pnakasone wrote:I wonder if you could argue that at some point a death sentence if carried out relatively quickly would be more humane then some one spending centuries behind bars.
I suppose in this vein of thought it would depend on the exact particulars of the case. And just
might be a subjective consideration.
Assuming that one does have benefit of prolong. One might rather quickly choose -- rather spend -- a couple of centuries in incarceration in lieu of a quick death sentence.
OTOH, where a life sentence is literal, then you very well have a point. With the caveat, that inhumane may be part of the intended punishment. See Hades. I wonder if all involved would have chosen death over Hell? Certainly not the ones who outlasted the sentence and returned to society.
No Extradition treaty may be more dangerous for a crook because your fate is at the whim of the local government. They may find that it is in that governments interest to simply hand you over. An extradition treaty will have rules on how and if some one can be turned over. Also extradition treaties or a lack of one only work when it is not worth the effort of a stronger power to simply send in commando unit to get the person their after.
You certainly have a point here as well. Although, another serving of caviar in in order (my niece equates caveat with caviar because she says that s'times they both stink. Cute, methinks.) My original suggestion was that some savvy criminals may pick planets for their subjective lenient nature. Likewise, here on Earth, it is crazy for a criminal to choose to traffic drugs in Central America, South America and Southeast Asia where the punishment is much more severe. Whereas it is death in some countries, like China where execution is the result of trafficking some drugs. In Vietnam, drug crimes are taken very seriously. If you are arrested with more than 1.3 pounds of heroin, you will automatically be executed. Even drunk driving is punished much more harshly in Malaysia.
So I agree that the no extradition policy may cut both ways, but I suggested that a savvy criminal may have checked the sharpness of the knife before committing crimes there.
References:
http://drugabuse.com/the-20-countries-w ... the-world/