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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Aikens v. California, Furman v. Georgia, Jackson v. Georgia, and Branch v. Texas Motion for Leave to File Brief Amici Curiae and Brief Amici Curiae in Support of Petitioners, 1971. 155e6920-ac9a-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/cb15c84a-756e-4152-8a2b-9c55eda220a7/aikens-v-california-furman-v-georgia-jackson-v-georgia-and-branch-v-texas-motion-for-leave-to-file-brief-amici-curiae-and-brief-amici-curiae-in-support-of-petitioners. Accessed April 08, 2025.
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IN THE Supreme ©mart 0! Up United States October Term, 1971 E arnest J ames A ikens, J r., Petitioner y. V No. 68-5027 State oe California J- No On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of California W illiam H enry F urman, Petitioner State of Georgia No. 69-5003 On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Georgia Lucius J ackson, Petitioner v. State of Georgia } No. 69-5030 On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Georgia E lmer Branch, Petitioner y, V No. 69-5031 State of Texas } On Writ of Certiorari to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE BRIEF AMICI CURIAE AND BRIEF AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS [Amici Curiae and attorney listed on inside cover] P ress of B yron S. Adams P rinting, Inc., W ashington, D. C. 9 H on. E dmund 6 . Brown H on. David F . Cargo H on. E lbert N. Carvel H on. Michael Y. D iSalle H on. P hillip H. H ope H on. Theodore B. McK eldin H on. E ndicott P eabody H on. Grant Sawyer H on. Milton J . Shapp By Michael V. D i Salle 425 - 13th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20004 (202)-393-3300 Attorney for Amici Curiae October, 1971 INDEX Page M otion for L eave to P ile B rief A m ici C u r ia e ..............1-M B rief A m ici Curiae in S upport of P e t it io n e r s ............ 1 Interest of Amici C uriae........................................... 1 Summary of Argum ent............................................. 2 Argument ............ 3 The Death Penalty Is a Cruel and Unusual Punish ment Prohibited by the U. S. Constitution....... 3 Conclusion .................. 16 IN THE i>uprrmr Court of tijr luitrd Stairs October Term, 1971 E arnest J ames A ikens, J r., Petitioner y. State of California No. 68-5027 On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of California W illiam H enry F urman, Petitioner y. State of Georgia No. 69-5003 On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Georgia Lucius J ackson, Petitioner ") v. V No. 69-5030 State of Georgia J On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Georgia E lmer Branch, Petitioner y. State of Texas No. 69-5031 On Writ of Certiorari to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE BRIEF AMICI CURIAE The movants hereto, Hon. Edmond G, Brown, former Governor of California, Hon. David E. Cargo, former Governor of New Mexico, Hon. Elbert N. Carvel, 2-M former Governor of Delaware, Hon. Michael V. DiSalle, former Governor of Ohio, Hon. Philip H. Hoff, former Governor of Vermont, Hon. Theodore B. McKeldin, former Governor of Maryland, Hon. Endicott Peabody, former Governor of Massachusetts, Hon. Grant Sawyer, former Governor of Nevada and Hon. Milton J. Shapp, Governor of Pennsylvania, hereby respectfully move for leave to file the attached brief amici curae in this case The consent of the re spondent, the State of Georgia, the respondent, the State of California, and the respondent, the State of Texas, was requested but, was refused by all. The interest of the foregoing individuals in this case arises from the fact that they are all presently or were formerly Governors in states where the death penalty is authorized by law, and in their official capacity as governors of their varied states have had intimate torturous experience with the death penalty. While scholarly research and judicial logic can ex plore the application of theoretical bounds of the Con stitution to the concept of capital punishment, these amici are uniquely qualified through personal experi ence to advise the court of the cruel and unusual nature of the death penalty. Each of these men has been in the position of sitting in final human judgment over the life of another human being; more final than that of the sentencing judge who had the knowledge that execu tive clemency might relieve him of the burden of taking another man’s life; more final indeed, than the decision of this honorable Court. Each of these amici have wit nessed the cruelty of the years-long suffering imposed upon the condemned, and the unusualness of the pun ishment in its discriminatory application to the poor, the ignorant, and the unpopular. Each can provide an 3-M additional dimension to the question now before the court which counsel can only begin to suggest. The brief of amici curiae is timely presented. Although time for filing briefs of the parties has passed, this Court has postponed consideration of these cases pending appointment of two additional Justices. The gravity of the question before the court, the finality (but for executive clemency) of its decision in these cases, and the fact that the court will neither be incon venienced nor delaj^ed due to the postponement of argument and decision in these cases, all suggest the propriety of the granting of this motion and the consideration by this Court of the brief amici curiae. W herefore movants respectfully request that this honorable Court grant leave to file the attached brief Amici Curiae in support of petitioners. Respectfully submitted, H on. E dmund Gf. B eown H on. D avid F . Cargo H on. E lbert N. Carvel H on. M ichael V. D i S alle H on. P h il ip H. H ope H on. T heodore R. M cK eldin H on. E ndicott P eabody TIon. Grant S awyer H on. M ilton J. S happ B y M ichael Y. D i Salle 425 - 13th Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20004 (202)-393-3300 Attorney for Amici Curiae October, 1971 IN THE ^upvnm (Emirf of tlfr United October Term. 1971 E arnest J ames Aikens, J r., Petitioner 'J y. I No. 68-5027 State of California J On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of California W illiam H enry F urman, Petitionerv. State of Georgia No. 69-5003 On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Georgia Lucius J ackson, Petitioner 1 Y. I- No. 69-5030 State of Georgia J On Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Georgia E lmer Branch, Petitioner 1 v. L No. 69-5031 State of Texas J On Writ of Certiorari to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals BRIEF AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE The subscribers to this brief are men who in their official capacity as Governors of their various states, 2 have had intimate, torturous experience with the death penalty. They are Hon. Edmund G. Brown, former Governor of California, Hon. David E. Cargo, former Governor of New Mexico, Hon. Elbert N. Carvel, former Governor of Delaware, Hon. Michael Y. Di- Salle, former Governor of Ohio, Hon. Philip H. Hoff, former Governor of Vermont, Hon. Theodore R. Mc- Keldin, former Governor of Maryland, Hon. Endicott Peabody, former Governor of Massachusetts, Hon. Grant Sawyer, former Governor of Nevada and Hon. Milton J. Shapp, Governor of Pennsylvania. Not until one has watched the hands of a clock mark ing the last minutes of a condemned man’s existence, knowing that he alone has the temporary Godlike power to stop the clock, can he realize the agony of deciding an appeal for executive clemency. SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT The death penalty is not a deterrant to those who would willfully take the life of another. History has repeatedly shown that people who actually witnessed public legal executions were often those who were later convicted and executed for similar offenses. The con verse is also true. In places where the death penalty has been abolished, there has been no rise in the num ber of willful homicides committed. Capital punishment is a relic of barbarism, and the sadism of earlier societies’ methods of execution is nonetheless present, even though modern “ more hu mane” methods may dispatch the convicted more quickly. The life-for-a-life principal of penology satis fies nothing but a lust for revenge which is degrading to the fabric of our society. 3 Legal execution is unconstitutionally cruel because it leaves no room for redemption and rehabilitation and subjects the condemned to years of terror on death row, until reprieve after reprieve, false hopes raised and dashed, and witness to others on death row going to a final doom which is uncertain for them only as to date, finally drives the condemned beyond the point of madness. The punishment of execution is unusual in its appli cation because among those found guilty of willfull homicide, it is generally the poor, 'the ignorant and the politically unpopular who suffer its consequences. In 1965, with 9,850 homicides committed, there were seven executions; in 1966, one, and since then, none. Those selected for execution appear chosen at random from among the unprivileged, with no rational method of applying the death penalty to those who, by legislation, are subject to it. ARGUMENT The Death Penalty Is a Cruel and Unusual Punishment Prohibited by the U.S. Constitution Generally, the people who sit in death row waiting to know whether the Governor will permit them to live or to die, follow a uniform pattern. They are men and women who generally have not had the finances necessary to enlist the services of the peculiarly tal ented counsel so essential in manning this type of defense. They are generally unschooled, often illiter ate, many times mentally inadequate, and frequently the result of local hysteria which cries for a vengeance that is extremely fleeting. They are the exception rather than the ride. It seems that somewhere, some one believes that the execution of one man among the 4 hundreds that are charged with willful homicide will serve as an example or a deterrent to society. Is it a deterrent? Three Presidents of the United States had been assassinated before John Fitzgerald Kennedy was shot down in Dallas. All of their assassins died. Booth, who shot Lincoln, was killed while trying to