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Death Penalty

Friday, March 22, 2013

SPEAK OUT: Do Gaithersburg Residents Support the Death Penalty?

The Maryland House of delegates voted on March 15th to abolish the death penalty in Maryland.

  The Maryland House of Delegates recently voted to abolish the death penalty. If Gov. Martin O'Malley signs the bill, Maryland would become the 18th state in the country to do so. According to a a poll released by Goucher College, 51 percent of respondents were in favor of capital punishment, versus 43 percent who were in favor of abolishing it. In Gaithersburg, similar mixed emotions were evident among people at a coffee shop in Quince Orchard. Mary Anderson, a 43-year-old writer, felt that more should be done to rehabilitate people convicted of murder. "I don't know how we are ever going to evolve as a society if we keep doing the 'eye for an eye' thing," she said. "Obviously, the death penalty doesn't scare people enough, it just doesn…

Friday, March 15, 2013

Maryland House Passes Death Penalty Repeal

The bill now goes to Gov. Martin O'Malley for his signature.

The Maryland House of Delegates passed a bill repealing the death penalty in Maryland. With the 82-56 vote, the bill will go to Gov. Martin O'Malley for his signature.

1ke

3:38 pm on Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Welcome to America. I have never felt comfortable walking on a street in my life. Never. Not ever. When the divide between haves and have-nots is so broad and bridging it so unthinkable, unimaginable, this is what you get. Enjoy living like the rest of us. Stay alert. I am done on this thread, Wiz.   more ›

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Maryland Death Penalty Moves Closer to Repeal

The House of Delegates rejects 18 amendments to a Senate bill that abolishes capital punishment.

The abolition of the death penalty in Maryland is one step closer to reality with a preliminary vote by the House of Delegates Wednesday night. The House debated the bill for more than two hours with proponents defeating 18 amendments. Only one of the amendments was offered by a Democrat, Del. C.T. Wilson of Charles County. The amendments attempted to change the bill from a full-blown repeal to a partial repeal, keeping capital punishment for contract killers, mass murderers, those who rape and murder or the killers of schoolchildren. The bill now moves to a final vote scheduled for Friday. Opponents of the repeal can still offer amendments before a final vote is taken. Both sides expect that any bill passed will ultimately end up as a …

Red White and Blue

11:30 am on Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Every criminal that has been put down, has never come back to the system compared to about 95% that are released always return. take their good parts and feed the crabs with their other parts, they did not care about human life when they we sentenced.   more ›

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Majority of Marylanders Oppose Ending Death Penalty

The latest poll from Goucher College shows that the majority of those polled do not see capital punishment as a deterrent to criminals.

A majority of Marylanders surveyed in a newly released poll say they favor retaining the death penalty in Maryland but appear to prefer life in prison without parole as a punishment for murder. The poll released by the Sarah T. Hughes Field Politics Center at Goucher College found that 51 percent of those surveyed favored retaining capital punishment in Maryland compared to 43 percent who said they favored abolishing the law. The poll released Wednesday afternoon comes just before the House of Delegates takes a scheduled preliminary vote on a bill to abolish the death penalty. That vote is scheduled for some time after 6 p.m. Fifty-five percent of those surveyed disagree that the death penalty acts as a deterrent to murder, while 37 …

Baltimore Matt

2:34 pm on Tuesday, April 16, 2013

When someone commits murder or rape, I no longer consider them human....they have proven themselves to be animals and need to be removed from all forms of civilization. They are no longer the same and they can no longer be trusted to be around other human beings... like that of a rabid animal. It is cruel to house prisoners for non-murder, non-rape charges in the same facilities as murders and …   more ›

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Zirkin Throws Support Behind Death Penalty Repeal

A bill to repeal capital punishment is expected to pass out of a Senate committee with the vote of the Baltimore County Democrat.

