Find Articles in Magazines

 Sections
Current Issues
The Arts
Life
Natural Science
Culture
Book World
Modern Thought
 Additional Resources
 
 
An Unjust Punishment?: The Juvenile Death Penalty
Section: MODERN THOUGHT / YOUTH CRIME AND JUVENILE JUSTICE
Author: Victor L. Streib
Publication: The World & I Online
Issue Date: 4/1/1990
Size: 3,345 Words, 19,658 Characters

Paula Cooper, an articulate, attractive college-correspondence student at age twenty, can barely remember the impulsive fifteen-year-old she was when she and three friends committed a brutal murder. Bounced around from school to school, Paula had been repeatedly abused by her parents and was personally adrift in a Gary, Indiana, ghetto. After her unexplainable emotional explosion resulting in the murder, Paula was convicted and sentenced to die in Indiana's electric chair - an adult sentence for an adult crime committed by a child. That sentence was reversed shortly before Paula's twentieth birthday, but the alternative given her was sixty years in prison. Even at her earliest parole date, this blossoming woman-child will be on Social Security before she is released from prison.

Dalton Prejean may not be so lucky. He has turned thirty while sitting on Louisiana's death row, awaiting execution for murdering a policeman when he was a drunken seventeen-year-old. Dalton also was abused as a child, is mildly retarded, and has lived a tumultuous life. In 1974, at age fourteen, he killed a taxi driver and was sent to a reform school for three years. Dalton was out of reform school only six months when he murdered the state police officer. Louisiana seems determined to execute Dalton, having come within a few hours of doing so on November 19, 1989. But the U.S. Supreme Court granted yet another stay so that the case can be reviewed one more time. Meanwhile, Dalton waits.

HISTORY AND MAGNITUDE OF THE JUVENILE DEATH PENALTY

Paula and Dalton are just two of the approximately seventy-five offenders sentenced to death in the 1980s for crimes committed while under age eighteen. Such sentences represent less than 3 percent of the total death sentences imposed during that decade. Since earliest colonial days, probably several thousand juveniles have been sentenced to death.

As rare as juvenile death sentences ha...


Read Full Article

Low Discount Magazine Prices at MagazineCity.com! ...a complete cure in a short time, since no one knows how long it will take. Unfortunately, no one now has the cure for violent juvenile crime. However, many believe that the death penalty for juveniles has been given a long trial period and has been found wanting. Its societal costs are enormous, and it delays our search for a rational and acceptable means of reducing violent juvenile crime.



(1,990 of 19,658 characters)
 

Publication Details (The World & I Online)
The World & I Online is a comprehensive academic resource that encompasses a broad range of articles by scholars and experts in the areas of Global Studies, Liberal Arts, Fine & Applied Arts, General Science, and Spanish. Originally published monthly in print as The World & I, our site includes the complete contents since 1986 and continues to publish a new issue online each month.
Ordering by Internet  
College Orders (based on full-time enrollment)
  Site License
      - Up to 999 Students
      - 1,000 to 4,999 Students
      - 5,000 to 9,999 Students
      - 10,000 or More Students
  Limited Access
      - Economy (5 computer accesses)
      - Individual (1 computer access)
Public Library Orders
  Site License
      - Up to 50 Computers
      - 51 - 100 Computers
      For over 100 computers, call 866-211-6040.
  Limited Access
      - Economy (5 computer accesses)
      - Individual (1 computer access)
 
 Search by Issues
2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001
2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986  

Copyright 2008 Articles In Magazines.