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Last updated on May 28, 2012 at 8:11 EDT

NJ lawmakers vote to suspend death penalty

January 9, 2006
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By Jon Hurdle

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – New Jersey lawmakers approved a
moratorium on the death penalty on Monday, becoming the first
U.S. state legislature to block executions since the Supreme
Court reinstated the punishment in 1976.

The state Assembly voted 55 to 21 with two abstentions to
suspend the death penalty until a commission report due to be
given to lawmakers and the governor by November 15. The state
Senate approved the measure last month.

The commission will study whether the death penalty deters
crime and whether there is a significant difference between the
cost of the death penalty and that of life without parole.

New Jersey is one of 38 U.S. states that have the death
penalty although it has not executed anyone since 1963. Ten
people are currently on the state’s death row.

The bill is expected to be signed by Acting Gov. Richard
Codey, a Democrat.

Two other states, Illinois and Maryland, have placed a
moratorium on the death penalty by the governor’s order,
although the Maryland measure has now expired. Texas, on the
other hand, leads the nation in executions, putting to death
355 people since 1976.

“By any measure, the death penalty has failed the people of
New Jersey who have come to know that it risks executing
innocent people and wastes millions of taxpayer dollars,” said
Celeste Fitzgerald, director of New Jerseyans for Alternatives
to the Death Penalty, a campaign group.

U.S. public support for the death penalty has dropped to a
27-year low of 64 percent in October 2005 from 80 percent in
1994, according to Gallup opinion polls.

The number of executions in the United States dropped to 60
in 2005 from 98 in 1999, the largest number since the U.S.
Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976 after
declaring it unconstitutional in 1972.

Public doubts are based on increasing evidence,
particularly from DNA testing, of wrongful convictions and an
increasing willingness of courts and attorneys to revisit old
cases, according to Richard Dieter, executive director of the
Death Penalty Information Center, a group that campaigns
against the policy.

Nationwide, 122 people have been freed from death row since
1973 because of evidence they may not be guilty, Dieter said.

Support for the death penalty has also waned because of the
increasing availability of life-without-parole sentences, which
are now provided by all but one of the death-penalty states.

In 2004, the United States conducted the fourth-largest
number of executions of any country in the world, exceeded only
by China, Iran and Vietnam, according to the Death Penalty
Information Center.


Source: reuters