How Do You Consider Someone Spending Decades In Prison, Sentenced to Death, Then Released Minus Years of His Life Proof That the System Is Working?
Death Penalty Falls From Favor as Some Lose Confidence in Its Fairness 
                      Some said that what persuaded them was the
                      news that 13 prisoners on death row in
                      Illinois were discovered to be innocent � a
                      revelation that led Gov. George Ryan, a
                      Republican, to declare a statewide
                      moratorium on the death penalty last year.
                      Others said they were troubled by reports
                      that the death penalty may be
                      disproportionately imposed on blacks and
                      Hispanics.
                     "I've slowly been changing my mind about
                      the death penalty," said Fredrica Hicks, a
                      mother of three who works in a Social
                      Security office in Chicago, where the
                      exonerations of prisoners in her state gave
                      her pause. "What would happen if
                      something went wrong and someone accused
                      me of something and there was no way for
                      me to prove my innocence, or evidence was
                      lost and I was sitting on death row? If it has
                      happened to someone else, it could happen
                      to anyone. It could be me." 
                      But Charlotte Stout, a retired nurse in
                      Greenfield, Tenn., rebutted that, saying: "To
                      me, that is the system working. If it hadn't
                      been working, the innocent people wouldn't
                      have been released." 
                    "Today to be raising questions about capital
                      punishment is to be in the company of the
                      pope, Governor Ryan, the Legislatures of
                      Nebraska and New Hampshire, the
                      columnist George Will, Pat Robertson and
                      William Sessions, the former director of the
                      F.B.I., all of whom have come out in favor
                      of a moratorium, said Mr. Sarat, the author
                      of "When the State Kills: Capital
                      Punishment and the American Condition"
                     (Princeton University Press, 2001). 
"Go down to the police department and look at the police blotter and you'll be convinced it's not deterring anything," said Jerry Jones, an election worker in Chicago.
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/06/17/national/17VOIC.html?pagewanted=all