Deck 20: The Death Penalty

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Question
The retribution argument for the death penalty is a moral argument.
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Question
The case law since Furman indicates capital punishment is legal as long as it is imposed fairly.
Question
The belief that execution of wrongdoers deters others from committing the crime reflects .

A) a moral belief
B) a utilitarian belief
C) an incapacitative belief
D) a restorative belief
Question
The number of people executed in the United States in the 1970s was a marked increase from previous decades.
Question
Recent evidence has determined that the death penalty does have a deterrent effect on crime.
Question
Although nearly 13 percent of people arrested for murder are women, judges and juries seem very reluctant to sentence women to death.
Question
The death penalty has been criticized for being immoral and an ineffective deterrent only since the 20th century.
Question
Insanity is a recognized defense for commission of a crime because mens rea is not present.
Question
In a democracy, public opinion usually has little to no impact on public policy.
Question
Individuals on death row tend to be poorly educated men from the middle class.
Question
Aggravated and mitigating circumstances are looked at during the sentencing phase of a bifurcated trial.
Question
The number of death sentences carried out has declined by more than half since the 1990s.
Question
A moral argument for the death penalty is that it deters people from committing crimes.
Question
The number of minorities on death row is proportional to their representation in the total population.
Question
According to opponents of the death penalty, capital punishment is applied in a discriminatory fashion.
Question
Use of the death penalty has dropped in recent years.
Question
Public executions were common until the 1830s, when most were moved inside prison walls.
Question
A person on death row who presents belated evidence of innocence is entitled to a new hearing in a federal court before execution.
Question
The belief that one who takes another's life deserves a punishment equal to the victim's fate is a argument.

A) moral
B) utilitarian
C) restorative
D) deterrence
Question
The case of McCleskey v. Kemp focused on racial discrimination under Georgia's death penalty law.
Question
Since 1976, the number of people facing the death penalty has .

A) declined
B) increased
C) stabilized
D) diminished
Question
In Atkins v. Virginia (2002), the Supreme Court ruled that .

A) executing the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
B) discrimination must be proven in each case
C) the death penalty is unconstitutional
D) bifurcated trials are constitutional
Question
The term refers to the idea that the punishment of execution will deter others from violent criminal activity.

A) incapacitation
B) retribution
C) deterrence
D) rehabilitation
Question
In Ford v. Wainwright, the Supreme Court ruled that should not be executed.

A) the insane
B) juveniles
C) veterans
D) disabled people
Question
Opponents of the death penalty argue that only has the right to take a life.

A) a victim
B) the survivor
C) the state
D) God
Question
Current case law indicates that capital punishment is legal as long as .

A) the voters of the state approve it
B) it is administered to deliver the least amount of pain
C) it is lethal injection and not electrocution
D) it is imposed fairly
Question
In polls, public support for capital punishment drops when .

A) crime rates go up
B) only whites are surveyed
C) standards of living increase
D) alternatives are presented
Question
The number of states without the death penalty has in recent years.

A) decreased
B) remained unchanged
C) increased
D) stabilized
Question
Research shows that the death penalty is more likely to be imposed when the .

A) convicted person is white
B) convicted person is African American
C) victim is white
D) victim is African American
Question
The term refers to the desire to keep the convicted person from committing further crimes.

A) reintegration
B) rehabilitation
C) incapacitation
D) retribution
Question
After 1935, the number of executions began to .

A) decline
B) soar
C) climb
D) stabilize
Question
In most parts of United States, executions were carried out in public until the .

A) 1750s
B) 1830s
C) 1870s
D) 1900s
Question
The term refers to the belief that one who takes another's life deserves punishment equal to the victim's fate.

A) incapacitation
B) retribution
C) rehabilitation
D) utilitarianism
Question
Which of the following countries has NOT abolished the death penalty?

A) France
B) Germany
C) Pakistan
D) Australia
Question
Until the mid-1700s criminal punishment in Europe and in American colonies focused on which of the following?

A) Mutilation
B) Whipping
C) Dismemberment
D) All of these are correct
Question
In most Western democracies, the death penalty has been .

A) streamlined
B) impartial
C) abolished
D) humanitarian
Question
The case of held that potential jurors who object to the death penalty cannot be automatically excluded from jury service in capital cases.

A) Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
B) Witherspoon v. Illinois (1968)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
D) Furman v. Georgia (1972)
Question
Because of the heinous nature of the crime, several states have sought to enact laws permitting use of the death penalty for adults who .

A) kill a child while drunk driving
B) rape a child
C) molest a child
D) neglect a child
Question
To try to ensure a more thorough deliberation before imposing the death sentence, legislatures enacted .

A) an oversight committee
B) a waiting period
C) a sentencing grid
D) a two-stage process
Question
The latest attempt to impose capital punishment in a way that does not offend modern cultural sensibilities is .

A) the gas chamber
B) the electric chair
C) lethal injection
D) the firing squad
Question
The Amendment protects against cruel and unusual punishment.
Question
Arguments against the death penalty are typically or utilitarian.
Question
__________ states and the federal government currently authorize capital punishment.
Question
Legal cases continue to raise concerns about the lengthy periods that condemned people spend on death row because of __________.
Question
Since 2000, many states have enacted a on capital punishment.
Question
The utilitarian argument in support of capital punishment is based on the belief that execution of convicted individuals
others from committing murder.
Question
The most common method used in executions in the United States today is .
Question
In , the Supreme Court ruled that juries, not judges, must make the crucial factual decisions as to whether a convicted murderer should receive the death penalty.

A) Roper v. Simmons (2005)
B) Atkins v Virginia (2002)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
D) Ring v. Arizona (2002)
Question
Individuals who oppose the death penalty argue that poor people and members of minority groups receive a
_____________ number of death sentences.
Question
Consular officials must be notified when a foreign national is .

A) arrested
B) executed
C) deported
D) exiled
Question
Most death penalty defendants are and are provided counsel by the state.
Question
In the United States, a recent poll indicated that percent of the population favors capital punishment.

A) 25
B) 40
C) 60
D) 75
Question
In Ring v. Arizona, the Supreme Court ruled that ___________ must make the factual decisions as to whether a convicted murderer should receive the punishment of death.
Question
In which case was it ruled that people cannot receive the death sentence if they were under 18 at the time of their crime?

A) Ring v. Arizona (2002)
B) Furman v. Georgia (1972)
C) McCleskey v. Kemp (1987)
D) Roper v. Simmons (2005)
Question
Retribution, incapacitation, and are usually cited as the reasons for keeping the death penalty.
Question
The case of Gregg v. Georgia decided that a court that was hearing a death penalty case must use a
system of judgment.
Question
In , the Supreme Court rejected a challenge on the grounds of racial discrimination to Georgia's death penalty law.

A) McCleskey v. Kemp (1987)
B) Atkins v. Virginia (2002)
C) Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
D) Ring v. Arizona (2002)
Question
In Furman v. Georgia (1972), the Supreme Court ruled that the way the death penalty was administered constituted
___________.
Question
In , the Supreme Court decided that a three-drug lethal injection protocol did NOT violate the "cruel and unusual punishment" clause.

A) Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
B) Strickland v. Washington (1984)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
D) Glossip v. Gross (2015)
Question
In , the Supreme Court ruled that the death penalty was itself not unconstitutional, but the way it was administrated constituted cruel and unusual punishment.

A) Furman v. Georgia (1972)
B) Glossip v. Gross (2015)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1972)
D) Atkins v. Virginia (2002)
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Retribution
Question
Describe the major arguments for and against the death penalty and the principles on which they are based.
Question
Imagine that you are a supporter of the death penalty, and you are attempting to convince someone who is opposed to it to see the issue from your standpoint. How would you support your position, from both a moral and utilitarian perspective? Be sure to address statistical data on deterrence in your answer.
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
Question
Describe the prevailing characteristics of people on death row, their crimes, and their victims. In what ways have their dispositions led to charges of racism against the criminal justice system?
Question
The biggest demographic predictor of attitudes toward capital punishment is .
Question
Discuss the ways in which public opinion about capital punishment has changed over time. What major factors account for the changes?
Question
Describe three of the constitutional challenges to capital punishment that have been brought to the Supreme Court, and the court's verdict and reasoning in those cases.
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Strickland v. Washington (1984)
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Atkins v. Virginia (2002)
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Bifurcated
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Mitigating
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Three-drug protocol
Question
In the case of Strickland v. Washington (1984), the Supreme Court ruled that defendants had the right to counsel that meets an "objective standard of ."
Question
Do you think that public support for the death penalty will be abolished in the United States in the foreseeable future?
Explain your answer.
Question
The number of people facing the death penalty in America has dramatically since 1976.
Question
In the case of Gregg v. Georgia (1976), the Supreme Court ruled that the sentencing judge or jury take into account specific aggravating and factors in deciding which convicted murderers should be sentenced to death.
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Aggravating
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Ring v. Arizona (2002)
Question
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Furman v. Georgia (1972)
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Deck 20: The Death Penalty
1
The retribution argument for the death penalty is a moral argument.
True
2
The case law since Furman indicates capital punishment is legal as long as it is imposed fairly.
True
3
The belief that execution of wrongdoers deters others from committing the crime reflects .

