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New Jersey Becomes First State to Abolish Death Penalty In Thirty Years

Posted by Ezekiel Edwards, Drum Major Institute at 6:46 AM on December 18, 2007.


New Jersey tinkered with the machinery of death in perhaps the only way that Justice Blackmun would have found acceptable: by disassembling it.
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Corzine

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Even as a native New Yorker, today I'm proud to say my father is a Jersey boy (sorry, Dad, for blowing your cover).

After 1,099 executions in America over the past 31 years (the second highest number in the world), and 741 in just the past decade; after 126 people on death row have been exonerated (including 15 by DNA testing); as some state governments continue trying --- in shame and in vain --- to find a "humane" way to kill people (having moved from hanging to shooting to electrocuting to poisoning); and after the United States, China, Iran, Sudan, Pakistan, and Iraq (not exactly the torch-bearing sextet for human rights) were responsible for 91% of the world's executions last year, yesterday New Jersey became only the first state to abolish the death penalty since it was reinstated by the Supreme Court in 1976.

Governor Corzine, who commuted the sentences of the eight men on New Jersey's death row to sentences of life without the parole the night before, ended executions in the Garden (of Eden, at least for now) State by signing the abolition bill (which last week passed the New Jersey Assembly by a vote of 44-36 and the Senate by a vote 21-16). The last states to legislatively end capital punishment were Iowa and West Virginia, 42 years ago.

New Jersey realized what many states stubbornly deny about the death penalty. It does not deter. It does not lower the crime rate. It does not bring back victims. It is violent. It is cruel. It is as irreversible for the innocent as it is for the guilty. It is expensive. It is not the only means of incapacitating someone (that is why we have prison and lifelong jail sentences). It is morally offensive to a majority of the world's countries, 133 of which are abolitionist in either law or practice. It is applied inconsistently and in a racially discriminatory manner.

A recent Connecticut study led by Yale law professor John J. Donohue III showed that minorities are disproportionately sentenced to die for their crimes, and decisions to seek the death penalty are often arbitrary. Included in the studies' findings are that (1) black defendants receive death sentences at three times the rate of white defendants in cases where the victims were white; (2) accused killers of white victims are charged and prosecuted more severely than people accused of killing minorities; and (3) minorities who kill whites receive death sentences at higher rates than minorities who kill minorities. A recent study by Ohio State University examining death row cases in 16 states also found that blacks convicted of killing whites are more likely than others convicted of murder to be sentenced to death and more likely to be executed.

As Governor Corzine stated yesterday, the bill marks "a day of progress --- for the State of New Jersey and for the millions of people across our nation and around the globe who reject the death penalty as a moral or practical response to the grievous, even heinous, crime of murder." Quoting Dr. Martin Luther King's Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, Corzine declared that "man must evolve, for all human conflict, a method of resolution which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation." Acknowledging that the "government cannot provide a foolproof death penalty that precludes the possibility of executing the innocent" --- a morally untenable risk for him and many others ---, that it has cost New Jersey more than a quarter-billion dollars, above and beyond incarceration, to pursue the death penalty since it was reinstated in 1982, and that "it is difficult, if not impossible, to devise a humane technique of execution ... that is not cruel and unusual," Governor Corzine ended the possibility of state-sanctioned executions.

Unfortunately, New Jersey's new law will have no statistical effect on America's execution rates, since along with New York, New Hampshire, Kansas, and South Dakota, New Jersey had the lowest execution rate among death penalty states (0%). Had this bill passed in execution-happy states such as Oklahoma, Texas, Delaware, Virginia, Arkansas, South Carolina, Alabama, or Louisiana, the impact would have been, in terms of human lives, significant.

Nonetheless, New Jersey has taken an important symbolic step towards a more sane and humane society, a step that hopefully other states will follow. By doing so, New Jersey echoed the sentiments of Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun, who wrote in a dissent in 1994 that "rather than continue to coddle the Court's delusion that the desired level of fairness has been achieved and the need for regulation eviscerated, I feel morally and intellectually obligated simply to concede that the death penalty experiment has failed. It is virtually self-evident to me now that no combination of procedural rules or substantive regulations ever can save the death penalty from its inherent constitutional deficiencies." As such, said Justice Blackmun, "I no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death."

New Jersey tinkered with the machinery of death in perhaps the only way that Justice Blackmun would have found acceptable: by disassembling it.

So, today, this New Yorker tips his cap to his neighbors across the Hudson River, declaring with unfamiliar enthusiasm that his father is a Jersey native.

EDITOR's NOTE by Adam Howard: I am originally a New Jersey native and I am proud to say that my father Rev. M William Howard jr was one of the main architects of this anti-death penalty legislation. I couldn't be more proud of him for his role in this landmark development and I too am proud to be from Jersey right now.

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Tagged as: death penalty, new jersey, corzine

Drum Major Institute Criminal Justice Fellow, Ezekiel Edwards is also a Staff Attorney/Mayer Brown Eyewitness Fellow at the Innocence Project, a non-profit legal clinic and criminal justice resource center.


