
2020: All the Measures on Your Primary Ballot, Explained
Feb 22, 2020 - 19:03
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
In our final episode before Election Day, we talk about the death penalty, which California voters will have a chance to end this year or reform. Proposition 62 would end the death penalty in California. Proposition 66 w...
Grappling With Death on Your Ballot is an episode from San Diego Decides by Voice of San Diego by Voice of San Diego. In our final episode before Election Day, we talk about the death penalty, which California voters will have a chance to e...
This episode belongs to San Diego Decides by Voice of San Diego.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Oct 31, 2016, 41:13 long, audio available.
In our final episode before Election Day, we talk about the death penalty, which California voters will have a chance to end this year or reform. Proposition 62 would end the death penalty in California. Proposition 66 would try to speed up appeals of death penalty verdicts, which could result in quicker executions or exonerations. (If both pass, the one with the most votes takes effect.) First Sara Libby and I talk with Mike and Penny Moreau, whose son Tim was murdered in Oregon in 1990. They discuss that horrible case and the moral dilemma they faced before they cast their votes this year on the two death penalty measures. On the one hand, philosophically, they think itâs wrong to kill somebody else. On the other, they have seen the criminal justice system up close and found there is some value in the death penalty. They talk about a practical benefit of the death penalty: It can provide leverage for prosecutors. Their sonâs killers took plea deals to avoid a death penalty trial. As part of those deals, they agreed to help authorities look for Timâs body, which they had buried in the woods. (They were unsuccessful; Tim has not yet been found.) âThatâs when we got interested in what impact hanging over someoneâs head the threat of a death penalty â how it can help victims find out what happened,â Mike Moreau said. The Moreaus have also shepherded other parents of murdered children through the justice system and theyâve seen people with life sentences get out of jail. Before theyâd vote to end the death penalty, they said they want to make sure the justice system doesnât ignore victims. We also talk with Kelly Davis, a freelance journalist who focuses on criminal justice issues. She walks us through some of the other policy implications of both death penalty ballot measures. To end on a lighter note, we also talked about our favorite things from the week. Libby enjoyed the many Vine videos people reposted after the video-sharing service announced it would discontinue its mobile phone app, effectively ending the service. Particular favorites include this and this . I enjoyed Saturday Night Liveâs âBlack Jeopardyâ skit because it highlighted the similarities between black and white working class Americans â their shared âdisempowerment, suspicion of authority, and working-class identity ,â as Jamelle Bouie at Slate put it â without papering over fundamental disagreements that still divide us.
You can listen to Grappling With Death on Your Ballot online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Grappling With Death on Your Ballot is an episode from San Diego Decides by Voice of San Diego by Voice of San Diego.
This episode is 41:13 long.
This episode was published on Oct 31, 2016.
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Grappling With Death on Your Ballot is from San Diego Decides by Voice of San Diego by Voice of San Diego.
Published Oct 31, 2016 and 41:13 long