A) a moral belief
B) a utilitarian belief
C) an incapacitative belief
D) a restorative belief
B
4
The number of people executed in the United States in the 1970s was a marked increase from previous decades.
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k this deck
5
Recent evidence has determined that the death penalty does have a deterrent effect on crime.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Although nearly 13 percent of people arrested for murder are women, judges and juries seem very reluctant to sentence women to death.
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k this deck
7
The death penalty has been criticized for being immoral and an ineffective deterrent only since the 20th century.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
Insanity is a recognized defense for commission of a crime because mens rea is not present.
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k this deck
9
In a democracy, public opinion usually has little to no impact on public policy.
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k this deck
10
Individuals on death row tend to be poorly educated men from the middle class.
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11
Aggravated and mitigating circumstances are looked at during the sentencing phase of a bifurcated trial.
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12
The number of death sentences carried out has declined by more than half since the 1990s.
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13
A moral argument for the death penalty is that it deters people from committing crimes.
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14
The number of minorities on death row is proportional to their representation in the total population.
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15
According to opponents of the death penalty, capital punishment is applied in a discriminatory fashion.
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16
Use of the death penalty has dropped in recent years.
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17
Public executions were common until the 1830s, when most were moved inside prison walls.
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18
A person on death row who presents belated evidence of innocence is entitled to a new hearing in a federal court before execution.
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k this deck
19
The belief that one who takes another's life deserves a punishment equal to the victim's fate is a argument.

A) moral
B) utilitarian
C) restorative
D) deterrence
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20
The case of McCleskey v. Kemp focused on racial discrimination under Georgia's death penalty law.
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k this deck
21
Since 1976, the number of people facing the death penalty has .

A) declined
B) increased
C) stabilized
D) diminished
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
In Atkins v. Virginia (2002), the Supreme Court ruled that .

A) executing the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
B) discrimination must be proven in each case
C) the death penalty is unconstitutional
D) bifurcated trials are constitutional
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k this deck
23
The term refers to the idea that the punishment of execution will deter others from violent criminal activity.

A) incapacitation
B) retribution
C) deterrence
D) rehabilitation
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In Ford v. Wainwright, the Supreme Court ruled that should not be executed.

A) the insane
B) juveniles
C) veterans
D) disabled people
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k this deck
25
Opponents of the death penalty argue that only has the right to take a life.

A) a victim
B) the survivor
C) the state
D) God
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k this deck
26
Current case law indicates that capital punishment is legal as long as .

A) the voters of the state approve it
B) it is administered to deliver the least amount of pain
C) it is lethal injection and not electrocution
D) it is imposed fairly
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k this deck
27
In polls, public support for capital punishment drops when .

A) crime rates go up
B) only whites are surveyed
C) standards of living increase
D) alternatives are presented
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k this deck
28
The number of states without the death penalty has in recent years.

A) decreased
B) remained unchanged
C) increased
D) stabilized
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Research shows that the death penalty is more likely to be imposed when the .

A) convicted person is white
B) convicted person is African American
C) victim is white
D) victim is African American
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The term refers to the desire to keep the convicted person from committing further crimes.

A) reintegration
B) rehabilitation
C) incapacitation
D) retribution
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
After 1935, the number of executions began to .

A) decline
B) soar
C) climb
D) stabilize
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In most parts of United States, executions were carried out in public until the .

A) 1750s
B) 1830s
C) 1870s
D) 1900s
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The term refers to the belief that one who takes another's life deserves punishment equal to the victim's fate.

A) incapacitation
B) retribution
C) rehabilitation
D) utilitarianism
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which of the following countries has NOT abolished the death penalty?

A) France
B) Germany
C) Pakistan
D) Australia
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Until the mid-1700s criminal punishment in Europe and in American colonies focused on which of the following?

A) Mutilation
B) Whipping
C) Dismemberment
D) All of these are correct
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In most Western democracies, the death penalty has been .

A) streamlined
B) impartial
C) abolished
D) humanitarian
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The case of held that potential jurors who object to the death penalty cannot be automatically excluded from jury service in capital cases.

A) Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
B) Witherspoon v. Illinois (1968)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
D) Furman v. Georgia (1972)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Because of the heinous nature of the crime, several states have sought to enact laws permitting use of the death penalty for adults who .

A) kill a child while drunk driving
B) rape a child
C) molest a child
D) neglect a child
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
To try to ensure a more thorough deliberation before imposing the death sentence, legislatures enacted .

A) an oversight committee
B) a waiting period
C) a sentencing grid
D) a two-stage process
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The latest attempt to impose capital punishment in a way that does not offend modern cultural sensibilities is .

