Law in Contemporary Society

A Pragmatic Criminal Justice System

-- By StephenRushin - 15 May 2009

Introduction

Beliefs in retribution and utilitarianism play competing and complementary roles within our criminal justice system. When I first entered law school, I perceived our criminal justice system as a tool for carving our proportional punishment for dangerous criminal offenders. After reflecting on the last year, I have no doubt that our criminal justice system is far too focused on punishing harms with proportional retribution, when we should instead focus on administering punishment that best serves the social welfare. The purpose of the justice system should not be adherence to the nebulous concepts of fairness and equality, but pragmatically protecting society through smart penalties and criminal rehabilitation.

Why Should We Focus on Social Good Over Retribution?

The concepts of social good and retribution are not inherently conflicting. In fact, in many cases a proportionally retributive punishment that matches the harm inflicted can protect society by deterring future criminals, and removing potentially dangerous individuals off the streets. Nevertheless, it is virtually impossible to judge the relative guilt, blameworthiness, or dangerousness of an offender without imagining how it feels to be in her shoes. An example of this can be seen in The Queen v. Dudley and Stephens, where the seemingly ritualistic insistence on administering a trial parallels the conflict between retribution and social good.

Stephens, Dudley and Brooks were, almost certainly, not a threat to other people within English society. Their actions were taken from a position of extraordinary hardship and out of absolute necessity in order to save their own lives. There is no doubt that if they had not taken Richard Parker’s life, they would have died. There is also no doubt that if they had waited, Richard Parker would have died.

The English court does not appear to be hoping to serve the social good by prosecuting Stephens and Dudley; almost any person in the same situation in the future will probably do whatever is necessary to stay alive, regardless of the legal precedent. Ultimately, though, the court seems to operate the belief that the justice system must punish men for the ultimate result of the actions, serving a formalistic view of justice. Although this is an older example, we can still see this focus on retribution at the expense of social welfare today, in our criminal justice system, from the use of victim impact statements in death penalty case, to the punishment requirements for certain offenders such as drunk drivers.

Alcoholism and Drunk Driving: A Case Study of Social Welfare Over Retribution

While working in the Texas Legislature two years ago, I had a casual discussion to Texas State Senator John Whitmire, the Chair of the Senate’s Criminal Justice Committee. I had read reports about Whitmire’s support for some highly questionable criminal justice measures, so I was curious how he would like to see our justice system change in the future. His answer took me off guard; Whitmire told me that the most important change that Texas could make to save money and serve justice is to lessen the penalty for drunk driving. His argument was simple: It just doesn’t make sense to focus on retribution at the expense of protecting society. The State of Texas spent millions of dollars each year incarcerating convicted drunk drivers for years at a time. And all the while, convicted drunk drivers in Texas are suspect to a variety of programs such as impounding their automobiles and requiring ignition locks, but rarely does the state mandate alcohol rehabilitation. As a result, the level of recidivism among convicted drunk drivers is extraordinarily high.

The solution, according to Whitmire, is to stop demonizing drunk drivers with harsher penalties, and instead focus on alcohol rehabilitation to prevent drunk driving in the future. It seemed like a simple solution, but one that he said he could never publicly support.

“It would be political suicide,” he suggested.

And I knew exactly why such a measure was unimaginable. Working in another office at the Texas Capitol, I had met with my fair share of advocacy groups such as Mother’s Against Drunk Driving. There is a strong emotional appeal presented by these types of organizations, advocating for harsher punishment for certain types of criminal offenders. Politicians hope to appear tough on crime by deterring future criminals with harsher penalties. Perhaps the death penalty in my home state of Texas is a stark reminder of how a focus on retribution can lead to highly questionable, and irreversible penalties.

The Death Penalty as the Ultimate Retributive Punishment

The death penalty stands as the ultimate example of an unnecessary, immoral, arbitrary, and permanent penalty offered by our criminal justice system. And yet for a penalty so final, there seem to be very few justifications premised on social good. The death penalty does not bring back those we have lost. It does not protect society from dangerous criminals anymore so than life imprisonment. And the death penalty costs substantially more in taxpayer money than life-imprisonment, without the possibility of parole. The only reasonable justification for the death penalty is that we as a society believe that it either deters future, would-be murders, or it serves some type of retributive goal. Unfortunately, evidence is mounting that the deterrent effect of the death penalty is highly questionable.

The death penalty represents the ultimate bastion of retribution, and our justice system allows for this seemingly arbitrary process to go on through mechanisms like secret jury deliberations and victim impact statements. And in the end, a certain segment of our population pays the ultimate price for such a fixation on retribution.

# * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, StephenRushin

Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of that line. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated list

Navigation

Webs Webs

r2 - 01 Jun 2009 - 23:07:01 - StephenRushin
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM