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August 13, 2007
As the cold-blooded July 9 fatal shooting of Police Officer Russel
Timoshenko turns the spotlight once again on New York state's death
penalty debate, it's important to note that it's not just self-interest
that compels most New York City police officers to support capital
punishment for cop killers — and many to want it even for
attempted cop killers. They're thinking not only of themselves
but also of the other potential victims whose lives convicted murderers
can claim.
Arguments focusing on deterrence, while not irrelevant, fail
to address another important consideration — the safety of
the humans who come into contact with homicidal career-criminals
as they serve out their sentences of life without parole.
Someone desperate enough to gun down a New York City police officer
poses a permanent threat to, among others, attorneys, court officers
and even fellow inmates. There are cases where judges have been
murdered by defendants in their courtrooms.
Correction officers are also vulnerable. A case in point was Donna
Payant, an intelligent and devoted mother of three who served the
public as a correction officer at Green Haven Correctional Facility
in Stormville, N.Y. In May 1981, an inmate who was serving three
consecutive life terms for a brutal double-murder lured Payant
into the prison chaplain's office, strangled her with a thin cord
and dumped her body in the prison garbage. She is by no means the
only example.
When and if convicted, the men who killed Officer Timoshenko
and tried to kill his partner, Officer Herman Yan, will have nothing
to look forward to and nothing left to lose except their lives.
As such, they are prime candidates to become prison predators.
Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes has clearly stated his
opinion that this case is not eligible to be prosecuted as a federal
capital crime. But this is a discussion we shouldn't even be having.
Let's protect society, including law enforcement and other criminal
justice personnel in and out of correctional facilities, by writing
and enacting a state death-penalty law that will withstand constitutional
scrutiny, something the current in-limbo statute has been unable
to do. The legislatures in 37 other states have accomplished that
goal. Surely the Empire State's lawmakers are up to the task.
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