On July 31, the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled to allow the state to execute incarcerated people by electrocution, firing squad, or lethal injection. The ACLU of South Carolina opposes the death penalty and urges state lawmakers to abolish the practice regardless of method.
“The death penalty has no place in our society or under our Constitution,” said ACLU-SC Executive Director Jace Woodrum. “Execution is a costly, ineffective form of cruel and unusual punishment that not only fails to make us safer but raises the possibility of the state killing innocent people in our name. In addition, South Carolina’s ‘shield law’ adds a layer of secrecy about the methodology of killing, making future executions less transparent than ever before.”
As part of an effort to build public understanding of the death penalty system and its harmful effects, the ACLU of South Carolina is currently suing the S.C. Department of Corrections over its uniquely draconian ban on news media interviews with incarcerated people.
We seek to publish an interview with Marion Bowman Jr., who resides on South Carolina’s death row in Columbia. As Mr. Bowman prepares to petition the governor to commute his sentence to life imprisonment, we want to share Mr. Bowman’s story in his own words. For more information about this ongoing lawsuit, see our case page for ACLU-SC v. Stirling.
The following are some basic facts about the modern death penalty:
Here are some more resources for understanding the death penalty:
The case against the death penalty (ACLU)
The Death Penalty: Questions and Answers (ACLU)
Wasteful & Inefficient: The alarming cost of the death penalty (Equal Justice USA)
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