2022 — Proposed leg­is­la­tion
States with bills to abol­ish death penal­ty indi­cat­ed with *

Session dates via StateScape
State names link to state legislative homepage

ALABAMA (Session dates: 01/​11/​2022 — 05/​17/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 76/​SB 196

Would amend the Alabama con­sti­tu­tion to require the gov­er­nor to noti­fy vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers before grant­i­ng a reprieve or com­mu­ta­tion to a per­son sen­tenced to death

SB 76 intro­duced January 13, 2022 by Sen. Sam Givhan (R), Chris Elliott (R), and Will Barfoot (R).

SB 196 intro­duced February 8, 2022 by Sen. Steve Livingston (R) and Sam Givhan (R). PASSED the Senate on February 16, 2022. PASSED the House on April 5, 2022. SIGNED by the governor.

ARIZONA* (Session dates: 01/​10/​2022 — 05/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HCR 2002Would repeal the death penaltyIntroduced by Rep. Athena Salman (D)
CALIFORNIA* (Session dates: 12/​07/​2020 — 11/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
ACA 2Would amend the California con­sti­tu­tion to pro­hib­it the death penal­ty from being imposed as a pun­ish­ment for any vio­la­tions of law.Read first time December 7, 2020. Referred to the Appropriations Committee and the Committee on Public Safety on February 18. Sponsored by Assembly Members Laura Friedman (D), Mike Gipson (D), and Mark Stone (D).
AB 1224Would allow a judge to dis­miss a find­ing of a spe­cial cir­cum­stance.” Under cur­rent law, if cer­tain spe­cial cir­cum­stances are found in a first degree mur­der case, the defen­dant must be sen­tenced to death.Introduced February 19, 2021 by Member Marc Levine (D). Referred to the Assembly Committee on Public Safety on March 4 and PASSED by the com­mit­tee by a vote of 5 – 2 on April 21.
SB 300Would repeal a pro­vi­sion requir­ing pun­ish­ment by death or impris­on­ment for life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole for a per­son con­vict­ed of mur­der in the first degree who is not the actu­al killer, but act­ed with reck­less indif­fer­ence for human life as a major par­tic­i­pant in cer­tain spec­i­fied vio­lent felonies. Would also allow pris­on­ers sen­tenced under that pro­vi­sion to peti­tion for a resen­tenc­ing. Would allow judges to strike special circumstances.Introduced February 3, 2021 by Sen. Dave Cortese (D).

PASSED by the Senate Committee on Public Safety by a vote of 4 – 0 on April 6 and referred to the Senate Appropriations Committee. Ordered to the Inactive File on June 2 at the request of the legislative sponsor. 

AB 256The Racial Justice Act for All” would make California’s 2020 Racial Justice Act retroactive.Introduced January 14, 2021 by Assembly Members Ash Kalra (D), Robert Rivas (D), and Miguel Santiago (D), and Sen. Sydney Kamlager (D). PASSED by the Public Safety Committee (6 – 2) on March 23. PASSED by the Appropriations Committee (4 – 0) on May 20. PASSED the Assembly (45 – 21) on June 1.

PASSED by the Senate Public Safety Committee (4 – 1) on June 29. Suspended by the Senate Appropriations Committee on August 26. Removed from sus­pense file, amend­ed, and PASSED (5 – 2) on August 11, 2022. Amended and PASSED by the full Senate (29 – 10) on August 29. The Assembly CONCURRED (46 – 25) in the Senate amend­ments on August 31 and sent the bill to the governor’s desk.

