits the death penalty.

Like torture, the harm of rape can leave its survivors with irreparable psychiatric injury which sometimes leads ultimately to suicide. Though alive, what such victims have lost could therefore arguably merit the most serious punishment that the law has to offer.

Life Versus Death: The Strange Eighth Amendment Divide

Last, but not least among the arguments for reconsidering Coker is the peculiar divide between Eighth Amendment precedents regarding death, on the one hand, and life imprisonment, on the other.

The Supreme Court has embraced an Eighth Amendment proportionality principle, for both capital and other offenses. Yet the same Court has upheld a penalty of mandatory life imprisonment without parole for possession of 672 grams of cocaine. It has similarly upheld a life sentence imposed upon a person convicted of fraudulently obtaining money and property totaling under $250. And most recently, in Lockyer v. Andrade, it upheld two consecutive terms of 25 years to life imprisonment under three strikes legislation against a person whose two triggering "strikes" were the theft of videotapes from K-mart, totaling under $160 in value.

Whatever one thinks of execution for rape, it seems a far less disproportionate penalty than a lifetime of confinement in a prison cell, for nonviolent, petty property crimes against a corporate entity. If the Court is serious about proportionality review, it should begin by applying that review to something other than the severity of penalties for rape and other violent crimes. Its failure to do so discredits the entire enterprise, along with its claims about gross disproportion with respect to rape and the death penalty.

Targeting Rape For Trivialization

As I have proposed, there are many arguments for reconsidering and overruling Coker. As I have explained in an earlier column, however, I am sympathetic with the view that the death penalty should be abolished, regardless of how undeserving of solicitude the typical person subjected to execution might be.

Nonetheless, opposition to the death penalty is not necessarily a reason to embrace or leave standing the decision in Coker v. Georgia. The Coker opinion does not simply condemn a subset of executions. It makes a value judgment about rape and deems this crime to be qualitatively not serious enough for the ultimate punishment.

This judgment, in turn, trivializes the suffering of rape. Perhaps it is time for this Court - one that generally defers (to an arguably alarming extent) to legislative judgments about retributive justice - to reconsider whether it is appropriate to continue to single out the rape of an adult woman as the one intentional, violent crime to be explicitly and uniquely shielded from the most severe of penalties. The current Louisiana case provides a welcome opportunity for such a reconsideration.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sherry F. Colb, a FindLaw columnist, is a Professor at Rutgers Law School in Newark.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: courts
"In 1977, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Coker v. Georgia that the rape of an adult woman may not constitutionally be punished by execution. A plurality of the Court reasoned that such a punishment would be "grossly disproportionate" to the crime of rape, because the rapist does not take the life of his victim. The opinion explained that "[l]ife is over for the victim of the murderer; for the rape victim, life may not be nearly so happy as it was, but it is not over and normally is not beyond repair."

A PERFECT example of the Court legislating from the bench. Execution for rape was, until the 1977 relevation from sources unknown, an accepted punishment in many states, with its roots in colonial times and before.

As Judge Bork so aptly put it last night on the O'Reilly factor, activist judges are subjecting a democratic republic to social and cultural changes in which the mass of the public does not agree. Since these dictators are most often political appointees who hold office for life, the public has little recourse to get them flushed from office. Impeachments are difficult and call for the same testicular fortitude so glaring absent from the Executive and Legislative branches of the government when they sit idly by and allow these judges to violate the basic foundations of our Republic by ignoring the Separation of Powers concept.

And so homosexual marriages will soon be defended by the Courts as they struck down, again unconstitutionally, the anti-sodomy laws in Texas. And as they will again, use the First Amendment to keep the ten commandments out of the Alabama Courthouse, DESPITE the fact that they are on the walls of the Supreme Court building itself, and DESPITE the fact that the Constitution clearly states "Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion, nor prohibiting the free exercise thereof.." - NO reference to the STATE governments there.

The Courts and Judges in America have gone wild. The only possible solution to this is for the Executive branch and the Legislative Branches of the Government to STOP ENFORCING THESE IDIOTIC DECREES.

Unfortunately, today's politicians are more interested in preserving what has become a permanent job, along with its substantial perks, pension and salary, rather then defending the Constitution they have taken an oath to protect.