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Monsters And Lesser Mortals
Posted by: QQOblivion on Dec 18, 2007 7:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The death penalty is murder. And it is murder in our name.
But what gets me is this: If the monsters who are behind the torture of many people and are behind the mass-murder of more than a MILLION people in Iraq and Afghanistan won't even face a day in jail for their most horrible of crimes (let alone face the death penalty), then why should any of us lesser mortals be murdered for our crimes when these crimes are relatively quite minor by comparison?

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RELIGION
Posted by: fg on Dec 18, 2007 7:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I chuckle when I hear candidates for the presidency of the U.S. will be improperly influenced by their religions (Huckabee and Romney, for example).

The Catholic Church holds that cases in which the execution of an offender is an absolute necessity "are very rare, if not practically non-existent."

New Jersey Assemblymen who voted to retain the death pemnalty:

Burzichelli, Chatzadakis, Conaway, Corodemus, Dancer, Doherty, Handlin, Mayer, Merkt, O'Toole, Rooney, Vandervalk, Beck, Bodine, DeCroce, Gregg, Holzaphel, Karrow, Malone, McHose, Moriarty, Pennacchio, Wolfe, Baroni, Biondi, Bramnick, Carroll, Connors, Diegnan, Greenstein, Sean Kean, Munoz, Panter, Russo, Thompson, Van Drew.

One suspects Roman Catholics form a majority here. Bottom line: "cafeteria" Catholicism is alive and well!

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» RELIGION Posted by: Eric Arthur Blair
» RE: LIGION Posted by: fg
Fiscally RESPONSIBLE; When will the Republicans wake-up to that fact to sell?
Posted by: Prairie Waif on Dec 18, 2007 11:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have always been opposed to "state sanctions assasinations." But then again, in my family, I am a commie pinko heretic for this belief. HA!

Turns out, they, as "Bush Fiscally Responsible Rethuglicans," they have missed the concept that it costs Millions upon Millions for the Mandatory Appeal process often times paid for by states due to the fact that most offenders require State APPOINTED AND PAID Defending Attorneys as well as the Prosecuting Attorneys, Judges, Juries and other necessary court officials.

Repeat over and over and the cost Far Outweighs the cost of $80,000 per year in keeping a heinous criminal in jail for life without parole.

As a NATION, the USA needs to take a hard look at who fills it's prisons and why. We have men and women in prison for drug offenses that are basically sent to prison/boot camp for further criminal activity.

If Lindsay Lohan can be arrested for drunk driving and vehicular endangerment and found with cocaine in her pocket and be out with a fine, why are our jails filled with men and women of colour and those in the lower economic classes for having small amounts of marijuana?

We do have two America's as Edwards asserts, one for the rich with name, recognition and money and the other the those in the lower economic sector, of colour, and poor employment prospects.

It's time to quit building prisons and start funding education fairly not based on an areas tax base, as those without income have no school that will produce high percentages of students with the opportunity to excel at life's opportunities as would a child who goes to P.S. Park Avenue.

The only thing No Child Left Behind did was mandate that each public school receiving Federal Funds provide the name, address and complete contact information of all students so that military recruiters could contact them. So, the only reason they didn't want them left behind was, left behind at home where they weren't going to be cannon fodder for Bush's meglo-maniacal war machine. (Parents' can take their children off the list by signing papers that ARE TO BE AVAILABLE AT ALL SCHOOLS).

It's time to stop killing the potential of the nation by not funding schools and providing opportunities to young people, we must not put people in jail for small drug offenses when in Hollywood it is a "cry for Drug Rehab" not a call to 23-hour-lockdown. We need to re-establish that the USA is NOT the leader in the western world as the greatest assasinator of it's citizens per capita, second to China.

We need the Republicans to see that it is FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE not to kill people. The only thing that might get through to a Republican is his pocket-book.

Heart? I think think you, with glee, turn it in to get your VERY OWN!! Brown Shirt.

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1 down...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Dec 18, 2007 3:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
49 to go...

oh please correct me... lol

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It is progress
Posted by: johnclark on Dec 18, 2007 3:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm also glad to see NJ finally overturn the death penalty. It's good to see that Democrats are beginning to show some leadership after so many years of being afraid of being labeled "soft of crime".

It sickens me to no end to here pro-death penalty people talk. The victims families are never allowed time to heal when they are forced go through years of appeals. The argument that there are too many appeals also rings hollow -- look at how many men have been sentenced to die only to be found innocent using the appeals process.

It also does nothing for the many murder victims families who's loved ones killer is never caught (over 60% in some cities). The vast costs the state spends on death penalty cases could be better used solving murders and protecting witnesses.

Crime is bad. Everyone agrees (except maybe some CEO's). Until we begin addressing the root causes and stop the "tough on crime" rhetoric, there will always be violent crime.

As for the comment that NCLB is ONLY about the military getting kids names, you must not have a child in the public school system. NCLB has forced schools around the country to "teach to the test". That means that poor kids are falling further behind, and most children are learning less.

The federal government has underfunded NCLB by about $60/billion so far. By 2014, ALL kids will have to pass the federally mandated state tests. The goal of NCLB, in my opinion, is to destroy public education as we know it.

Think we have violent crime now, just wait. Or, we can educate ourselves on these issues and demand change. There are many issues that we need to fix; it's not just the war.

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