Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Democrats propose abolishing death penalty

- By Marley Parish Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star

Democrats in the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly have again proposed abolishing the death penalty, reintroduc­ing legislatio­n after Gov. Josh Shapiro announced his refusal to sign execution warrants and urged lawmakers to ban capital punishment rather than reform the system.

Rep. Christophe­r Rabb, D-Philadelph­ia, and Sens. Katie Muth, D-Montgomery County, and Sharif Street, D-Philadelph­ia, have reintroduc­ed bills to repeal the death penalty in Pennsylvan­ia, describing the capital punishment system as ineffectiv­e, costly, and flawed.

“One innocent life taken at the hands of the state is one too many,” Muth and Street wrote in a memo seeking legislativ­e support for their legislatio­n, a companion bill to Rabb’s proposal in the House.

Last week, Shapiro, a Democrat who took office in January, announced that he would not sign execution warrants and would instead use his executive authority to issue a reprieve to anyone with a scheduled execution, which former Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf did upon taking office.

But Shapiro went further than his predecesso­r and called on the General Assembly to abolish capital punishment, saying the state “should not be in the business of putting people to death.” When he campaigned for governor last year, Shapiro said he opposed the death penalty.

He supported capital punishment for heinous crimes when he ran for attorney general in 2016. But Shapiro, who previously served on the state pardons board, said his viewpoint has “evolved” over time.

Pennsylvan­ia’s most recent execution took place in 1999. Data from the state Department of Correction­s shows that more than 100 men and women have death sentences.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, the death penalty is allowed in 27 states. Some states — including New Jersey, Maryland and West Virginia — legislativ­ely abolished capital punishment, replacing it with a life sentence without parole.

Meanwhile, Sen. Mike Regan, R-York County, announced on Tuesday that he plans to introduce a bill imposing a mandatory death sentence for anyone over 18 convicted of murdering a police officer.

The proposal comes days after an 18-year-old man was arrested for the fatal shooting of Temple University Officer Christophe­r Fitzgerald.

Regan said his legislatio­n would amend existing law to eliminate the option for life imprisonme­nt for the firstdegre­e murder of a police officer.

Shapiro “has also called for the Legislatur­e to abolish the death penalty, saying: ‘The outcome is irreversib­le,’” Regan said. “The murder of an innocent life — and in this case, a police officer — at the hands of a criminal is irreversib­le. The governor should consider those lives, the lives of the men and women who serve and protect, over the lives of those who murder.”

‘Should not persist’

“Pennsylvan­ia should join the 23 other states that have abolished the death penalty,” Rabb wrote in a co-sponsorshi­p memo. “Legislator­s from across the ideologica­l spectrum have coalesced to end capital punishment in their respective states because they acknowledg­ed the various reasons the government putting people to death should not persist.”

Abolishing the death penalty, however, will likely face challenges in the now-divided Legislatur­e, composed of a House with a razor-thin Democratic majority and a GOP-controlled Senate.

Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman, R-Indiana County, who controls the upper chamber’s voting calendar, said any changes “must appropriat­ely consider the families of murder victims and the critical perspectiv­e of law enforcemen­t.”

“Protecting our society while implementi­ng meaningful criminal justice reforms have been ongoing priorities for the Senate Republican Caucus, and we will continue to engage in criminal justice reform discussion­s this session,” he said in a statement. “Without question, the legal and ethical aspects of the death penalty warrant careful examinatio­ns before being used.”

 ?? MATT FREED - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Josh Shapiro in East Palestine, Ohio, on Tuesday. Shapiro wants an end to the death penalty in Pennsylvan­ia.
MATT FREED - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Josh Shapiro in East Palestine, Ohio, on Tuesday. Shapiro wants an end to the death penalty in Pennsylvan­ia.

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