1 posted on 09/11/2003 6:39:06 AM PDT by ZULU
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To: ZULU
Someone who steals a child's innocence is deserving of the harshest possible punishment. Well just ask your average con behind bars what they think of kiddie perverts.
2 posted on 09/11/2003 6:40:53 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: ZULU
Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?

No.

3 posted on 09/11/2003 6:41:20 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: ZULU
i'd say- depends upon the rape. Serial rapists/child rapists? no prob, but hows about the guy who is the victim of her post-ciotal remorse? in a he-said/she-said situation SHE has the upper hand. and he dies? I dunno about that.
4 posted on 09/11/2003 6:43:57 AM PDT by camle (not even a water balloon fight can rouse these dullards!)
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To: wideawake
yes if you consider the latest definition of a rapist.
5 posted on 09/11/2003 6:45:46 AM PDT by biblewonk (Spose to be a Chrisssssssstian)
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To: camle
I wouldn't consider a case where an adult woman consents to sex, then, after she gets the guy aroused, and they are in the midst of the business, she suddenly changes her mind, as "rape", in the traditional sense of that term. There is a degree of consent here, and biological urges, once aroused by two willing partners, are difficult to turn off.
6 posted on 09/11/2003 6:46:55 AM PDT by ZULU
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To: goldstategop
There are a wide variety of crimes in this area. Anything from feeling up a behind to rape and murder.

It is the purpose the justice system to make fine distinctions, insofar as possible.
7 posted on 09/11/2003 6:48:39 AM PDT by proxy_user
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To: wideawake
Ya' beat me to it. This is one of those areas where "cruel and unusual punishment" should be recinded.
8 posted on 09/11/2003 6:48:50 AM PDT by Dead Corpse (For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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To: biblewonk
yes if you consider the latest definition of a rapist.

You're right.

I'm thinking of the guy who drags a woman into an alley at knifepoint, not the frat brother who forgets to call the next morning.

9 posted on 09/11/2003 6:49:03 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: camle
As an addendum to my comment, I might add that if sex were limited to married people, as it should be, this problme wouldn't arise - nor would we have the rampant promiscuity, illegitmacy, and sexually transmitted diseases produced by the "Playboy Philosophy".
10 posted on 09/11/2003 6:49:29 AM PDT by ZULU
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To: goldstategop
"It is arbitrary, moreover, to treat child rape as qualitatively more heinous than the "rape of an adult woman," for death penalty purposes. To do so minimizes the devastation of rape for women, because it suggests that although the rape of one category of people is bad enough to call for execution, adult women do not qualify - as a matter of constitutional law - for inclusion in that category. '

Findlaw=leftist heaven

Protecting children is not fair to women. Liberals continue to assault the rights of the defenseless. Pathetic.





11 posted on 09/11/2003 6:49:42 AM PDT by At _War_With_Liberals (Honk!! ...if you are being followed by leftists too.)
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To: proxy_user
"getting felt up from behind" is why women should be proficient in firearms usage. I'd be willing to bet a years salary that if more women carried, there'd be a LOT less of this crap going on.
12 posted on 09/11/2003 6:50:31 AM PDT by Dead Corpse (For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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To: goldstategop
I do not think that rape - even rape of a child - should get the death penalty. Giving it the same penalty as murder tells the rapist that he cannot be punished worse - and, in fact, he might escape punishment altogether - if he kills his victim, thereby eliminating the best (or only) witness against him.
13 posted on 09/11/2003 6:51:51 AM PDT by DonQ
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To: ZULU
Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?

Of a child under 12...

NO!

But...

We must be careful...child rape charges are used as weapons by parents against ex-spouses...

14 posted on 09/11/2003 6:52:18 AM PDT by Onelifetogive
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To: ZULU
I like the death penalty, but the "unintended consequences" of the death penalty is that there is no incentive for the perp to spare his victim. If conviction means death , why not kill the witness?
15 posted on 09/11/2003 6:52:27 AM PDT by Little Ray (When in trouble, when in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout!)
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To: wideawake
Feminazis ultimately believe all sex is rape. Their goal is that the accusation alone should convict the man.
16 posted on 09/11/2003 6:53:55 AM PDT by At _War_With_Liberals (Honk!! ...if you are being followed by leftists too.)
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To: ZULU
you're doing what the libs do - imagine the world as you think it should be and not as it is. there are those who do think that when a woman says no, it's rape - even if she say's no AFTER the event - even days after. And there are those who have sex outside of marriage.