AB 2657Would cre­ate a mech­a­nism to remove from death row indi­vid­u­als who are per­ma­nent­ly mentally incompetentIntroduced February 18, 2022 by Assembly Member Mark Stone (D). Referred to Committee on Public Safety on March 10. PASSED as amend­ed (5 – 2) on April 5 and referred to the Appropriations Committee. PASSED as amend­ed (12 – 4) on May 11. PASSED the Assembly (56 – 18) on May 25
Referred to the Senate Committee on Public Safety on June 1. PASSED as amend­ed (4 – 0) on June 21 and referred to the Senate Appropriations Committee. Following a deter­mi­na­tion that the costs of the bill are not sig­nif­i­cant, SENT TO FULL SENATE on August 8 with­out a hear­ing in the com­mit­tee. PASSED the Senate 29 – 10 on August 23. Assembly CONCURRED in Senate amend­ments 56 – 17 on August 24 and the bill was sent to the gov­er­nor on August 31.
FLORIDA* (Session dates: 01/​11/​2022 — 03/​11/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 386/​H 6061Would abol­ish the death penalty.SB 386 filed September 30, 2021 by Sen. Gary Farmer Jr. (D). H 6061 filed October 20, 2021 by Rep. Joseph Geller (D).
SB 770/​HB 1251Would pro­hib­it the death penal­ty for defen­dants with severe mental illnessSB 770 filed November 2, 2021 by Sen. Jeff Brandes (R). Died in com­mit­tee on March 142022
HB 1251 filed January 6, 2022 by Rep. Vance Aloupis Jr. (R). Died in com­mit­tee on March 142022.
SB 1204/​HB 873

Would cre­ate a pub­lic records exemp­tion for infor­ma­tion that could reveal the iden­ti­ty of a per­son or enti­ty” that par­tic­i­pates in an execution

Senate bill filed December 8, 2021 by Sen. Doug Broxson (R). PASSED Senate Criminal Justice Committee on Jan. 25 by a 9 – 0 vote. PASSED Senate Judiciary Committee on Feb. 7 by a 10 – 0 vote. PASSED Senate Rules Committee on Feb. 15 by a 9 – 6 vote.

House bill filed December 8, 2021 by Rep. Patt Maney (R). PASSED the House on March 3, 2022 by a vote of 84 – 31. PASSED the Senate on March 7 by a vote of 28 – 10. SIGNED by the Governor on May 12.

GEORGIA* (Session dates: 01/​11/​2021 — 03/​31/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 485Would repeal the death penaltyIntroduced February 17, 2021 by five Democratic spon­sors and one Republican sponsor.
HB 1426Would change the stan­dard of proof for intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty in cap­i­tal cas­es. Georgia cur­rent­ly has the nation’s high­est stan­dard of proof for intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty (“beyond a rea­son­able doubt”). The bill would low­er it to by a pre­pon­der­ance of evi­dence,” align­ing it with most oth­er states’ standards.Introduced February 22, 2022 by Rep. Beth Moore (D), Rep. Bill Werkheiser (R), and Rep. Stan Gunter (R).
IDAHO (Session dates: 01/​10/​2022 — 03/​20/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 658Would make the iden­ti­ty of lethal-injec­tion drug sup­pli­ers and oth­ers involved in exe­cu­tions con­fi­den­tial, and pre­vent doc­tors who par­tic­i­pate in exe­cu­tions from hav­ing their licenses revokedIntroduced February 16, 2022 by the State Affairs Committee. Hearing held in the Judiciary Committee February 17. PASSED com­mit­tee on February 18. PASSED the House by a 38 – 30 vote on February 24. Hearing held in the Senate Judiciary and Rules Committee on March 9. Failed by an ini­tial 4 – 4 vote in com­mit­tee on March 9, but lat­er PASSED 5 – 4 with all com­mit­tee mem­bers present on March 15. PASSED the Senate by a 21 – 14 vote on March 18. SIGNED by the Governor on March 23.
ILLINOIS (Session dates: 01/​13/​2021 — 01/​11/​2023)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 3627/​SB 614/​SB 2219Would rein­state the death penalty

HB 3627 filed February 19, 2021 by Rep. Andrew S. Chesney (R), referred to Rules Committee.

SB 614 filed February 24, 2021 by Sen. Brian W. Stewart (R), referred to Assignments Committee.

SB 2219 filed February 26, 2021 by Sen. Jason Plummer (R), referred to Assignments Committee.

SB 3899/​HB 4746Would rein­state the death penal­ty for killing a police offi­cer in the course of per­form­ing his or her official dutiesSB 3899 filed January 21, 2022 by Sen. Darren Bailey (R), referred to Assignments Committee.