A) the gas chamber
B) the electric chair
C) lethal injection
D) the firing squad
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k this deck
41
The Amendment protects against cruel and unusual punishment.
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k this deck
42
Arguments against the death penalty are typically or utilitarian.
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k this deck
43
__________ states and the federal government currently authorize capital punishment.
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k this deck
44
Legal cases continue to raise concerns about the lengthy periods that condemned people spend on death row because of __________.
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k this deck
45
Since 2000, many states have enacted a on capital punishment.
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k this deck
46
The utilitarian argument in support of capital punishment is based on the belief that execution of convicted individuals
others from committing murder.
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k this deck
47
The most common method used in executions in the United States today is .
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k this deck
48
In , the Supreme Court ruled that juries, not judges, must make the crucial factual decisions as to whether a convicted murderer should receive the death penalty.

A) Roper v. Simmons (2005)
B) Atkins v Virginia (2002)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
D) Ring v. Arizona (2002)
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Individuals who oppose the death penalty argue that poor people and members of minority groups receive a
_____________ number of death sentences.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Consular officials must be notified when a foreign national is .

A) arrested
B) executed
C) deported
D) exiled
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Most death penalty defendants are and are provided counsel by the state.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
In the United States, a recent poll indicated that percent of the population favors capital punishment.

A) 25
B) 40
C) 60
D) 75
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
In Ring v. Arizona, the Supreme Court ruled that ___________ must make the factual decisions as to whether a convicted murderer should receive the punishment of death.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
In which case was it ruled that people cannot receive the death sentence if they were under 18 at the time of their crime?

A) Ring v. Arizona (2002)
B) Furman v. Georgia (1972)
C) McCleskey v. Kemp (1987)
D) Roper v. Simmons (2005)
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
55
Retribution, incapacitation, and are usually cited as the reasons for keeping the death penalty.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
The case of Gregg v. Georgia decided that a court that was hearing a death penalty case must use a
system of judgment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
In , the Supreme Court rejected a challenge on the grounds of racial discrimination to Georgia's death penalty law.

A) McCleskey v. Kemp (1987)
B) Atkins v. Virginia (2002)
C) Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
D) Ring v. Arizona (2002)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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58
In Furman v. Georgia (1972), the Supreme Court ruled that the way the death penalty was administered constituted
___________.
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59
In , the Supreme Court decided that a three-drug lethal injection protocol did NOT violate the "cruel and unusual punishment" clause.

A) Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
B) Strickland v. Washington (1984)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1976)
D) Glossip v. Gross (2015)
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60
In , the Supreme Court ruled that the death penalty was itself not unconstitutional, but the way it was administrated constituted cruel and unusual punishment.

A) Furman v. Georgia (1972)
B) Glossip v. Gross (2015)
C) Gregg v. Georgia (1972)
D) Atkins v. Virginia (2002)
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61
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Retribution
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62
Describe the major arguments for and against the death penalty and the principles on which they are based.
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63
Imagine that you are a supporter of the death penalty, and you are attempting to convince someone who is opposed to it to see the issue from your standpoint. How would you support your position, from both a moral and utilitarian perspective? Be sure to address statistical data on deterrence in your answer.
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64
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Ford v. Wainwright (1985)
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65
Describe the prevailing characteristics of people on death row, their crimes, and their victims. In what ways have their dispositions led to charges of racism against the criminal justice system?
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66
The biggest demographic predictor of attitudes toward capital punishment is .
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67
Discuss the ways in which public opinion about capital punishment has changed over time. What major factors account for the changes?
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68
Describe three of the constitutional challenges to capital punishment that have been brought to the Supreme Court, and the court's verdict and reasoning in those cases.
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69
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Strickland v. Washington (1984)
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70
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Atkins v. Virginia (2002)
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71
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Bifurcated
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72
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Mitigating
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73
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Three-drug protocol
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74
In the case of Strickland v. Washington (1984), the Supreme Court ruled that defendants had the right to counsel that meets an "objective standard of ."
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75
Do you think that public support for the death penalty will be abolished in the United States in the foreseeable future?
Explain your answer.
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76
The number of people facing the death penalty in America has dramatically since 1976.
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77
In the case of Gregg v. Georgia (1976), the Supreme Court ruled that the sentencing judge or jury take into account specific aggravating and factors in deciding which convicted murderers should be sentenced to death.
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78
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Aggravating
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79
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Ring v. Arizona (2002)
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80
Match each item to the phrase or sentence listed below.
a. Ruling that required an objective standard of reasonableness for defense counsel
b. Circumstances that increase seriousness of crime
c. A moral argument for capital punishment
d. Ruling that execution of the developmentally disabled is unconstitutional
e. Execution method developed in the late 1970s
f. Separate hearings for guilt and sentencing
g. Ruling that the execution of the mentally ill is unconstitutional
h. Circumstances that invite mercy
i. Ruling that only juries should decide whether to implement the death penalty
j. First ruling that the death penalty is constitutional if it is not administered in a cruel and usual fashion
Furman v. Georgia (1972)
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.