Plea For Life

Words: 781
Pages: 4

The Plea for Life “The time has come, these dark, cold walls serve as witness for my sentence. Anxiously I await for the tall figures to enter once again, one last time, and put an end to my existence. Sweaty, shaky hands are guided by chains to the last room I’ll ever be in, to the last breath I’ll ever take. Repentance overflows my being, but it’s too late now, the sharp venomous needle has found its way to my skin.” Many debates and controversies have been linked to capital punishment and people’s opinion regarding it. My goal in this paper is to inform the reader about the death penalty and describe why people are for and against it. In order to be sentenced to the capital punishment the prisoner must first be found guilty of a murder. …show more content…
As it was stated in the Declaration of independence, everyone has the right of life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. With the death penalty people are being deprived of their freedom of life. While at the same time their civil liberties are being violated, “The Eighth Amendment prohibits excessive bail, excessive fines, and cruel and unusual punishments” (The White House). Taking life from a human being is no doubt a cruel punishment. Those that are for the death penalty argue that this law protects and makes justice for the victims family. Imprisonment is expensive and people wonder why they have to pay for the needs of in inmates in prison, “When teenage killers are convicted and put in prison for life, society must pay to feed and house them for fifty, sixty, seventy, or more years. Death penalty supporters say this is too much to ask” (Day 32). They claim the unfairness of feeding a murderer. The family of the victims that have been murdered by an individual also endure many suffering and depressions. When a loved one's life is suddenly taken away the family go through the five stages of grief, “Like all survivors of loss, co-victims of homicide struggle with the range of normal reactions to grief, such as denial, shock, confusion, anger, guilt, powerlessness, depression, and a desperate search for understanding and meaning” (Gross). The family will want justice to be served and in the process will suffer immense