Houston Chronicle

Virginia outlaws death penalty

- By Denise Lavoie ASSOCIATED PRESS

JARRATT, Va. — The governor signed legislatio­n Wednesday making Virginia the 23rd state to abolish the death penalty, a dramatic shift for the commonweal­th, which had the second-highest number of executions in the U.S. behind Texas.

The bills were the culminatio­n of a yearslong battle by Democrats who argued the death penalty has been applied disproport­ionately to people of color, the mentally ill and the poor.

Republican­s argued that the death penalty should remain a sentencing option for especially heinous crimes and to bring justice to victims and their families.

Virginia’s new Democratic majority, in full control of the General Assembly for a second year, won the debate last month when both the Senate and House of Delegates passed the measures banning capital punishment.

Gov. Ralph Northam, a Democrat, signed the House and Senate bills in a ceremony under a tent Wednesday after touring the execution chamber at the Greensvill­e Correction­al Center, where 102 people have been put to death since executions were moved there from the Virginia State Penitentia­ry in the early 1990s.

“There is no place today for the death penalty in this commonweal­th, in the South or in this nation,” Northam said shortly before signing the legislatio­n.

Northam said the death penalty has been disproport­ionately applied to Black people and is the product of a flawed judicial system that doesn’t always get it right. Since 1973, more than 170 people around the country have been released from death row after evidence of their innocence was uncovered, he said.

Northam recounted the story of Earl Washington Jr., a Black man who was sentenced to death after being wrongfully convicted of rape and murder in Virginia in 1984. Washington spent more than 17 years in prison before he was exonerated.

He came within nine days of being executed.

Virginia has executed nearly 1,400 people since its days as a colony. In modern times, the state is second only to Texas in the number of executions it has carried out, with 113 since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976, according to the nonprofit Death Penalty Informatio­n Center.

The sentences of the two men still on death row will be converted to life in prison without parole.

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