Here's the abstract of a study on how three strikes laws encourage witness-murdering, but no word yet on any studies of whether the death penalty serves to discourage witness-murdering.
The         Lethal Effects of Three-Strikes Laws Thomas B. Marvell, Carlisle E.         Moody Journal of Legal Studies, Vol. 30, No. 1 (Jan., 2001) , pp. 89-106
       
        Abstract--Three-strikes laws provide very long prison terms for certain         criminals with prior convictions of serious violent crimes. It is likely         that the laws increase homicides because a few criminals, fearing the         enhanced penalties, murder victims and witnesses to limit resistance and         identification. With a state-level multiple-time-series design, we find         that the laws are associated with 10-12 percent more homicides in the         short run and 23-29 percent in the long run. The impact occurs in almost         all 24 states with three-strikes laws. Furthermore, there is little         evidence that the laws have any compensating crime reduction impact         through deterrence or incapacitation.
A reader comments:
Memorable relevant anecdote: that early scene in the film "Heat" where Waynegro (Kevin Gage) shoots dead a security guard for no discernable reason, making McCauley (Robert DeNiro) and the rest of his crew guilty of felony murder. So McCauley gives the go-ahead to Cherito (Tom Sizemore) to murder the other two guards, because there's no additional legal punishment for those two murders.
This is the flip          side of the logic that persuaded the Victorians to stop hanging          pickpockets -- if both the Artful Dodger and Bill Sikes are liable to be          hanged, how do you discourage pickpockets like the Dodger from turning          into robber-murderers like Sikes? The criminal law needs gradations of          punishment to provide proper incentives.
        
        We've discovered over the last quarter century that we need long prison          terms to discourage criminality, but long terms, in the absence of a          higher penalty (i.e., the death pealty) reduce the opportunity          cost of witness-murdering.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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