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Biden Fails a Death Penalty Abolitionist’s Most Important Test

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The mystery of Joe Biden’s views about capital punishment has finally been solved. His decision to grant clemency to 37 of the 40 people on federal death row shows the depth of his opposition to the death penalty. And his decision to leave three of America’s most notorious killers to be executed by a future administration shows the limits of his abolitionist commitment. The three men excluded from Biden’s mass clemency—Dylann Roof, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, and Robert Bowers—would no doubt pose a severe test of anyone’s resolve to end the death penalty. Biden failed that test.

Nevada | Perspective of the death penalty by a prison doctor

This opinion column was submitted by Karen Gedney, MD, former senior physician for the Nevada Department of Corrections.

I never thought about the death penalty until I was asked to write for the drugs to execute ‘Bud’ Thompson in 1989. I had only been a prison doctor for the Nevada Department of Corrections for two years. I was informed it was my "job," and they were not pleased when I told them I would not do it. Not only did I think it morally wrong for a doctor to take part in killing someone, the stories that my German mother told me about the Nazis and "just following orders" ran through my mind.

Some of you might not know that there is a bill, AB 395, going before the legislature to abolish the death penalty and retroactively reduce existing death sentences to life without parole. It has been said that the more you know about the death penalty, the more you want it to be abolished. Did you know that Nevada has the second highest number of inmates on death row per capita than any other state, and the death penalty costs Nevada twice as much as a case where the death penalty is not sought?


If you think that the death penalty deters violent crime, you are mistaken. Violence and heinous acts are driven by emotion, not logic. Eighty-eight percent of the top U.S. academic criminological society presidents reject the notion that the death penalty deters murder.

Did you know that 25% of the individuals on death row have a severe mental illness or brain damage? Or how racially biased the death penalty is where African Americans comprise 37% of the death row in Nevada when their population is only 9.5%?


I’m sure you’ve heard about innocent individuals on death row who have spent decades in prison, like Paul Browning, who was released in 2020 after two decades on death row in Nevada for a crime he didn’t commit. According to a 2016 study carried out by Harvard University’s Fair Punishment Project, 47% of the death penalty cases in Clark County, Nevada have been found to have severe prosecutorial misconduct.


If those reasons are not enough to sway you to tell your legislators to abolish the death penalty in Nevada, learn more about it, and you will.

Source: Reno Gazette Journal, Karen Gedney, March 30, 2021. Karen Gedney, MD is author of "30 Years Behind Bars: Trials of a Prison Doctor."


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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

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