believer258 said:
Well, maybe I was acting on my own usually passive personality. But I doubt that anyone getting out of jail after decades is going to want to murder anybody (and yes, that would simply be murder); they're still going to just want to get back to normal.
You may be a person who would do it. But riddle me this: What will it solve and how will it help? Answer me that, with an answer more legitimate than some variation of "it will make me feel better".
Perhaps I was a tad general in my initial declaration. Let me elaborate.
My viewpoint is that if someone commits perjury(which, in my mind, should be a capital crime) in a case where the accused winds up in jail and is later proven to have been falsely accused, then the person who committed perjury should be tried, and if convicted, the accused should be allowed to be the executor. Now, I also believe that the standards of convicting someone of perjury are unreasonably high, as you normally have to prove that the person lied intentionally. This is unlike most crimes where, if you commit it, you get convicted regardless of intention or awareness. I feel that if you can prove that the person lied under oath, regardless of intention, then that should be grounds for conviction.
If we make it so that people who falsely accuse others of severe crimes run the risk of losing their lives themselves, we can reduce the number of false accusations. As it is, too many people have their lives ruined in cases where there simply is hardly any physical evidence, but the jury convicts them anyway. Put simply, it is an incentive for charges to only be brought against people when there is tangible physical evidence rather than merely on, say, witness testimony, which has been proven to be completely unreliable but is used all the time anyway.