|  | State-administered
                          death is always a greater horror than any other by
                          virtue of the methodical reasoning that precedes it.
                          French philosopher Albert Camus wrote that "capital
                          punishment is the most premeditated of murders".
                          "The United States' concept of justifiable
                          homicide/Executions in criminal law stands on
                          the dividing line between an excuse, justification and
                          an exculpation. In other words, it takes a case that
                          would otherwise have been a murder or another crime
                          representing intentional killing, and either excuses
                          or justifies the individual accused from all criminal
                          liability or treats the accused differently from other
                          intentional killers. |