On October 24, New Hampshire state representative Renny Cushing (pictured) will introduce a bill to repeal the state’s death penalty. In addition to a bi-partisan group of co-sponsors, Cushing will be joined by Judge Walter Murphy—a former chief justice of the New Hampshire Superior Court and chair of the New Hampshire Death Penalty Study Commission; Ray Dodge—a former police chief; Bishop Peter Libasci—of the Catholic Diocese of Manchester; and Nancy Filiault—a murder victim family member. Cushing, whose father was murdered in 1988, is also the Executive Director of Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights. In 2000, legislators voted to repeal the death penalty, but then-governor Jeanne Shaheen vetoed the bill. In 2009, the House also passed a repeal bill. New Hampshire has not had an execution since 1939. New Hampshire’s current governor, Maggie Hassan, has said she would sign a repeal bill.

(K. Stucker, “Bill to Repeal NH Death Penalty to Soon Be Unveiled,” Amherst Patch, October 21, 2013). See Victims and Recent Legislation.