An edi­to­r­i­al in the Asbury Park Press, a news­pa­per that for­mer­ly sup­port­ed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, called on New Jersey pol­i­cy­mak­ers to aban­don the state’s cost­ly death penal­ty and replace it with the sure and swift” sen­tence of life with­out parole. Stating that New Jersey has wast­ed mil­lions of dol­lars on the death penal­ty, but has not car­ried out an exe­cu­tion since it was rein­stat­ed in1982, the edi­to­r­i­al not­ed:

Can it real­ly be 22 years since Robert O. Marshall cow­ard­ly hired hit men to shoot and kill his wife and the moth­er of his three chil­dren for insur­ance mon­ey? So he could con­tin­ue an extra­mar­i­tal affair and car­ry on with his coun­try club life? Sadly, it has been that long for the 66-year-old for­mer Toms River insur­ance sales­man.

Marshall was on death row for two decades before a court found his rep­re­sen­ta­tion dur­ing the death penal­ty phase of his tri­al was lack­ing. The court over­turned the death penal­ty and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of that deci­sion, leav­ing it up to the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office to decide whether to seek the death penal­ty again.

Ocean County Prosecutor Thomas F. Kelaher said Friday his office strug­gled with the deci­sion, but ulti­mate­ly decid­ed not to ask anoth­er jury to sen­tence Marshall to death because of the dif­fi­cul­ty in mount­ing a case so long after the crime was com­mit­ted and the like­li­hood that more appeals would take years to resolve at great pub­lic expense.

This trou­ble­some and dis­tress­ing con­clu­sion was made only after exten­sive con­sul­ta­tion with the fam­i­ly of the vic­tim, Maria Marshall,” Kelaher said.

In March, we reluc­tant­ly called for anoth­er death penal­ty tri­al, with con­cern about the issues raised by Kelaher and the hope that Marshall would nev­er be paroled. However, we under­stand the pros­e­cu­tor’s rea­son­ing that going through anoth­er round of legal pro­ceed­ings that would cost more mil­lions over a decade or more is prob­lem­at­ic. And we urge him in the strongest terms to fol­low through with his pledge to oppose parole of Marshall for­ev­er. He could be released in 2014.

Which again brings us to the issue of New Jersey’s death penal­ty. Since its rein­sti­tu­tion in 1982, no cold-blood­ed mur­der­er has been exe­cut­ed. Nearly 50 death sen­tences have been over­turned by high­er courts. For now, a year­long mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions is in effect while a study com­mis­sion looks at how New Jersey enforces its death penal­ty statute.

The com­mis­sion should file its report now with the com­mon-sense find­ing that New Jersey’s death penal­ty is a fail­ure and should be abol­ished in favor of life in prison with­out parole.


To be effec­tive, jus­tice must be sure and swift. New Jersey’s death penal­ty statute is nei­ther. It is such a drain on resources as to be coun­ter­pro­duc­tive.

Think of the mil­lions of tax­pay­er dol­lars wast­ed on scum like Marshall. Multiply that by 50 or more. Life with­out chance of parole. That’s a sen­tence whose exe­cu­tion can be sure and swift.

(Asbury Park Press, May 16, 2006) (empha­sis added). See Editorials, Costs, and Life Without Parole.

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