escape his pursuers; his accomplices were hanged. Garfield’s assassin, a disappointed office seeker, was executed. So was the anarchist who shot McKinley. Did this deter the men who took pot-shots at Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, or Harry S. Truman ? All of the previous examples did not deter Lee Harvey Oswald. The fact that Oswald was killed by Jack Ruby should have served to satisfy those who were seeking vengeance. Instead, the killing of Oswald by Jack Ruby produced intense indignation on the part of our citizens. But if we say that Ruby as an in dividual should not seek revenge, should we, as a people, seek it collectively? To emphasize the futility of the death penalty as a deterrent, we might briefly review the case of Charles Justice. Justice was sentenced in 1902 to the Ohio State Penitentiary after a cutting scrape. He was assigned as a trusty to the housekeeping duties of the death house. In those days, the electric chair was considered inefficient. Since it was too large for the small, nervous type of prisoner, it would cause him to squirm in his seat and cause the electrodes to make imperfect contact. As a result, the powerful current would arc between the electrodes and the doomed man’s body, causing flesh burns and an unpleasant odor which discommoded the witnesses and officiating rep resentatives of the state. Charles Justice corrected 5 this deficiency by designing iron clamps which are still in use. They immobilized the limbs of the condemned man during his death reflexes and thus made for a neater execution. For his service to Ms state, Charles Justice was granted extra time off and was paroled in April, 1910. In November of the same year, Justice returned to the penitentiary, the charge; murder in the first degree. On October 27, 1911, undeterred Charles Justice died in the electric chair he had made more lethal, im mobilized by the clamps he had invented. How cruel is cruel? Capital punishment is a relic of barbarism. The Lord Chief Justice of England wondered if the death penalty might not be a trifle severe in view of the prisoner’s age. The trial judge argued against mercy on the grounds that William York’s punishment would be an example deterring others from a life of crime. So William York was hanged for stealing a shilling from the man to whom he was apprenticed. He was ten years old. The place was London. The time was 1748. Britain has come a long way along the road to civ ilization in the two centuries since the hanging of William York. In October 1965, not only the House of Commons, but the usually stuffy House of Lords, with a surprising two-to-one majority, voted to abolish the death penalty for a test period of five years, which will probably prove permanent. Tins enlight ened legislation, although still behind most of Western Europe’s, is far ahead of the United States’, and marks a definite global trend. Capital punishment is a relic of barbarism, it is immoral, it usurps for society the exclusive privilege of natural laws, it is futile because it does not deter 6 the homocidal criminal, and its finality precludes any possibility of correcting an error. The eye-for-an-eye, life-for-a-life concept of pen ology is obviously based on the degrading principle that society, in punishing the criminal, is seeking re venge rather than justice. The strong strain of sadism that rims through a vindictive .society’s clamor for a wrongdoer’s blood is evident in the fact that until rather late in this century (in the Western world, at least) the execution of the condemned has been some thing of a spectator sport. The executioners of the Far East have been far more inventive in their spectacular cruelty than any 20th Century Western country, with the possible ex ception of Nazi Germany. The Chinese, of course, have long been recognized as leaders in the field, with their boiling in oil, leisurely dismemberment (The Hundred Slices) and similar refinements. The Mogul, emperors of India, however, should be recognized for their in genuity in dispatching criminals as well as for their building of such monuments as the Taj Mahal. Im palement, for instance, was very popular (except with the victims) in 17th Century Delhi. The man to be put to death by impalement (possibly for stealing a mango or a handful of roasted chick peas from the Emperor Aurangzeb’s palace kitchens) was paraded naked past the eager spectators to the killing grounds, where a sharpened stake of heat- tempered bamboo had been erected. Two men, each holding one of the prisoner’s bound arms, would lift him clear of the ground while a third separated the buttocks so that when the culprit was lowered briskly, the bamboo lance would penetrate the rectum as far as the sigmoid flexure. The executioners could then 7 step back and join the delighted crowd in watching the dance of death as the screaming' wretch writhed and pirouetted on his tiptoes in an effort to stay the inexorable progress of the murderous bamboo through his vitals. When sheer exhaustion and loss of blood finally forced the thief to his knees, the point of the bamboo stake pierced his heart and the show was over. Justice—or