Quotes by Law Enforcement
Issue quote: Robert DelTufo, on Fairness - Testimony before the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission. September 13, 2006
...being selected as a defendant for a capital case is as random and serendipitous as being struck by lightning.
— Robert DelTufo, former Attorney General of New Jersey
Issue quote: Martin Franz, on Fairness - Cleveland Plain Dealer. May 7, 2005
Our criminal justice system doesn’t always mete out justice and fairness in neat little packages – sometimes it’s a little rough. It’s not something you can compute with a calculus or with any kind of certainty as to who belongs and who doesn’t on death row.
— Martin Franz, prosecutor, Wayne County, Ohio
Issue quote: William Sessions, on Indigent Defense
When a criminal defendant is forced to pay with his life for his lawyer’s errors, the effectiveness of the criminal justice system as a whole is compromised.
— William Sessions, former FBI Director under Ronald Reagan
Issue quote: James Abbott, on Cost - James Abbot, “Less money, more pain and injustice,” Fort Worth Star Telegram. January 20, 2
As a police chief, I find this use of state resources offensive... Give a law enforcement professional like me that $250 million, and I'll show you how to reduce crime. The death penalty isn't anywhere on my list.
— Chief James Abbott, Police Chief and former death penalty supporter, West Orange, NJ
Issue quote: Sterling Goodspeed, on Cost
I think I could prove to you that I could put someone in the Waldorf Hotel for 60 to 70 years and feed them three meals a day cheaper than we can litigate a single death penalty case.
— Sterling Goodspeed, former District Attorney, Warren County, NY
Issue quote: Norm Stamper, on Cost - Norm Stamper, "Death penalty wastes money, while failing to reduce crime," San Jose Mercury
Spending all this money on the death penalty might be worth it - if it actually made our communities safer. But it doesn't… Our communities would be exponentially better off by reinvesting the time, money and resources we spend on trying to get a few people executed into crime prevention measures that work.
— Norm Stamper, Former Seattle Police Chief
Issue quote: Patrick Murphy, on Cost - Patrick Murphy, “Defending Leonard Hamm, opposing the death penalty,” Baltimore Examiner.
The state can protect many more officers at a fraction of the cost by adding police, providing the best protective equipment available, and implementing effective policing programs known to reduce crime. The death penalty is simply a distraction from the real issues surrounding public safety.
— Patrick Murphy, Former Detroit And New York City Police Commissioner
Issue quote: Robert M. Carney, on Cost - Testimony before the New York State Assembly Codes, Judiciary, and Correction Committe
Continuing to spend millions of dollars to take a murder defendant who has already been caught and subject him to death rather than life without parole will not prevent the next murder. Redirecting money to more vigorously apprehend and prosecute armed robbers, rapists, burglars, and those who commit gun crimes will prevent murders and save lives.
— Robert M. Carney, Schenectady, NY District Attorney
Issue quote: Jim Davidsaver, on Public safety - Jim Davidsaver, “Community Columnist: Death penalty comes down to dollars, cents
I have experienced countless violent crime scenes... Of the accused murderers my fellow officers and I have brought to justice, I do not believe any of them was deterred in the least by Nebraska’s death penalty.
— Police Sergeant Jim Davidsaver, 20-year veteran of the Lincoln Police Department
Issue quote: Jim Willet, on Secondary trauma - Washington Post. May 13, 2001
Sometimes I wonder whether people really understand what goes on down here and the effect it has on us. Killing people, even people you know are heinous criminals, is a gruesome business, and it takes a harsh toll… I have no doubt it’s disturbing for all of us. You don’t ever get used to it.
— Jim Willet, former warden, Huntsville, Texas, who oversaw 89 executions
Issue quote: Jim Willet, on Secondary trauma
A new set of victims is created among the family members of the condemned who watch. I wondered most about the mothers who saw their sons being put to death. Some would just wail out crying. It’s a sound you’ll never hear any place else, an awful sound that sticks with you.
