Answer
Life in prison or the death penalty
Answer
The 35 states that still have capital punishment were transitioning toward using lethal injection for most executions, when medical evidence indicated the drugs may not be working as expected, and may cause the prisoner to undergo conscious asphyxiation. At least one state (Nevada) has reverted to using the electric chair, and several others have declared a temporary moratorium on executions. A few states allow a choice between injection and one other method, such as the gas chamber, electrocution, hanging, or a firing squad, usually for offenders who were sentenced or committed their crimes before a certain date.
Execution Methods by State
Alabama..................Choice of lethal injection or electrocution
Arkansas.................Lethal injection (or choice of electrocution if convicted before 1983)
Arizona...................Lethal injection (or choice of electrocution if convicted before November 1992)
California................Choice of lethal injection or gas chamber
Colorado.................Lethal injection
Connecticut.............Lethal injection
Delaware................Lethal injection (or choice of hanging if convicted before June 13, 1986)
Florida....................Choice of lethal injection or electrocution
Georgia..................Lethal injection
Idaho.....................Lethal injection (or firing squad if injection is impractical)
Illinois....................Lethal injection
Indiana..................Lethal injection
Kansas...................Lethal injection
Kentucky................Lethal injection (or choice of electrocution if sentenced before March 31, 1998)
Louisiana................Lethal injection
Maryland................Lethal injection (or choice of gas chamber if sentenced before March 25, 1994)
Missouri.................Choice of lethal injection or gas chamber
Mississippi..............Lethal injection
Montana.................Lethal injection
North Carolina.........Lethal injection
Nebraska................Lethal injection
New Hampshire.......Lethal injection (or hanging if injection is impractical)
Nevada..................Lethal injection
Ohio......................Lethal injection
Oklahoma..............Lethal injection (or electrocution or firing squad if injection is declared unconstitutional)
Oregon..................Lethal injection
Pennsylvania..........Lethal injection
South Carolina........Choice of lethal injection or electrocution
South Dakota.........Lethal injection
Tennessee..............Lethal injection (or choice of electrocution for offenses before December 31, 1998)
Texas....................Lethal injection
Utah.....................Lethal injection (or firing squad if injection is declared unconstitutional)
Virginia.................Choice of lethal injection or electrocution
Washington...........Choice of lethal injection or hanging
Wyoming...............Lethal injection (or gas chamber if injection is declared unconstitutional)
Federal.................Method of state where sentence was imposed
Military.................Lethal injection
Answer
Oklahoma was the first jurisdiction to authorize lethal injection May 1977. Texas was the second August 1977. Oklahoma and Texas no longer authorize electrocution but electrocution is designated to supplant lethal injection if lethal injection can't be administered in Oklahoma. Texas executed the first prisoner by lethal injection December 7, 1982.
ELECTROCUTION
Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, and Virginia authorize electrocution as an alternative to lethal injection. Ohio similarly authorized electrocution until September 2001. Kentucky and Tennessee authorize electrocution if the prisoner was sentenced to death for crimes committed before legislative dates. (March 31, 1998 and December 31, 1998 respectively.) Arkansas, Illinois, and Oklahoma don't authorize the use of electrocution but electrocution is designated to supplant lethal injection if lethal injection cannot be administered. Florida required electrocution until January 2000. Georgia required electrocution until October 2001. Alabama required electrocution until July 2002. Nebraska required electrocution until February 2008.
GASSING
California authorizes gassing as an alternative to lethal injection. North Carolina similarly authorized gassing until October 1998. Arizona authorizes gassing for prisoners sentenced to death before November 15, 1992. Maryland authorizes gassing if the prisoner was sentenced to death for crimes committed before March 25, 1994. Wyoming no longer authorizes the use of gassing but gassing is designated to supplant lethal injection if lethal injection can't be administered. Missouri either authorizes gassing as an alternative to lethal injection or designates gassing to supplant lethal injection if lethal injection cannot be administered - no one is certain except the State Legislature.
HANGING
Washington state authorizes hanging as an alternative to lethal injection. Delaware and New Hampshire no longer authorize hanging but hanging is designated to supplant lethal injection if lethal injection cannot be administered.
SHOOTING
Utah authorizes shooting if the prisoner was sentenced to death for crimes committed before May 3, 2004. Oklahoma doesn't authorize the use of shooting but shooting is designated to supplant electrocution if electrocution cannot be administered.
JURISDICTIONS THAT FORMERLY AUTHORIZED ELECTROCUTION
Alabama - prescribed method until July 2002.
Arkansas - prescribed method until July 1983.
Florida - prescribed method until January 2000.
Georgia - prescribed method until October 2001.
Kentucky - prescribed method until March 1998.
Mississippi - prescribed method until September 1954.
Nebraska - prescribed method until February 2008.
Oklahoma - prescribed method until May 1977.
Pennsylvania - prescribed method until November 1990.
South Carolina - prescribed method until June 1995.
Tennessee - prescribed method until December 1998.
Texas - prescribed method until August 1977.
If caught in the US and tried for treason, yes they get the death penalty because of the US constitution
The death penalty was extremely unfair for some people, but for the rest of us it was justice........ In the states the death penalty is still used in 37 states and by the Federal Government and the US Military.
In the US, all death penalty sentences are carried out with wtnesses present.
No. In fact, Wisconsin was the first state in the US to abolish the death penalty, back in 1853.
In the US, no. The Supreme Court found that minors could not be sentenced to the death penalty.
There were the original 13 states, although the death penalty was established in the US long before the US was a separate nation.
It doesn't.
yes
If by "protected" it is meant what options does the person who is sentenced to death have, all such sentencing is immediately subject to appeal. In the US all convicted persons who receive the death sentence can file an appeal as many times as is permitted by the highest state appellate court and/or the US Supreme Court. The US Supreme Court has also ruled that any law that automatically imposes the death penalty is unconstitutional. In the US voters decide whether or not to allow capital punishment. The federal government institutes the death penalty when specified crimes such as the killing of a federal law enforcement officer are committed.
Thirty-four of the fifty states currently have the death penalty, or 68%For more information about the death penalty in the United States, see Related Questions, below.
Don't quite understand the question. The application of the death penalty is one of the rights preserved to the states. There is no federal law that addresses, it or forbids it. Currently 35 of the 50 states plus the US Government and US Military have a death penalty in effect, although several have not exercised it in some time.
Since before the inception of the US to the present day.