HB 4746 filed January 24, 2022 by Rep. Dave Severin (R), referred to Rules Committee January 27, assigned to the Judiciary — Criminal Committee February 9, and re-referred to the Rules Committee February 18.

INDIANA (Session dates: 01/​04/​2022 — 03/​11/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
IOWA (Session dates: 01/​11/​2021 — 05/​31/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SF 82/​SSB 1004/​HF 271Would rein­state the death penal­ty for mur­der in the first degree involv­ing kid­nap­ping and sex­u­al abuse offens­es against the same vic­tim who is a minorIntroduced January 14, 2021 by 14 Republican spon­sors in the Senate and 1 Republican spon­sor in the House and referred to Judiciary Committee. Failed to make it out of com­mit­tee by dead­line for passage.
SF 534, as amend­ed by H‑1306The amend­ment would rein­state the death penal­ty for the mur­der of a cor­rec­tion­al offi­cer, pub­lic employ­ee, or hostage while the per­son is impris­oned in a cor­rec­tion insti­tu­tion under the juris­dic­tion of the Iowa Department of Corrections, or in a city or coun­ty jail … or a peace offi­cer who is on duty, under any cir­cum­stances, with knowl­edge that the per­son killed is a peace officer.”Amendment filed in the House Committee on Public Safety by Rep. Jon Jacobsen (R) on March 25, 2021 after SF 534, passed the Senate on March 10, 2021. No hear­ing has been scheduled.
KANSAS* (Session dates: 01/​11/​2021 — 05/​27/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 136Would abol­ish the death penaltyIntroduced February 3, 2021 by the Committee on Ways and Means and referred to Judiciary Committee
HB 2300Would abol­ish the death penal­ty for crimes com­mit­ted after July 12021Introduced February 9, 2021 by a bipar­ti­san coali­tion of 34 spon­sors and referred to Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice
KENTUCKY* (Session dates: 01/​04/​2022 — 03/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 47Would abol­ish the death penaltyIntroduced on January 5, 2022 by one Republican and three Democratic sponsors.
HB 269Would exempt peo­ple with severe men­tal ill­ness from the death penal­ty and require that defen­dants seek­ing an exemp­tion due to intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty or severe men­tal ill­ness file their motion 120 days before trialIntroduced on January 11, 2022 by a bipar­ti­san group of 21 spon­sors. Reported favor­ably by the Judiciary Committee on February 3. PASSED the House by a 76 – 19 vote on Feb. 9. Reported favor­ably by the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 17 and PASSED by the full Senate by a vote of 25 – 9 on March 25. SIGNED by the Governor on April 8.
LOUISIANA* (Session dates: 03/​14/​2022 — 06/​06/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 294/​HB 106Would abol­ish the death penaltySB 294 pre­filed by Sen. Katrina Jackson (D) on March 3. HB 106 pre­filed by Rep. Kyle M. Green (D) on February 21.
HB 68Would make par­ents con­vict­ed of killing their own chil­dren eli­gi­ble for the death penal­ty. Murder of any child under age 12 is already a death-eligible crime.

Prefiled by Rep. Barbara Carpenter (D) on February 14. PASSED Committee on Administration of Criminal Justice on March 24 by a 9 – 2 vote.

MISSISSIPPI (Session dates: 01/​04/​2022 — 04/​01/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 800Would remove fir­ing squad as an autho­rized method of executionIntroduced by Rep. Zakiya Summers (D) on January 17, 2022. Died in com­mit­tee February 1.
HB 1479/​SB 2655Would grant the Commissioner of the Department of Corrections dis­cre­tion to deter­mine the method of exe­cu­tion from the options of lethal injec­tion, elec­tro­cu­tion, nitro­gen hypox­ia, or firing squad

HB 1479 intro­duced by Rep. Nick Bain (R) on January 17, 2022. PASSED the House by a vote of 81 – 383 on February 3, 2022. PASSED the Senate by a vote of 38 – 14 on March 8. SIGNED by the Governor on April 14.

