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Actor Stephen Collins Says Death Penalty for 'Politicians Who Like to
Sound Tough'
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Stars gathered for the "Death Penalty Focus’s 18th Annual Awards
Dinner" at Hollywood’s Universal Studios last month to honor New
Mexico ’s Governor Bill Richardson with the 2009 Humanitarian Award.
Founded in 1988, Death Penalty Focus is dedicated to the abolition of
capital punishment. FOXNews.com talked to "7th Heaven" star Stephen
Collins there about the controversial topic.
The Iowa-born actor/writer, who, by the way, is the great-great-great
grandson General James Baird Weaver, the 1880 Greenback Party
presidential candidate and the 1892 Populist Party candidate for
president, is a long-time contributor to the organization.
FOX: What is your stand on the death penalty?
Stephen Collins: It doesn't work. It's expensive, most people don't
know that it costs more to execute a person than it does to put them
in prison for life, so for people who say I'm not going to pay money
to feed prisoners, it strangely enough is economically sound. But
we're also one of two countries in the entire Western civilized world
who have the death penalty, and there's so much research that shows
the victims families don't end up feeling better because of it. I
don't know who ends up winning with the death penalty, except
politicians who like to sound tough.
FOX: What do you believe the solution is?
Stephen Collins: I'm old fashioned and I believe in rehabilitation. I
also believe that there is too much evidence that shows we've
executed people wrongly, and people who say ‘well that's the price we
have to pay,’ no, we don't have to pay this price. America and South
Africa are the only two western nations to execute people. Why do we
have to pay that price? Why do we have to pay the price for being
wrong occasionally?
I used to do some work with a group that taught meditation at San
Quentin prison and it was very interesting to close your eyes and
meditate with people on death row. There was a guy there that was in
for life, a famous prisoner named Geronimo Pratt, and he was
basically framed for murder, he was a Black Panther who they framed,
and he was in prison for 22 years before he got out, and much of that
in lockdown, and we do make mistakes. At least Geronimo Pratt is
alive and he's out. It’s horrible that he had to spend that much time
behind bars, but he wasn't executed.
FOX: What about all of the talk about whether Jesus would have
supported capital punishment?
Stephen Collins: The death penalty solves nothing except a kind of
understandable but misguided sense of justice and vengeance, and
certainly Jesus never says anything about executing people. I go to
church, I'm a Christian. I think it’s interesting that so many
political Christians support the death penalty when Jesus Christ
never says a single, slight word about putting people to death, never
even slightly. I don't know where they're coming from as Christians.
I don't understand.
FOX: Can we make progress on this issue?
Stephen Collins: People are saying prisons are crowded and there
aren't too many states that are under budget, so we need to reexamine
the dollars we are spending to indulge our lust to put people to
death. It is interesting to see the states just missed a referendum
in Colorado, but [the death penalty] has been overturned in a couple
of states, and most of my life, the death penalty wasn't with us. If
we could point to the last 25 years and say ‘Yeah the death penalty
is really working’? It was always in my gut and troubled me. As a
Christian it troubles me, and Christ did not advocate putting people
to death for any reason.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,527223,00.html