I don't think that you want to leave the door open to having these events classified as capital offences?
17 posted on 09/11/2003 6:55:46 AM PDT by camle (not even a water balloon fight can rouse these dullards!)
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To: ZULU
"Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?"



Rape had been punishable by death for centuries before that stupid Coker decision. People who commit forcible rape, whether against adults or children, and whether against males or females, deserve nothing better than capital punishment. I would exclude statutory rape from such punishment when we're talking about men or women who have sex with 16-year-olds or something (which is a crime in many states), but if the boy or girl is below 14, I say give that pervert the chair.
18 posted on 09/11/2003 6:59:10 AM PDT by AuH2ORepublican (Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice, moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.)
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To: ZULU
Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?

When force and injury is the main ingredient?
No.
And the age of the victim is irrelevant.

19 posted on 09/11/2003 7:04:02 AM PDT by Publius6961 (californians are as dumb as a sack of rocks.)
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To: wideawake
The only part about the present form of capital punishment is that it is over much to quickly.

A more deserving punishment would be to take them somewhere deep the the woods, tie them to stakes in the ground, cover them with honey and let the insects have a field day. Hopefully the insects will take their time and the death will be slow and very painfull.

20 posted on 09/11/2003 7:13:09 AM PDT by chiefqc
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To: ZULU
First offense: Remove one testicle (plus usual and customary jail time)

Second offense: Remove second testicle (plus usual and customary jail time)

Third offense: Well, I guess that wouldn't happen, now, would it?
21 posted on 09/11/2003 7:16:51 AM PDT by Eccl 10:2
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To: Eccl 10:2
Believe it or not, castration has not been shown to reduce significantly recidivism among rapists. I suppose neutering might do it, but castration doesn't.
22 posted on 09/11/2003 7:17:58 AM PDT by XJarhead
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To: wideawake
I'm thinking of the guy who drags a woman into an alley at knifepoint, not the frat brother who forgets to call the next morning.

Absolutely. We always think of rape being by some stranger, of some other ethnic persuasion, who stalked our wife and nailed her and we are lucky if she lived. Today's definition of rape is one stroke past when she claims she said she wanted to quit. You and I know the real reason, she acted like a slut, got drunk, got nailed, and feels ashamed the next day and then wants to define it as rape. Or is mad about the lack of a call. Real rape happens much much less the things that pass as rape.

23 posted on 09/11/2003 7:18:47 AM PDT by biblewonk (Spose to be a Chrisssssssstian)
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To: ZULU
Is it too harsh? NO!! It's too lenient.
24 posted on 09/11/2003 7:27:39 AM PDT by Cronos ('slam and sanity don't mix, ask your Imam.....)
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To: ZULU
I'd actually like to see corporal punishment (discomfort and pain) rather than the death penalty. The fact that there are so many murder/suicides suggests to me that many consider death an "escape" and an "escape" just doesn't seem like a suitable punishment to me. And from an entirely Christian standpoint, I think a criminal should be given as much time as they need or have to repent. I don't think they should enjoy that time, but I think they should be given it. I'd rather let God play God with people's souls.

But the real problem with executing rapists is that you remove the incentive for them to leave their victims alive. If a man who rapes an 8 year-old knows that he will face the death penalty for his crime, why shouldn't he kill and dispose of his victim to lessen his chances of being caught?

25 posted on 09/11/2003 7:57:00 AM PDT by Question_Assumptions
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To: ZULU
If conception occurs, the baby is usually executed. Why should the rapist not be punished in a like manner? This is why rape is a crime of the magnitude that should be punished by execution.
26 posted on 09/11/2003 9:21:34 AM PDT by TheDon (Tick, tock, tick, tock...the sound of the clock ticking down the time until Tom drops out.)
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To: ZULU
Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?

As a father of two, I don't have a problem with it.

27 posted on 09/11/2003 9:25:49 AM PDT by Jonah Hex (kittens are only dangerous if you're a 'Rat.)
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To: ZULU
Is Capital Punishment Too Harsh for Rapists?

Too lenient, rather.

Too quick.

28 posted on 09/11/2003 9:43:34 AM PDT by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle ("The Clintons have damaged our country. They have done it together, in unison." -- Peggy Noonan)
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