SB 2655 intro­duced by Sen. Joey Fillingane (R) on January 17, 2022. Died in com­mit­tee February 1.

MISSOURI* (Session dates: 01/​05/​2022 — 05/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 1612/​HB 2028Would abol­ish the death penal­ty and resen­tence death-row pris­on­ers to life without parole.HB 1612 pre­filed December 1, 2021 by Rep. Tony Lovasco (R). HB 2028 pre­filed December 20, 2021 by Rep. Sarah Unsicker (D).
NEW YORK (Session dates: 01/​06/​2021 — 01/​01/​2023)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
AB 3741Would rein­state the death penaltySponsored by Assemblyman Joe DeStefano (R). Referred to Codes on January 282021
NORTH CAROLINA* (Session dates: 1/​13/​2021 — 06/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 724
Would abol­ish the death penalty
Introduced April 21, 2021 by four Democratic sponsors.
OHIO* (Session dates: 01/​04/​2021 — 12/​31/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 103/​HB 183Would abol­ish the death penalty
SB 103 intro­duced March 2, 2021 by Sens. Nickie Antonio (D) and Stephen Huffman (R) and referred to Judiciary Committee. HB 183 intro­duced March 4, 2021 by Reps. Jean Schmidt (R) and Adam Miller (D) and referred to Government Oversight Committee. Re-referred to Criminal Justice Committee on April 15. Four hear­ings were held in the Criminal Justice Committee throughout 2021.
HB 586Would allow con­sid­er­a­tion of DNA test­ing, regard­less of who request­ed the test­ing. Intended to close a legal loop­hole that allows pris­on­ers to remain incar­cer­at­ed, despite DNA evi­dence of their inno­cence, because the test­ing was request­ed by some­one oth­er than the prisoner.Introduced by Reps. Jean Schmidt (R) and Terrence Upchurch (D) on March 12022.
OKLAHOMA (Session dates: 02/​01/​2021 — 05/​29/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 1551Would cre­ate a Conviction Integrity Review Unit with­in the Oklahoma Board of Pardon and Parole to review cap­i­tal cas­es in which the defen­dant has pre­sent­ed a plau­si­ble claim of actu­al inno­cence (Bill substituted)
Conviction Integrity Review Unit bill sub­sti­tut­ed for pri­or ver­sion of HB 1551 and approved by the House Criminal Justice and Corrections Committee on March 9, 2021. Sponsored by Rep. Kevin McDugle (R) and Sen. Shane Jett (R).

HB 2219

Would require all Oklahoma dis­trict attorney’s offices and the Office of the Attorney General to allow open-file dis­cov­ery at all stages of a capital caseFirst read­ing February 1, 2021, referred to House Judiciary Committee. Sponsored by Rep. Kevin McDugle (R) and Sen. Shane Jett (R).
HB 2220Would cre­ate a Prosecutorial Disclosure Review Panel to review pros­e­cu­tion files and pros­e­cu­tor con­duct in death penalty casesFirst read­ing February 1, 2021, referred to House Judiciary Committee. Sponsored by Rep. Kevin McDugle (R) and Sen. Shane Jett (R).
HB 3903Would restrict the pow­ers of the par­don and parole board, includ­ing 1) pro­hibit­ing the par­don and parole board from rec­om­mend­ing com­mu­ta­tion hear­ings to the Governor for any­one sen­tenced to death or life with­out parole, 2) pre­vent the parole board from hear­ing cas­es based on actu­al inno­cence claims, and 3) lim­it parole board clemen­cy rec­om­men­da­tions in death cas­es to life without paroleFirst read­ing February 7, 2022, referred to Judiciary Committee. Sponsored by Rep. John Pfeiffer (R).
PENNSYLVANIA* (Session dates: 01/​05/​2021 — 11/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 499/​HB 999Would abol­ish the death penalty
SB 499 spon­sored by Sen. Katie J. Muth (D) and referred to Judiciary Committee on July 26, 2021. HB 999 spon­sored by Rep. Christopher M. Rabb (D) and referred to Judiciary Committee on April 12021.
SOUTH CAROLINA* (Session dates: 01/​12/​2021 — 06/​15/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
S 52Would abol­ish the death penalty