something-—had been done. The early Siamese did pretty well in the way of spectacular capital punishment by throwing their criminals to the crocodiles. This possibly gave the Romans the idea of throwing Christians to the lions, although the Romans got better exposure by building huge stadia for their lionization carnivals. This may have been an improvement over the earlier Roman form of capital punishment by crucifixion (in itself an im provement over the crude Jewish practice of lapidation, with no strictures as to who was to throw the first stone), but it was a failure as a deterrent to the spread of Christianity. The ancient Greeks, with their more temperate and philosophic civilization, did not feel it necessary to borrow from the annals of Oriental cruelty in ex terminating their undesirables and nonconformists. A quiet cup of hemlock did away with the lawless and the contumacious without fuss, feathers or cheering crowds. The Greek example, however, did not deter the rest of Europe from linking justice with sadism. Spain during the Inquisition made notable advances in the field of cruel and unusual punishment with the rack, the wheel, flaying alive and burning at the stake, al though the popularity of auto-da-fe spread to other countries. Even today, although Spaniards have 8 managed to transfer most of their hostilities to the brave bulls, the Franco government, perhaps out of sentimental longing for the good old days, still retains garroting as an official form of capital punishment. Only a few years ago—August 17, 1963, to be exact—- two men found guilty of terrorist bombing were garroted in Madrid. Awakened at dawn to be fitted with adjustable steel collars, they were slowly strangled to death. The collars were tightened until eyes bulged and faces purpled, tightened still more until the wind pipe was collapsed. The two men were then given the coup de grace by the points of the tightening screws emerging cleverly from inside the backs of the collars to pierce the cervical vertebrae and crush the spinal cord. Decapitation, once a popular form of capital pun ishment throughout the world, is now used sparingly despite an attempt by the Nazis to revive it during their brief but memorable rule of Schrecklichkeit. It was originally done by hand—wit h scimitar or cleaver in the East, with broadsword or ax in the West. Punitive head chopping was legally automated, how ever, as early as the 18th Century. The guillotine came into use in the early years of the French Revo lution. Curiously, this lethal instrument, which be came a symbol of the Reign of Terror, was originally suggested as a humane method of obviating the suf fering attendant to executing the death penalty. Dr. Joseph Gruillotin, a professor of anatomy appalled by the bloody extravagances of the French Revolution, carried on a campaign to humanize necessary killing, but resented the fact that his name was attached to the killing machine which he did not invent. Actually, the first “ guillotine” was devised by Dr. Antoine 9 Louis, and was called, by contemporaries in Ms honor, a Louisette. I t consisted—and still consists—of a trapezoidal knife weighing more than a hundred pounds, which drops ten feet between guide rails and slices on the bias through the neck of the condemned man who lies prone beneath it, Ms head immobilized by stock-like clamps. The severed head drops into a suitable container, while the body is rolled into a basket. It was Dr. Gfuillotin’s theory that this method of putting a man to death was the most compassionate, because the victim would feel nothing except perhaps a brief sensation of cold at the nape of his neck. Whether there is any intervening pain or the reali zation on the part of the severed head of its impossible position has never been confirmed or denied by any of the victims. Executions by guillotine took place in a public square in Paris as late as 1939. The scaffolding and the weighted knife would be erected the night before, and although the accused died at dawn, there were al ways crowds on hand to be edified, if not deterred from crime, by the spectacle of the spurting carotid arteries, the ghastly surprised expression on the de tached face, the reflex flopping of the headless body. Whether or not there was any appreciable deterrent effect, the grisly ritual is today privately performed behind the walls of La Saute prison on the Left Bank of the Seine. Public hangings were abolished in England in 1868. At that time capital crimes numbered only a dozen, down from 200 in 1820. It is likely that the public spectacle was discontinued then because a royal com mission had reported two years earlier that the death 10 penalty, even when witnessed by potential criminals, was no deterrent. The commission’s report found that of the 167 persons executed in 1866, 164 had previously watched a hanging. This is not surprising, as the public executions used to attract huge erowuls, and the crowds would attract dozens of pickpockets intent on plying the very trade for which the center of at traction was being hanged. Public hangings persisted in America beyond the cutoff date in England, particularly in the