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New Jersey Senate Passes Death Penalty Moratorium

The New Jersey Senate today passed a one year moratorium on the death penalty.

A co-sponsor, Sen. Robert J. Martin, R-Morris and Passaic, noted that 50 of the 60 death sentences imposed since the penalty was reinstated in 1982 have been overturned. "Something is fundamentally flawed with that statute," Martin said.

If passed, New Jersey will be the first state in the modern era to legislatively enact a moratorium. Maryland and Illinois have imposed moratoriums based on executive orders. More details:

The state has 10 men on death row. The bill the Senate will consider would create a death penalty study commission to scrutinize the state's death penalty law, particularly whether it is applied fairly, its costs, whether it is a deterrent to crime and if it should be abolished. The commission would complete its work by Nov. 15, 2006. In the meantime, a moratorium would be imposed on all state executions until at least 60 days after the commission finishes its work.

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    Re: New Jersey Senate Passes Death Penalty Morator (none / 0) (#1)
    by Al on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:07:04 PM EST
    Way to go, New Jersey. It will be very interesting to see what the commission's conclusions are, especially regarding the question of whether the death penalty is a deterrent of crime.

    It will be very interesting to see what the commission's conclusions are, especially regarding the question of whether the death penalty is a deterrent of crime.
    Yes, it will be interesting. I'm from Illinois, and since the reinstatement of the death penalty, we've had 13 overturned convictions to 12 executions. Hopefully more wrongfully imprisoned inmates on death row will be exonarated (as a shameless plug, I also recommend reading No Equal Justice. It's a great book examining race in regards to the death penalty and other parts of the CJ system).

    More is posted over at at the Abolish the Death Penalty blog

    Re: New Jersey Senate Passes Death Penalty Morator (none / 0) (#4)
    by pigwiggle on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:07:04 PM EST
    “scrutinize the state's death penalty law, particularly whether it is applied fairly, its costs, whether it is a deterrent to crime and if it should be abolished.”
    Certainly, the first two are reasonable concerns; even-handed application and cost. But why should we care if the execution of justice is a deterrent to crime? This is about an attempt, even if symbolic, at making the victim whole, right? I suppose this goes to the heart of the distinction between the criminal and civil systems, as I see them anyway. The criminal system at its heart is less about real justice and more about the authority of the state; penance to the crown (or rather, usefulness to the state). Because, you know, when I own your a$$ after you have murder one of my loved ones I’m not thinking to much about making an example.

    Pigwiggle: Murder victims' family members lead the charge in NJ in getting the m