Prefiled by Sen. Gerald Malloy (D) and referred to Committee on Judiciary, December 92020

S 200/​H 3755Would make elec­tro­cu­tion the default method of exe­cu­tion, add fir­ing squad as an option for the method of exe­cu­tion, and alter the process by which pris­on­ers may elect lethal injec­tion as their method of executionH 3755 intro­duced by 29 spon­sors and referred to Committee on Judiciary, January 27, 2021. PASSED com­mit­tee by a 14 – 7 vote on February 23.
S 200 pre­filed by six Republican spon­sors and referred to Committee on Corrections and Penology, December 9, 2020. PASSED com­mit­tee by 11 – 6 vote on February 2. PASSED the full Senate by a vote of 32 – 11 on March 3. PASSEDthe House Judiciary Committee by a vote of 13 – 9 on April 27. PASSED the House by a vote of 66 – 43 on May 5. SIGNED by the gov­er­nor on May 14.
SOUTH DAKOTA (Session dates: 01/​11/​2022 — 03/​28/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 159

Would pro­hib­it the death penal­ty for defen­dants with severe mental illness

Introduced by Sen. Timothy Johns (R) and Rep. Aaron Aylward (R) on January 27, 2022. Referred to Senate Judiciary Committee. PASSED the Senate Judiciary Committee by a 6 – 1 vote on Feb. 15. PASSED the Senate by a 21 – 14 vote on Feb. 22. Referred to House Judiciary Committee on Feb. 24. Amended by the House Judiciary Committee and PASSED by a vote of 8 – 3 on March 2. FAILED on a vote of 25 – 43 in the full House.
TENNESSEE (Session dates: 01/​12/​2021 — 05/​07/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 1/​SB 1236

Would allow a defen­dant who has been sen­tenced to the death penal­ty and whose con­vic­tion is final to peti­tion the tri­al court for a deter­mi­na­tion of whether the defen­dant is inel­i­gi­ble for the death penal­ty because of intellectual disability.

Defines intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty as sig­nif­i­cant lim­i­ta­tions in both intel­lec­tu­al func­tion­ing and adap­tive behav­ior, includ­ing many every­day social and prac­ti­cal skills; and … [t]hat orig­i­nat­ed pri­or to the person’s eighteenth birthday.”


HB 1 filed for intro­duc­tion by Rep. G.A. Hardaway (D) on November 4, 2020 and intro­duced on January 12, 2021. Referred to the House Criminal Justice Committee on January 13 and assigned to the Criminal Justice Subcommittee January 27.

SB 1236 filed for intro­duc­tion Sen. Brenda Gilmore (D) and intro­duced on February 11, 2021. Referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee February 22.

HB 1062/​SB 1349

Would allow a defen­dant who has pre­vi­ous­ly been sen­tenced to death penal­ty and whose con­vic­tion is final to peti­tion the tri­al court for a deter­mi­na­tion of whether the defen­dant inel­i­gi­ble for the death penal­ty because of intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty.

Would con­form the def­i­n­i­tion of intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty to the diag­nos­tic cri­te­ria con­tained in the cur­rent edi­tion of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) of the American Psychiatric Association.”

House bill 1062 filed for intro­duc­tion by Rep. David Hawk (R) on February 10, 2021, intro­duced February 11, and referred to the Criminal Justice Subcommittee of the House Criminal Justice Committee on February 22. Recommended for pas­sage by a voice vote of the sub­com­mit­tee on April 7. PASSED the Criminal Justice Committee by a voice vote on April 14. PASSED the House by a vote of 89 – 4 on April 26. PASSEDthe Senate by a vote of 28 – 1 on April 26. Transmitted to the gov­er­nor on May 4. SIGNED by the gov­er­nor on May 11.

Senate bill 1349 filed for intro­duc­tion by Sen. Todd Gardenhire (R) and intro­duced February 11, 2021 and referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 22. Passed the Senate Judiciary Committee cal­en­dar by a vote of 7 – 1 on April 14 [Note, leg­isla­tive web­site erro­neous­ly says 4/​13.]

