Duty and the Death Penalty

January 13, 2014 @ 4:00 pm
January 14, 2014 @ 3:45 pm

In this lecture, Chancellor Leo E. Strine, Jr. of Delaware's Court of Chancery reflects on the duty of a public official to respect the rules of law established through the constitutional process even when the rule of law conflicts the official’s own views. In his nearly quarter century of public service, Chancellor Strine – who opposes capital punishment – has had to address that troubling subject at close range, in three very different capacities – as Counsel to Delaware’s Governor during a period when seven executions occurred, as a member of the State’s Board of Pardons handling an application to commute a death sentence, and as an appellate judge reviewing whether a trial court properly imposed capital punishment. The lecture will focus on how the specific duty owed influenced Chancellor’s Strine approach to the performance of his duties, and suggest that there is continuing democracy-enforcing value to recognition by public officials that legitimately enacted laws must trump personal preference.

Reception to follow in the Strine Atrium.

The lecture will also be telecast to Room L205 on the Harrisburg Campus.
 
RSVPs encouraged. Contact Carol Perrupato at caperrupato@widener.edu or 302-477-2178.