Capital Punishment
"I
should like to have every court begin, 'I beseech ye in the bowels of
Christ, think that we may be mistaken.'"
Just.
Learned Hand - 1951
On a prima facie basis, capital punishment is patently
constitutional. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments both specifically
guarantee that government cannot deprive any person of "life,
liberty or property, without the due process of law." By direct
inference, therefore, the converse must be true, as well. Any person
can be deprived of life, liberty or property with the
due process of law. Many opponents to capital punishment contend that
the death penalty is inherently unconstitutional because it is
uniquely corporeal and, hence, violates the Eight Amendment's
prohibition against "cruel and unusual punishments." The
Eighth Amendment does not define the phrase "cruel and unusual
punishments," however. Therefore, a prohibition against
corporeal punishment can only be inferred from it indirectly. Direct
inference is always a stronger argument than indirect inference. For
example, if the word "life" in the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments had been replaced by the phrase "life or limb," it
would necessarily follow that punishment by amputation would be
permissible constitutionally. Since it was not, amputation can be
presumed to be a violation of the Eighth Amendment's prohibition
against cruel and unusual punishments. In determining
constitutionality, explicit permission or prohibition is always a
stronger argument than direct inference, which in turn is always a
stronger argument than indirect inference, which in turn is always a
stronger argument than silence.
Thus, capital punishment is constitutionally permissible if the
due process of law has been maintained. Yet, it is within the
contemporary application of due process by American jurisprudence
that the imposition of this method of punishment becomes
fundamentally unconstitutional. In addition to being uniquely
corporeal, the execution of an individual is also uniquely
irreversible. As long as people are human, they will make mistakes.
When a mistake occurs in a court of law, it is a miscarriage of
justice. Despite the best efforts and intentions of the judge, the
jury, the prosecution, the defense and the police, innocent people
may be convicted and guilty ones may be exonerated. Although the
frequency of injustices may be debated, their occurrence cannot be
disputed. Because erroneous convictions can be rescinded in every
facet of criminal jurisprudence except in capital punishment, the due
process of the law in capital cases should include the application of
a correspondingly unique standard of evidentiary proof. In specific,
because the punishment meted out by the death penalty is absolutely
immutable, the verdict that imposes it should contain a corresponding
degree of accuracy in order to ensure that the due process of law in
capital litigation possesses the ethical validity necessary to ensure
its constitutionality. Thus, the novel aspect of capital punishment
that mandates a comprehensive revision of its application pertains
not to the moral repercussions of inflicting cruel punishments but
rather to the ethical imperative of the due process of law. Since the
irreversible nature of capital punishment is unique within the
construct of American jurisprudence, the application of the due
process of law that is required for the imposition of the death
penalty by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments should be unique, as
well.
Because the death penalty either necessitates or permits a direct
appeal to the state's highest court in every state that permits
this form of punishment, this appellate process establishes a higher
standard of accuracy in capital cases than exists in other types of
criminal cases. Nevertheless, it is simply insufficient to justify
the absolute irrevocability of human execution. In short, a more
rigorous standard of evidentiary proof should be adopted in the
adjudication of capital cases. The inalienable human right of liberty
can be revoked ethically with an unreasonable degree of doubt or
uncertainty in the veracity of the verdict; the inalienable human
right of life, however, cannot.
A fundamental principle included in the modern definition of
substantive due process is that ethical convictions and punishments
cannot violate the natural rights of the individual. As the Eight
Amendment's prohibition against the infliction of "cruel and
unusual punishments" exemplifies, the tenet that the punishment fit
the crime is a venerated bulwark of substantive due process. Hence,
the syllogism becomes clear. If the nature of the punishment is
irrevocable and if the ethicality of irrevocable punishments is
predicated upon total verity, then it follows logically that the only
ethical application of the death penalty should be predicated upon
absolute exactitude. Hence, a guilty verdict in a capital case cannot
be permitted to contain any scintilla of doubt whatsoever, regardless
of the plausibility of that doubt, for it to retain its functional
validity within a civilized society. Guilty verdicts in capital cases
that do not meet this elevated standard of evidentiary proof, that
are not uncontrovertibly accurate, violate substantive due process,
and hence, the punishments that they inflict are unconstitutional
contraventions of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.
What Can We Do?
Congress might consider revising the definition of the due process
of law in capital litigation because its ethical application is
essential to legitimize the imposition of the death penalty within a
civilized and democratic society. The rationale for this revision
might be demonstrated most efficaciously by examining those
possessions protected by the due process of law as enumerated by the
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. By considering these possessions in
the reverse order in which they are listed in these amendments (i.e.
property, liberty and life), the evidentiary standard that the due
process of law mandates in order to determine culpability evinces a
graduated threshold of proof clearly:
Issues pertaining to the possession of property are
resolved by civil litigation, and the burden of proof in civil
cases is "the preponderance of the evidence."
Issues pertaining to the possession of liberty are resolved
by criminal litigation, and the burden of proof in criminal
cases is "beyond a reasonable doubt."
Therefore, it is reasonable presume that the next
logical step in this escalating degree of evidentiary proof might
read as follows:
Issues pertaining to the possession of life are resolved by
capital litigation, and the burden of proof in capital cases
could rise to "beyond all possible doubt."
Graphically, these differences could be
represented as follows:
Issue
|
Litigation
|
Evidentiary
Standard
|
Property
|
Civil
|
The
Preponderance of the Evidence
|
Liberty
|
Criminal
|
Beyond
a Reasonable Doubt
|
Life
|
Capital
|
Beyond
All Possible Doubt
|
This elevated burden of proof implies that the penalty of death
could be applied only when mentally competent defendants acknowledge
their guilt in open court during the sentencing phase of capital
litigation. In combination with the veracity of incontrovertible
physical evidence or unimpeachable testimonial evidence required to
prove criminal culpability beyond a reasonable doubt, this admission
in open court could become the sole method of ascertaining guilt
beyond all possible doubt. If defendants denied their guilt, or were
mentally handicapped to the point that they did not understand the
lethal consequences of their confessions, the penalty of death could
not be imposed without violating the protection of substantive due
process guaranteed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The net
result of the adoption of this method of adjudicating capital cases
would provide convicted murderers with a choice between life in
prison or death by execution as a punishment for their crimes,
thereby obviating a reoccurrence the fiasco of the execution of Gary
Gilmore in 1977. Finally, the recantation of a defendant's confession
at any time prior to the execution of a death sentence might cast
some degree of doubt upon the veracity of that verdict. Thus, even if
the doubt created by this recantation is infinitesimally small and
highly implausible, the threshold of absolute certainty would not be
met, and that offender's sentence could be commuted to life in
prison without the possibility of parole.
In conclusion, Congress could revise the US Code to stipulate that
capital litigation should be considered to be as different from
criminal and civil litigation as they are from each another and
should be adjudicated accordingly. As implied by the doctrine of
substantive due process, therefore, these different types of
litigation should differ in kind, not merely in degree. Because of
its uniquely irreversible nature, no doubt whatsoever, reasonable or
unreasonable, should be permitted to exist when a person's life may
be extinguished by the due process of law. Therefore, the only
ethical application of due process in capital cases would be to raise
the evidentiary standard in litigation that may result in the death
of the defendant to an infallible level, i.e. absolute certainty. If
fallible human beings, regardless of the conferral of any public
authority, are to assume a divine role in determining matters of
human mortality, they should possess at least the same amount of
information as the divinity possesses before doing so. To presume
omnipotence without omniscience is an act of flagitious hubris.
|