HB 47/​SB 226Would make a defen­dant con­vict­ed of first degree mur­der eli­gi­ble for the death penal­ty if the vic­tim was a Good Samaritan help­ing, pro­tect­ing, or pro­vid­ing emer­gency care to a per­son and the defen­dant knew the vic­tim was act­ing as a Good Samaritan.House bill filed for intro­duc­tion by Rep. Brandon Ogles (R) on December 16, 2020, intro­duced January 12, 2021, and referred to House Criminal Justice Committee on January 13. Assigned to Criminal Justice Subcommittee January 27 and rec­om­mend­ed for pas­sage February 24. Recommended for pas­sage by the Criminal Justice Committee on March 3. PASSED the House by a vote of 84 – 0 on March 15.

Senate bill filed by Sen. Joey Hensley (R) on January 19, 2021 and referred to Senate Judiciary Committee on February 10. Recommended for pas­sage by the com­mit­tee by a vote of 7 – 2 on March 30. The Senate moved to sub­sti­tute SB 226 with HB 47 and PASSED the House bill by a vote of 26 – 6 on April 8. SIGNED by the gov­er­nor on April 22.
SB 2310/​HB 2809Would pro­hib­it the death penal­ty for defen­dants with severe mental illnessSenate bill intro­duced by Senator Brenda Gilmore (D) on February 1, 2022. House bill intro­duced by Rep. G.A. Hardaway (D) on February 22022.
UTAH* (Session dates: 01/​18/​2022 — 03/​04/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 147

Would abol­ish the death penal­ty and add a sen­tenc­ing option of 45 years to life for aggravated murder

Introduced on January 18, 2022 by Rep. V. Lowry Snow (R) and Sen. Daniel McCay (R). FAILED in House Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice Committee on Feb. 14 by a 5 – 6 vote.
VIRGINIA (Session dates: 01/​12/​2022 — 03/​08/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HB 661/​SB 379

Would rein­state the death penal­ty for mur­der of a police officer

HB 661 pre­filed by Del. William Wampler (R) on January 11, 2022.

SB 379 pre­filed by Sen. Bill DeSteph (R) on January 11, 2022. Senate Judiciary Committee passed by indef­i­nite­ly on February 7 by a 9 – 6 vote. Passed by indef­i­nite­ly” means the com­mit­tee can recon­sid­er the bill at a lat­er meet­ing, but if it takes no fur­ther action, the bill is dead.

Both bills FAILED in committee.


WASHINGTON* (Session dates: 01/​11/​2021 — 04/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SB 5047Would remove the death penal­ty from Washington’s laws, bring­ing it in line with the 2018 Washington Supreme Court rul­ing strik­ing down the death penalty.
Prefiled December 31, 2020 by 16 spon­sors. First read­ing January 11, 2021, referred to Committee on Law & Justice.
SB 5099Would rein­state the death penal­ty for peo­ple who com­mit mur­der while incarcerated.Prefiled January 7, 2021 by Sen. Keith Wagoner (R) and Sen. Jeff Holy (R). First read­ing January 11, 2021, referred to Committee on Law & Justice.
WYOMING* (Session dates: 01/​12/​2021 — 04/​02/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
SF 150

Would repeal Wyoming’s death penalty.

Introduced March 1, 2021 by 13 bipar­ti­san spon­sors. Referred to Senate Revenue Committee. Hearing sched­uled for March 4. PASSED Committee by a 4 – 1 vote on March 4. FAILED in the Senate by a 11 – 19 vote on March 18.
U.S. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT* (Session dates: 01/​03/​2021 — 10/​30/​2022)
Bill num­berBill DescriptionStatus
HR 72

Would pro­vide addi­tion­al aggra­vat­ing fac­tors for the impo­si­tion of the fed­er­al death penalty

Introduced January 4, 2021 by Rep. Vern Buchanan (R ‑FL)
HR 97/​HR 262Would abol­ish the fed­er­al death penaltyIntroduced January 4, 2021. HR 97 spon­sored by Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D — NY). HR 262 spon­sored by Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D — MA).