Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ./DUMP-TEXT/1/25-utf8.txt
Encodage utilisé (INPUT) : UTF-8
Forme recherchée : ([Pp]eine de mort)|([Pp]eine capitale)|([Dd]eath penalty)|([Cc]apital punishment)|死刑
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- Ligne n°61 : Just or Not, Cost of Death Penalty Is a Killer for State Budgets
Ligne n°69 : ... That is the broad assessment of a growing number of studies taking a- Ligne n°70 : cold, hard look at how much the death penalty costs in the 35 states
Ligne n°71 : that still have it. ...
Ligne n°74 : ... any of the traditional arguments that have been part of the public- Ligne n°75 : debate over the death penalty. The new one is this:
- Ligne n°79 : "There have been studies of costs of the death penalty before, but we
Ligne n°80 : have never seen the same reaction that we are seeing now," says Richard ...
Ligne n°80 : ... have never seen the same reaction that we are seeing now," says Richard- Ligne n°81 : C. Dieter of the non-partisan Death Penalty Information Center.
Ligne n°82 : "Perhaps it is because governments are looking for ways to cut costs, ...
Ligne n°88 : ... issue. In each state there was a major shift toward rejection of the- Ligne n°89 : death penalty and narrow defeats for legislation that would have
Ligne n°90 : abolished it. In Connecticut, both houses actually voted in favor of a ...
Ligne n°93 : ... Unlike past debates over executions, the current battles are fueled- Ligne n°94 : largely by the costs the death penalty imposes on states. The numbers,
Ligne n°95 : according to the studies, are staggering. ...
Ligne n°110 : ... Since 1983, taxpayers in New Jersey have paid $253 million more for- Ligne n°111 : death penalty trials than they would have paid for trials not seeking
Ligne n°112 : execution — but the Garden State has yet to execute a single convict. ...- Ligne n°117 : A recent Duke University study of North Carolina's death penalty costs
Ligne n°118 : found that the state could save $11 million a year by substituting life ...
Ligne n°118 : ... found that the state could save $11 million a year by substituting life- Ligne n°119 : in prison for the death penalty. An earlier Duke study found that the
Ligne n°120 : state spent $2.1 million more on a death penalty case than on one ...
Ligne n°119 : ... in prison for the death penalty. An earlier Duke study found that the- Ligne n°120 : state spent $2.1 million more on a death penalty case than on one
Ligne n°121 : seeking a life sentence. ...
Ligne n°127 : ... It was much the same story in Kansas. A state-sponsored study found- Ligne n°128 : that death penalty cases cost 70 percent more than murder trials that
Ligne n°129 : didn't seek the death penalty. ...
Ligne n°128 : ... that death penalty cases cost 70 percent more than murder trials that- Ligne n°129 : didn't seek the death penalty.
Ligne n°131 : ... A Florida study found the state could cut its costs by $51 million- Ligne n°132 : simply by eliminating the death penalty.
Ligne n°138 : ... In fact, she says, the odds against being executed are so great, murder- Ligne n°139 : suspects in California actually seek the death penalty because it is
Ligne n°140 : the only way to get a single room in the state's prison system. ...
Ligne n°142 : ... "Only 1 percent of people sentenced to death in California in the last- Ligne n°143 : 30 years have been executed," Minsker said. "The death penalty in
Ligne n°144 : California is purely a symbolic sentence." ...
Ligne n°146 : ... Her study found that the cash-strapped state could immediately save $1- Ligne n°147 : billion by eliminating the death penalty and imposing sentences of life
Ligne n°148 : without parole. The alternative, if the cash-strapped state keeps the ...
Ligne n°148 : ... without parole. The alternative, if the cash-strapped state keeps the- Ligne n°149 : death penalty: spend $400 million to build a new death-row prison to
Ligne n°150 : house the growing number of prisoners. ...
Ligne n°160 : ... Will the economic slump and every state's need to cut budgets have an- Ligne n°161 : impact? Death penalty opponents say the recession has given their
Ligne n°162 : effort a new, non-political reason for abolition that resonates on both ...
Ligne n°164 : ... Presidential Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Utah and a- Ligne n°165 : death penalty expert, says that major changes are not likely to occur
Ligne n°166 : soon. ...
Ligne n°168 : ... "You can make the argument that it is cheaper not to have the death- Ligne n°169 : penalty" he said, but that is not what the death penalty is about.
- Ligne n°171 : The death penalty "provides a sense of justice to the system, is a just
Ligne n°172 : punishment for murder and has a deterrent effect on crime," he said. ...
Ligne n°176 : ... "Moreover," he said, "polls show that 70 to 80 percent of people- Ligne n°177 : support the death penalty. And that isn't going to change."
Ligne n°178 : * ...