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Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

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Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Supreme Court Justice Argues World Opinion Matters on the Death Penalty

The U.S. Supreme Court
The U.S. Supreme Court
Should the Supreme Court care that other countries have abolished the death penalty?

That looming question animates Justice Stephen Breyer’s “The Court and the World,” a brisk but academic book that argues that it is relevant for the nation’s top judges to consider what other countries’ legal systems have decided when faced with difficult issues.

“If someone with a job roughly like my own, facing a legal problem roughly like the one confronting me, interpreting a document that resembles the one I look to, has written a legal opinion about a similar matter, why not read what that judge has said?” writes Breyer, who was appointed by President Clinton in 1994. “I might learn from it, whether or not I end up agreeing with it.”

It’s not an academic question. In recent years, members of Congress have harshly criticized justices for citing foreign courts, with one former member even suggesting it could be grounds for impeachment. Meantime, the court is narrowly divided on the death penalty, an issue where the United States bucks the trend of other advanced democracies toward abolition.

In 284 pages, Breyer explores the history of justices looking to foreign courts, the influence of America’s legal system on the world, the increase in legal questions over international agreements and the role of judges in spreading American influence.

But the heart of the book is an 11-page chapter defending the court’s citation of foreign cases. And while Breyer mentions cases involving consumer safety, desertion and gay rights, that section of the book returns again and again to court decisions on the death penalty.

That’s because one of the arguments for the court to ban the death penalty in the United States is that it violates the constitutional prohibition on “cruel and unusual punishment.” For Breyer, who called the death penalty“capricious, random, indeed arbitrary” in a dissent earlier this year, foreign practices help show how unusual it is.


Source: TIME, Ryan Teague Beckwith Sept. 14, 2015

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