A bill that would have end­ed the death penal­ty in Kansas lost by a tie vote of 20 – 20 in the state Senate on February 19. The bill would have replaced the death penal­ty with a sen­tence of life with­out parole. Republican Senator Carolyn McGinn, the orig­i­nal spon­sor of the leg­is­la­tion, argued for repeal, point­ing to the high cost of the death penal­ty: It costs half a mil­lion dol­lars, or 70 per­cent more, to try a death penal­ty case than a non-death penal­ty case and yet the state hasn’t exe­cut­ed any­one since 1965. We’re not exe­cut­ing any­body. Can we use this mon­ey to pre­vent future heinous, hor­ri­ble crimes? Can we use it to solve cold cas­es that are up on the shelf for those fam­i­lies who don’t even know who mur­dered their fam­i­ly mem­ber?” Sen. McGinn also based her oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty on her respect-for-life posi­tion: Those who have com­mit­ted even heinous mur­ders are still chil­dren of God, she said. Tell me, at what point in time did they lose that sta­tus and who made that deci­sion,” she asked. Twelve of the 20 sen­a­tors who vot­ed for repeal were Republicans. 

Also argu­ing for repeal, Republican Senator John Vratil said stud­ies failed to show the death penal­ty was a deter­rent to mur­der. Vratil cit­ed fig­ures that showed decreased mur­der rates in every state over the past two decades, regard­less of whether the state had the death penalty. 

(D. Klepper, Live blog­ging from KS Death Penalty Debate: Bill Fails on 20 – 20 Vote,” Kansas City Star, February 22, 2010; Lawrence Journal-World, Feb. 20, 2010). See also Recent Legislative Activity.

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