El Dorado News-Times

Shapiro’s bold call on death penalty right on point

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Gov. Josh Shapiro Thursday boldly called on legislator­s to abolish Pennsylvan­ia’s costly, ineffectiv­e and immoral death penalty. In urging legislator­s to act, an unpreceden­ted move, Mr. Shapiro showed some sorely needed leadership from the governor’s office.

Unless Mr. Shapiro engages the legislatur­e, the death-penalty statute will endure. He needs to take the lead in persuading the Democrat-controlled House and Republican-controlled Senate to approve bills that would repeal it. Former Gov. Tom Wolf refused to do that.

In making his statement a month after his inaugurati­on, Mr. Shapiro signaled that getting state government out of the business of killing people will be a priority. He appears willing to spend some political capital on a fundamenta­lly moral issue. That’s encouragin­g, but to succeed, Mr. Shapiro will have to lobby legislator­s and address the issue in public, perhaps the biggest test yet of his political skills and acumen.

Mr. Shapiro has a model to guide him: Former Gov. Ralph Northam led the fight to abolish the death penalty in Virginia. In 2021, it became the first Southern state, and the 23rd in the nation, to abolish the death penalty.

Opposing the death penalty still carries some political risks, but they’re not overwhelmi­ng. Since 2009, seven states have abolished the death penalty.

In remarks at Mosaic Community Church in Philadelph­ia, Mr. Shapiro, a former death-penalty supporter, said abolishing it was morally right. He cited the possibilit­y of irrevocabl­e mistakes. Since 1973, at least 185 prisoners on death row, including 10 from Pennsylvan­ia, have been exonerated.

Pennsylvan­ia’s death row, with about 100 prisoners, is one of the nation’s largest. More than half of the prisoners are Black, in a state in which African Americans make up only 12% of the population.

Other than exacting revenge, a notion with no place in a modern criminal justice system, there are no rational arguments for the death penalty.

No evidence shows it deters crime, and the death penalty is extremely costly. Even with the moratorium on executions, prosecutor­s continue to try to convict people under the statute.

Most capital conviction­s are overturned on appeal for mandatory life sentences. Since 1976, Pennsylvan­ia has sentenced more than 400 prisoners to death, resulting in only three executions.

Securing death penalty conviction­s and defending them on appeal have cost the state about $1 billion since 1976, reported former Pennsylvan­ia Auditor General Eugene DePasquale. For even

the most ardent death-penalty supporter, spending $1 billion for three executions is, to put it crudely, a poor return-on-investment.

Pennsylvan­ia has not executed a prisoner since 1999. As a death-penalty state, however, it retains a shameful moral stain.

The moratorium on executions that started in 2015 will continue under Mr. Shapiro, who will sign no execution warrants.

For Mr. Shapiro, the work has only begun. Still, he should be applauded for taking a small but significan­t step toward removing this barbaric practice permanentl­y from Pennsylvan­ia.

— Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Feb. 20

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