— Jim Willet, former warden, Huntsville, Texas, who oversaw 89 executions
Issue quote: Steve Dalsheim, on Secondary trauma - Washington Post. February 12, 2005
There was this big old-line officer, a well liked fellow, and he oversaw the executions. Afterwards he’d get very, very drunk and not come in for several days. It’s terrible, terrible – I get very emotional thinking about it. I certainly don’t like terrorism or murder but there has to be a better way than putting men to death.
— Steve Dalsheim, former superintendent, Sing Sing Prison, New York
Issue quote: Ron McAndrew, on Secondary trauma - Testimony before the Montana House Judiciary Committee. March 25, 2009
I saw staff traumatized by the duties they were asked to perform. Officers who had never even met the condemned fought tears, cowering in corners so as not to be seen. Some of my colleagues turned to drugs and alcohol to numb the pain of knowing that a man had died by their hands. I myself was haunted by the men I was asked to execute in the name of the State of Florida. I would wake up in the middle of the night to find them lurking at the foot of my bed.
— Ron McAndrew, former warden, Florida State Prison, who presided over eight executions
Issue quote: Calvin Lightfoot, on Public safety - Personal interview with EJUSA.
I've been in this system for over 40 years. I’ve been held hostage and been through multiple prison riots. If someone told me that the death penalty would protect me as a corrections officer, I would be offended. Safety inside prisons depends on proper staffing, programming, and effective reintegration of inmates back into society. The death penalty does not safeguard anybody.
— Calvin Lightfoot, former Maryland Secretary of Public Safety and Correctional Services
Issue quote: Ron McAndrew, on Cost - Testimony to the Montana House of Representatives Judiciary Committee. March 25, 2009
The very notion that we need the death penalty to keep prisons safe is both professionally and personally offensive. I don’t believe there is a single qualified prison warden in this country that wouldn’t trade the death penalty for more resources to keep his or her facility safe. The death penalty system is just a drain on those resources, and it serves no purpose in the safety of the public or prisons.
— Ron McAndrew, former warden, Florida State Prison, who presided over eight executions
Issue quote: John Connor, on Cost - John Connor, “Death penalty drains justice system resources,” Billings Gazette. March 22, 20
A well-managed prison with proper classification and staffing can create incentives for lifers to behave while segregating and punishing those who are a threat before violence ever occurs... Prison safety depends on proper staffing, equipment, resources and training. Certainly the money spent on trying to put someone to death for over 20 years could find better use in addressing those practical needs of our correctional system.
— John Connor, former chief special prosecutor for the state of Montana for 21 years, prosecuting five death penalty cases involving prison homicides
Issue quote: Scott Harshbarger, on Public safety - Letter to the Montana House Judiciary Committee. March 16, 2009
Eliminating the death penalty will have no negative impact on community, police, victim, or prison safety. It will not hinder the prosecutorial capacity to seek, or the court’s ability to impose, ‘life without parole’ sentences for serious, heinous crimes and criminals.
— Scott Harshbarger, former District Attorney and former Attorney General of Massachusetts, which has no death penalty
Issue quote: Edward Defazio, on Pleas - Rudy Larini, "A year later, state assesses justice without death penalty," New Jersey St
We have not viewed [abolition] as an impediment in the disposition of murder cases…As a practical matter, we have really seen no difference in the way we conduct our business in prosecuting murder cases.
— Edward Defazio, Prosecutor, Hudson County, NJ, noting that prosecuting cases and securing guilty pleas was not any more difficult since NJ repealed the death penalty
Issue quote: Chief James Abbott, on Cost - Fort Worth Star Telegram, January 20, 2008
The death penalty throws millions of dollars down the drain – money that I could be putting directly to work fighting crime every day – while dragging victims' families through a long and torturous process that only exacerbates their pain.
— Police Chief James Abbott, who changed his mind about the death penalty after serving on the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission
Issue quote: 47 CA law enforcement officers - Letter to the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice signed b
A trial seeking life without parole is far speedier than a death penalty case and costs far less. By pursuing life without parole sentences instead of death, resources now spent on the death penalty prosecutions and appeals could be used to investigate unsolved homicides, modernize crime labs, and expand effective violence prevention programs.
— Letter signed by 47 California law enforcement officials, March 28, 2008
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