* indicates states with bills to abolish the death penalty
State | Description | Status |
---|---|---|
California* | Bill (#490) introduced by Senator Loni Hancock to have a referendum on abolishing the state’s death penalty, noting its high costs | Passed Assembly’s Public Safety Com. 5-2. The bill was not voted out of the Assembly’s Appropriations Committee, signaling the bill’s defeat. However, a coalition called Taxpayers for Justice announced it will begin the process of collecting signatures to place the issue on the ballot in 2012. (L.A. Times, Aug. 26, 2011). |
Connecticut* | 1. A bill co-sponsored by Rep. Gary Holder-Winfield and Rep. Roland Lemar would abolish the death penalty for future cases and replace the sentence with life without parole. HB 6425. Another abolition bill would apply retroactively. SB 1035. | 1. A similar bill passed the legislature in 2009 but was vetoed by the governor. The new governor said he would sign such legislation. Joint Judiciary Committee hearing on Mar. 7. Passed(26-17) in Com. Apr. 12 (prospective-only bill was passed and substituted for SB 1035). Next vote in the Senate. |
Florida* | 1. Rep. Michelle Rehwinkel Vasilinda introduced a bill (HB 4189) to abolish the death penalty | 1. Passage considered unlikely |
Georgia | SR 155 and HR 250 would urge District Attorneys not to seek the death penalty and instead reinvest resources into solving cold cases, services for victims of crime and other public safety measures. | |
Hawaii | SB 838 would establish the death penalty | |
Illinois* | 1.SB 3539 would repeal death penalty and use money saved to support victims’ families and assist law enforcement (part of 2010 legislative session) | 1. Passed House 60-54 on Jan. 6. PassedSenate by 32-25 on Jan. 11. |
Indiana* | Bill to abolish the death penalty - SB 344. | |
Kansas* | HB 2323 would abolish the death penalty and replace the sentence with life without parole for future cases. | The bill is sponsored by the Corrections and Juvenile Justice Committee. |
Kentucky* | 1.HB 274 would exempt the severely mentally ill from the death penalty. | |
Maryland* | Del. Sandy Rosenberg is the lead sponsor of a bill to abolish the death penalty. HB 1075 and SB 837. | Bill to be introduced Feb. 10. Hearings in House Judic. Com. on Mar. 15. Session ended without passage (Defeated). |
Massachusetts | Would reinstate the death penalty - HB 470 | |
Mississippi | Would establish a moratorium on death penalty - HB 127 | |
Missouri* | 1. Bill to help prevent race-based prosecution HB 516 | |
Montana* | SB 185 would repeal the death penalty and replace it with life without parole. Sen. Dave Wazenried is the primary sponsor. | Passed Senate Judiciary Committee hearing 7-5 on Feb. 10. Passed Senate 26-24 on Feb. 14. Passed final Senate vote on Feb. 15 and moves to House. House hearing on Mar. 15. Defeatedin House Judic. Com. on Mar. 18. |
Nebraska* | LB 276 would replace the death penalty with life without parole plus restitution to victims’ families. | Passed Judic. Com. 6-1 in March, but unlikely to be finally voted on this year. |
Nevada | 1. SB 283 attempts to shorten death penalty appeals by withdrawing the requirement of appointing an attorney for post-conviction review | 1. Sen. Judic. Com. hearing in April. |
New Hampshire | 1. A bill to expand the death penalty to murders committed in the course of a home invasion; the Kimberly Cates Bill (HB 167) |
|
New Jersey | Sen. Robert Singer introduced a bill to reinstate the death penalty for the murder of a child, police officer, or while committing terrorism. (S-2674) | |
New Mexico | Rep. Kintigh introduced House Joint Resolution 6 that would put reinstatement of the death penalty before the voters in a 2012 referendum. | Bill requires passage by 2/3 of both houses. Reinstatement appears unlikely. Session ended without passage (defeated). |
New York | Sen. Gregg Ball (R-Carmel) plans to introduce a bill reinstating the death penalty for the murder of a police officer or corrections officer. | Announcement Mar. 4. |
North Carolina | 1. HB 615 would effectively repeal the state’s Racial Justice Act by requiring proof of intentional discrimination | 1. Before House Judic. Com. Passed Com. June 1. Repeal of RJA passed by both Houses in a special sessioni. Vetoed by the governor on Dec. 14. Legislature will have an opportunity to override veto. |
Ohio* | A bill co-sponsored by Rep. Ted Celeste and Rep. Nickie Antonio would abolish the death penalty and replace the sentence with life without parole. Chief Justice of Sup. Ct. established a blue-ribbon commission to study all aspects of the death penalty. | Introduced week of Mar. 14. Hearings Dec. 14. |
Oklahoma | A bill to allow execution by “drug or drugs” determined by the Dept. of Corrections, perhaps leading to a single-drug protocol. | Passed House 94-0. Passed Senate panel, March 22. Bill passed and sent to governor. OK has continued to use a 3-drug protocol. |
Oregon | Bills to limit death penalty; e.g., prosecution must announce intent to seek death within 180 days of charging murder. See SB 365, 366. | April. |
Pennsylvania* | 1. Bill to abolish death penalty - SB 423 4. SB 6 Resolution to initiate a study of death penalty. | 1. Introduced Mar. 24 4. Passed Senate on Dec. 14. No further action necessary so study can begin. |
Tennessee | Bill to exempt the severely mentally ill from the death penalty-HB 2064 | Hearing on April 19 in House Judic. Com. On April 21, bill was transferred to a summer study com., thereby putting off its passage at this time. |
Texas* | 1. HB 819, authored by Reps. Farrar, Allen, and Marquez, calls for repeal of the death penalty in Texas. | 1&2. A hearing on the bills will likely be held at the end of March. |
Utah | Bill to restrict death penalty appeals (HB202); would generally bar a court from issuing a temporary stay of execution following a defendant’s 1st post-conviction petition. The bill also would limit public funding of defense counsel after that first post-conviction petition has been rejected. There is an exception for new evidence that would alter the case’s outcome. | Unanimously passed House Judicariary Standing Committe (Jan. 27). Passed Senate 27-0 (Feb. 17) and sent to governor. |
Virginia | Bill would allow the death penalty for co-conspirators in cases of rape, where the victim is murdered. Senator Obenshain’s bill (SB 1200). | Passed a subcommittee of the Senate Courts of Justice Committee (Jan. 27). Full Committee voted 8-7 to table the bill indefinitely (defeated). |
Washington* | SB 5456 would repeal the death penalty | Bill did not get voted out of committee (defeated). |
West Virginia | HB 2526 would reinstate the death penalty. | Hearing in the House of Delegates Feb. 15. Reinstatement appears unlikely. Bill did not pass in this legislative session (defeated). |
Federal | Sen. Patrick Leahy has introduced a bill implementing the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. The bill would allow federal courts to review capital cases when defendants were deprived of their rights to consular notification. (June) | An execution occurred in Texas on July 7 of Humberto Leal from Mexico who was not informed of his rights under the Convention. |