Ear West. The more spectacular forms of legal brutality were not practiced, however, even in the earlier Colonial days. There were, of course, occasional unofficial and nonintegrated autos-da-fe in some of the deeper parts of our Deep South, a practice that has carried over well into this century. But even the witches of Salem were not burned at the stake; they were decently hanged. Crimes calling for the death penalty, however, were almost as numerous in Colonial America as in con temporary England. In 1636 hanging was the penalty in the Massachusetts Bay Colony for witchcraft, idol atry, blasphemy, assault in anger, murder, sodomy, buggery, statutory rape (the death penalty was op tional for forcible rape), perjury in a capital case and rebellion. The Old Dominion of Virginia ranked the degree of criminality according to race, color and current condition of servitude. Seventy crimes were listed as capital for Negro slaves, but only five for whites. It was inevitable that an emerging nation like the United States, aspiring to world leadership in science and invention and the practical application thereof, would sooner or later abandon hanging for a modern, 11 efficient, scientific and more “ humane” method of legal murder. In 1880 the state of New York abolished the gallows in favor of a newfangled “ electric chair.” Thirteen years later a man named Kemmler lost his court battle to have the new monster declared uncon stitutional as “ cruel and unusual punishment,” and became the first man to be punished electrically for his misdeed—an ax murder. The contraption was a success technically, since it killed Kemmler, but the humanity of the experiment was doubtful. Either the machine misfunctioned or the executioner did some thing wrong. There was considerable searing of flesh and the human guinea pig apparently died in agony. Techniques have been improved in the 70-odd years since, and it is now generally agreed that death by electrocution is practically painless. While patho logists still argue over the exact mechanics of death by electricity—some believe the heart muscles are par alyzed; others are just as certain that paralysis of the respiratory centers causes death by asphyxia— most of them concede that the victim loses conscious ness almost instantly. The tremendous electrical surge raises the temperature of the body to the boding point and sears the brain to insensibility in a fraction of a second. The jerking and writhing that nauseate wit nesses are not signs of a death struggle but purely re flex reactions of the muscles to an electrical impulse. An expert hanging is also supposed to extinguish consciousness at the end of the drop. The snap of the rope grown taut theoretically breaks the neck and severs the spinal cord. The frantic kicking, the jerk ing arms, the ejaculation of sperm in men, are all un conscious nervous reflexes. Of course there have been many bungled hangings—defective traps, ropes that 12 broke, inexpert knots that merely choked the man to death. There is a record of an early English hanging of a half-starved female criminal who dropped through the trap and dangled at the end of the rope, eyes bulging with dread, because she was not heavy enough —she was a small 12-year-old girl—for the fall to break her neck. The hangman had to go down the 13 steps, grab her legs and add his weight to hers to carry out the sentence. In 1921 the Nevada state legislature came up with the latest contribution to the fine art of killing crim inals. It was not only scientific, quick and efficient; it introduced a new ‘£humane” note: I t would elimi nate the torture of apprehension. Poison gas would be introduced without warning into the cell of the condemned man while he was asleep. He would die peacefully, and nobody’s conscience need be disturbed by witnessing a death struggle. When a murderer named Gee Jon was sentenced to this new-style death three years later, it happily occurred to someone that the bars of Gee Jon’s cell could hardly be expected to contain the lethal gas intended exclusively for Gee Jon’s gentle extinction. Bather than risk exterminat ing the entire population of the penitentiary, instead, the penal authorities postponed the historic execution until a special gas chamber could be built. Mne states besides Nevada now poison their capital criminals with gas. The best-known gas chamber of them all is California’s, perhaps because Caryl Chess man died there after a legal fight that lasted 12 years. Chessman had a long record of charges against him, but the one for which he was finally executed was that of forcing a girl to move from one car to another at gunpoint. This is technically kidnaping in Cali- 13 fornia and is punishable by death under California’s “ Little Lindbergh Law.” Because there were many newsmen among the 60 witnesses who came to San Quentin for Chessman’s execution, millions read descriptions of how a man dies by inhaling poison gas. I t is a death not much dif ferent, they found, from hanging or electrocution. Looking through glass panels of the hermetically sealed gas chamber, the reporters saw the doomed Chessman enter and without hesitation