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Old 03-02-2005, 03:33 PM
Peaches-n-Cream Peaches-n-Cream is offline
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The five were Stevens, Souter, Breyer, Bader Ginsberg, and Kennedy. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justice Clarence Thomas joined Scalia in seeking to uphold the executions.

Quote:
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor filed a separate dissent, arguing that a blanket rule against juvenile executions was misguided. Case-by-case determinations of a young offenders' maturity is the better approach, she wrote.

"The court's analysis is premised on differences in the aggregate between juveniles and adults, which frequently do not hold true when comparing individuals," she said. "Chronological age is not an unfailing measure of psychological development, and common experience suggests that many 17-year-olds are more mature than the average young 'adult.'"
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp..._death_penalty

I just happened to attend a lecture about the death penalty last night so this decision was a major topic.
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