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Argument: Executions contradict strategy of sensitivity to urban neighborhoods

Issue Report: Death penalty

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Daniel F. Conley, Suffolk County District Attorney, Boston Globe. 19 Sept. 2003. – “I do not believe the death penalty is a deterrent or appropriate punishment for inner-city homicide. The death penalty runs counter to the strategies for preventing and prosecuting urban crime — which include sensitivity to the neighborhoods we serve — that have proven successful in Boston over the last decade.”[1]