death penalty news

August 16, 2004


USA:

Medical groups seek end to death penalty for minors - Their legal brief is 
one of dozens filed by groups worldwide that call for a U.S. ban on this 
punishment.

The U.S. Supreme Court is considering the legality of sentencing children 
younger than 18 to death, and the American Medical Association, American 
Psychiatric Assn. and other medical societies are asking justices to put an 
end to the practice.

In a friend-of-the court brief filed in the case of a 17-year-old death-row 
inmate challenging his sentence, the medical groups say adolescents are 
less developed than adults and should not be held to the same standards.

"Our society understands the differences between adolescents and adults 
when it comes to driving, drinking alcohol and smoking, voting, and 
marriage," said Robert Weinstock, MD, a member of the APA's Committee on 
Judicial Action. "We are contradicting ourselves to deny these privileges 
to adolescents, yet still enforce the ultimate punishment on them -- death."

The medical associations argue that science has shown that adolescents -- 
even at age 16 or 17 -- underestimate risks and overestimate short-term 
benefits. Studies also have shown that teens are more emotionally volatile 
and more susceptible to stressful situations, they wrote.

"This court has held that executing a mentally retarded offender is 
unlikely to 'affect the cold calculus that precedes the decision of other 
potential murders,' " the brief states. "The same is true of older 
'adolescents' whose calculus weighs inputs -- particularly, future 
consequences -- differently from adults, and far differently from the 
cold-blooded adult murderer for whom the death penalty is reserved."

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case, Roper v. 
Simmons, in its term that begins in October. The court will decide whether 
to uphold the Missouri Supreme Court's decision that overturned Christopher 
Simmons' death sentence on the grounds that it violated the Eighth 
Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

The American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of Child 
and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 
National Assn. of Social Workers, Missouri Chapter of the National Assn. of 
Social Workers, and the National Mental Health Assn. also have signed on to 
the brief. Dozens of other organizations from around the world have weighed 
in on the case and are calling for the United States to ban the death 
penalty for minors.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Weblink

AMA brief filed in Roper v. Simmons, in pdf 
(www.abanet.org/crimjust/juvjus/simmons/ama.pdf)

(source: American Medical News)

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