Md. Death Penalty debate – UpDate
Posted on: March 27, 2009No comments yet
As the Reporters’ Roundtable has been the leading media outlet on the Md. Death Penalty Repeal debate, here in the State of Maryland, since its debut show with Senators Gladden and Jacobs and their discussion on such issue.
Now as the State legislature has all but rejected the Repeal effort, Governor Martin O’Malley, along with the Democratic controlled House and Senate, have basically set forth their own repeal, by a convoluted bill, thereby creating legal loopholes, that defense attorneys would have a field day with, basically killing all efforts for any State Prosecutor, to bring forth this much needed and popular measure. (NO Pun intended)
Therefore it is are sincere and obligatory right, to bring you the explanation of such legislation, as it relates to the jurisdictions throughout the State of Maryland, as written and brought forth by the Senate’s Minority Caucus office:
Political Expediency Trumps Sound Policy in Death Penalty Vote
This past Friday, the House Judiciary Committee had one of its legendary voting sessions. Working late into the evening, Delegates considered a long voting list of bills including the Senate’s version of the death penalty repeal bill.
While the Zirkin Amendment to the Senate bill technically preserves the death penalty in Maryland, it eliminates basic evidentiary tools, such as fingerprints and ballistic evidence, for prosecutors seeking the death penalty as punishment in even the most horrific murder cases. As pointed out in our earlier post (click here), it would also make it virtually impossible to seek the death penalty for the lead perpetrator in a murder-for-hire or witness intimidation case. Many in the legal community believe that the Senate bill is drawn so poorly that there will never be a successful death penalty prosecution in Maryland again.
At the top of that list of doubters is Maryland’s Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler. In fact, he testified before the House Judiciary Committee last week and stated that the Senate bill is “ill-prepared, ill-thought-out, awkward and clumsy.” Moreover, Gansler concluded that the Zirkin Amendment “significantly limits the death penalty so as to almost nullify it in the state of Maryland.” He implored the Delegates to fix the bill.
Obviously the bill is bad policy from a criminal justice perspective unless you are one who supports total repeal. Who better to judge that policy perspective than the person who has to handle the appeals on every single death penalty case in Maryland – the state’s Attorney General?
So – one would anticipate that the House Judiciary Committee would roll up its sleeves and get to work to fix the bill, right? Well, in the political reality of Annapolis, not really.
See, there are two problems:
First, the Senate President told the House leadership to “take it or leave it.” If the bill passes the House unchanged, it becomes law upon signature by the Governor. If the House amends the bill to correct the problems identified by Attorney General Gansler, then the bill goes back to the Senate risking a long filibuster towards the hectic end of the session.
Second, the Governor told the House to “take it.” He has too much politically invested in the death penalty repeal for this session. A partial victory is better than walking away empty-handed. If he wants to show something for his efforts this term, it has to be this year because no legislator wants a major controversial issue with heated debate next year in an election-year session when voters might have a fresh recall of a Governor’s or legislator’s position when they stand in the voting booth.
In the Judiciary voting session, eighteen amendments were offered to craft a better bill. But the skids were politically greased on this one – all amendments were rejected.
And sadly, sound policy lost out to political expediency as Maryland will be stuck with the restrictive nature of the Zirkin amendment. The new law will gives defense attorneys so many loopholes to work before a judge or jury in the courtroom that it basically nullifies the death penalty in this state.
Related posts:
- The Death of a Repeal Effort in Maryland? Today, February 27, 2009, the Maryland State Senate’s Judicial Proceedings...
- Md. GOP; Just RIGHT on the Death Penalty Md. GOP; ‘Just Right on the Death Penalty?’ As a...
- Md. Democrats Drop the Ball on Repeal Effort Did the MD. GOP Force the Change of Strategy of...
- Death Penalty Repeal-Part II The Advocacy v. the Opponent of a Death Penalty Measure...
- Maryland’s Fairness Doctrine Bill? House Bill 1182 = Bad News and the END of...
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