uh Greg uh i'm i'm not familiar i think uh you guys in Indiana don't you have the the death penalty
yeah we do have the death penalty here it's not exercised very often but we do have it
uh-huh
i believe it i can't even remember the last execution we had here actually
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uh personally i'm in favor of capital punishment i know there's a lot of lot of problems with it but uh
um-hum
seems to me that some crimes are just so heinous that that the person just uh i feel doesn't deserve to live doesn't deserve for the tax payers to spend however many thousands of dollars it costs a year to keep them in in prison for life
right
uh i know there's a lot of problems with that like well they say okay if you declare someone put them on death row and execute them well then ten late years later you find out that he really didn't do it then that life was wasted but
um-hum
just seems like in some cases that it's a it's a good policy
um-hum uh i i tend to agree with you uh i've changed my views over uh even even within the last few years uh to be honest uh
uh when i was in college when i was an undergraduate i was a member of Amnesty International
uh-huh
and uh of course at that time you know i thought uh how it's it was stupid to kill anybody for uh you know that the eye for an eye was a stupid argument
right
but the uh
the more now i live in downtown Dallas and i uh you know i've seen uh i've seen cases on in the news and all where where you know uh a a
right
person who had murdered a person is back on the street and then commits another murder
right
i think that maybe a
a good solution to capital punishment might be uh reserve it solely for uh repeat offenders of a crime like uh murder
that's a that's a thought that i had never really had on that which which seems pretty sensible
yeah uh i
yeah it seems sensible and and fail-safe i uh i i don't you know not completely fail-safe but if a man's convicted of two murders uh you know there's a pretty good chance that something's wrong
right
uh
i also uh to tell you how liberal i have turned uh toward this or or or whatever side that is i've kind of chosen uh i believe that that uh
right yeah
big time drug importers like uh say Noriega for example these these people need to be uh eliminated uh
uh-huh
uh-huh
from society and i think i think the death penalty is the best choice for those people because uh really any kind of uh
uh jail sentence for them is just another chance to uh
create another power structure
yeah you're you're right there uh
you know the
i just basically my views i guess they tend to be more economically oriented in that i just
uh-huh
you you know they come out with these figures that it costs fifty thousand dollars taxpayer dollars a year to keep someone alive in jail when they're going to be there for life they're never going to be rehabilitated
right
right
i mean i don't believe that the prison system that we have today does much towards rehabilitation to begin with so to me i'm paying taxes you know twenty percent of my check or whatever
right
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to keep somebody alive who i in my mind shouldn't be there in the first place and is never going to be a valuable or worthwhile part of society so i i'm all in favor of it
um-hum
uh
do you uh are there cases where you think that that uh the capital capital punishment shouldn't be uh uh sentenced
well i i really don't know on that question it just seems like for instance the Jeffrey Dahlmer case i mean i i don't really think that this person is going to ever be a worthwhile part of society i hope the guy never gets back out on the streets
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and in that case Wisconsin doesn't have a death penalty so he's going to be sentenced to life imprisonment
right
and i think that that he should not be allowed to live but you know then you're kind of playing God which is never never a good thing to do but cases where i think the death penalty should be withheld
that's true yeah
right
uh not really that i can think of i i would i would be in favor of the death penalty in things like you know murders and like you said repeat murders or serial killers
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uh-huh
uh i don't really agree with the uh death penalty for people like Noriega and such as that i think that they're
they're operating on a more i mean i know that they're causing massive problems in society up here but i don't really think that that it's
it's in our power to take these people from a sovereign state and say you don't deserve to live because they're feeding our consumer needs
right
sure yeah i understand i understand your point
yeah uh of course you know with uh with with Dahlmer now uh you you realize that Ohio i think it's Ohio uh gets to try him next and they do have the death penalty
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yeah
yeah
so uh that was a curious case i
yeah yeah that is very curious
uh uh that was something is sort of nightmarish to say the least
yeah
that's that's right
uh well here in Texas we uh i think even even this last week
uh last week they had another they uh you know they use their capital punishment by lethal injection uh uh