sit down in the death chair, watch without expression while his arms and legs were strapped down. A clutch of cyanide “ eggs,” poised above a tub of acid beneath the chair, was released by remote control. As the fumes rose to shroud the prisoner, his eyes bulged, his head jerked, he gagged and gasped as he seemed to be struggling against the straps. In two minutes his long jaw sagged and his body slumped. According to medical men, the gaseous cyanide de rivatives are neurotoxins that attack the nerve centers and paralyze the cardiac and respiratory functions at the first deep whiff. The signs of a desperate death struggle, apparently the symptoms of great suffering, are again nothing more than unconscious reflexes. So what is the meaning of all this scientific progress that we in America have made in the centuries and centuries since the boiling in oil, the crucifixions and the hanging of little children? We have perhaps re duced the coefficient of suffering to within a fraction of a second of the instantaneous extinction of the guillotine, which the late Albert Camus described as “ a crude surgery [without] any edifying character whatever.” We have reduced our lust for public blood-letting to boxing (which is becoming more and 14 more bloodless), auto racing and professional football. We no longer feed our wrongdoers to the crocodiles or invite VIPs to public hangings, as was the custom in Arizona, but we still kill our criminals in three quarters of our American states. We are far ahead of the rest of the world in the scientific technique of legal killing, but we are at least a century behind in the sociological, psychological, economic and humani tarian approach to the problem of crime and punish ment. Why do we still kill our killers'? Do we imagine that we are doing justice, with no thought of vengeance ? Do we think we are eradicating crime1? Are we de luding ourselves that by snuffing out the lives of our misfits, our nitwits and our psychopathic personalities (who, our psychiatrists hasten to add, are not con genital psychopaths), are we creating a better world for ourselves? Do we really think that punishment will prevent crime, that killing murderers will prevent murder ? Where do we draw the line? I t is certain that we would consider the Oriental methods of execution cruel. We would consider other methods that have since been tried cruel. Does death by a firing squad or gas or electricity become less cruel because these methods are used in the name of law and order in the free democ racy of the United States of America ? The actual act of execution is not only cruel in and of itself, but it is more than cruel if we are to contemplate the days and the nights of a man who is awaiting execu tion in the name of society by a soverign state. This usage of cruelty and cold-blooded premeditated murder is certainly a poor example of the humanity of a civilized people. 15 Is capital punishment unusual? In the year 1966, one person was executed by the 37 states still retaining the death penalty. In the year 1965, with 9,850 homo- cides committed, there were 7 executions. Year after year the number of men convicted of homocide and sentenced to life continues to increase in every state penitentiary where capital punishment is a part of the law. The number of persons executed even before the unofficial moratorium of 1967 has been gradually decreasing which makes the use of the death penalty more and more unusual. I t is the person who com mits the crime in an aroused community who is exe cuted. I t is the person without proper legal repre sentation. I t is the person without financial resources. More and more the world has given recognition to the sacredness of life. Seventy-three countries have abolished the death penalty as well as 13 states of the United States. Yet, in no instance has there been an eruption of crime. For example, Michigan, which has not had capital punishment since 1947, over a period of years has had a lower rate of homocide than its adjoining states. The same is true with Maine, Rhode Island, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota. Often the death penalty is used as an excuse for not doing those things that should be done, such as improving corrections, developing a sounder approach to rehabilitation, and providing a more modern parole system. I t seems almost unbelievable that in the year 1971 there should be continued reliance on the destruc tion of an occasional life with all its self-demeaning consequences. This is truly an instance where the Su preme 'Court of the United 'States speaking on behalf of the Constitution of the United States could restore justice to all. 16 CONCLUSION For the reasons stated, the judgments of the Courts below should be reversed. Respectfully submitted, H on. E dmund G. B rown H on. D avid E . Cargo H on. E lbert N. Carvel H on. M ichael Y. D i S alle H on. P h il ip Id. H ope H on. T heodore R. M cK eldin H on. E ndicott P eabody H on. Grant Sawyer H on. M ilton J . S happ By M ichael Y. D i Salle 425 - 13th Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20004 (202)-393-3300 Attorney for Amici Curiae October, 1971