The effort to repeal the death penalty in Maryland was stalled by the vote of one Baltimore County Democratic senator but it may pass this year because of another. Sen. Bobby Zirkin said he will vote in favor of a bill that repeals capital punishment in the state. "I'm forever torn on this issue, have been and probably always will be," Zirkin said in an interview Thursday. "I'm extremely jealous of people who fall comfortably on one side of the debate or the other." In the end, Zirkin said he made the decision to vote for repealing capital punishment based on testimony of some victims who said the death penalty provided little closure because of lengthy appeals and that the state hasn't executed anyone in nearly a decade. Zirkin said the …

Mark Patro

12:07 pm on Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Moments ago, Maryland's State Senate voted 27-20 to PASS legislation to end the death penalty!   more ›

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Opponents Appear to Have Votes to Repeal Death Penalty

Capital punishment in Maryland already is effectively dead, according to some prosecutors.

By Julia Maldonado, Capital News Service A bill that would repeal the death penalty in Maryland appears to have the votes needed to clear the Senate, adding momentum to Gov. Martin O’Malley and proponents’ push for repeal. But some prosecutors and other death penalty supporters say a repeal would only make official what is already true—capital punishment doesn’t really exist in Maryland. The state has one of the most restrictive death penalty laws in the country. Combine that with bureaucratic opposition from the governor and judges’ reluctance to impose the ultimate penalty, and even the most violent criminals are not likely to ever be executed, some say. “I don’t want them to ever have the opportunity to do it again,” said Sen. Kathleen …

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George Washington

3:13 pm on Tuesday, February 12, 2013

This state has gone over to the dark side and it is crime ridden and very uncivilized. Pro death penalty because some malicious animals deserve to die!   more ›

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

O'Malley Pushes for Wind, Gun Legislation

The governor's seventh State of the State address is seen by many as a prelude to an expected run for president in 2016.

Gov. Martin O'Malley Wednesday urged lawmakers to pass his offshore wind bill and find more money for transportation projects—though he offered no details on a gas tax initiative. In his seventh State of the State speech, the Democratic governor also used his 35-minute address to remind legislators of what he sees as his major accomplishments since taking office in 2007. In many ways, the speech seemed to lay the groundwork for what many expect will be a run for President in 2016. Choice was a major theme in O'Malley's speech. "Better choices. Better results. The proof is in our progress," O'Malley said. [Read O'Malley's speech as prepared or watch it.] O'Malley's Legislative Wish List On the top of O'Malley's wish list are the passage of …

Tom Hope

3:55 pm on Sunday, February 3, 2013

I'll try to throw a different twist on this topic.... Look up the amendment Representative Jose Serrano from New York is proposing to the 22nd Amendment of our Constitution.   more ›

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Graphic: Maryland Executions and Death Row Prisoners

Sean Henderson and Julia Maldonado, Capital News Service

This interactive graphic shows the five people executed in Maryland since 1976, and the five people currently on death row in the state. Also includes an interactive map comparing the number of executions in Maryland since 1976 with the number of executions in other states in that period.

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Shawn

4:38 pm on Wednesday, January 30, 2013

John good common sense along with a strong financial IQ will not be tolerated here on the Patch forum. Shame on you. ;)   more ›

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

O'Malley Gets Behind Death Penalty Repeal Effort

Maryland has not executed a prisoner since 2005, and is among the states with the fewest number of prisoners on death row with five.

By Julia Maldonado for Capital News Service Maryland moved one step closer to becoming the 18th state to abolish the death penalty after Gov. Martin O’Malley said Tuesday that he believes the state should end capital punishment completely because it is “expensive and does not work.” The governor’s announcement could tip the scale on what has been a divisive issue in the legislature for years. O’Malley was joined Tuesday by members of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, including president and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous, who was optimistic about the likelihood of abolishing the death penalty. Jealous invoked former Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall of Maryland, who was a capital punishment opponent. “Today’s…

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Death Penalty, Gas and Guns: The 2013 Maryland General Assembly

The session opened Wednesday with social and budget issues among lawmakers' top priorities.

By Lucas High, Capital News Service ANNAPOLIS—Gun control, the death penalty, transportation and environmental legislation were expected to be top priorities for state lawmakers as the Maryland General Assembly convened for its 433rd legislative session Wednesday in Annapolis. In the wake of the mass killings in Newtown, CT, in December, Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) plans to push for tighter firearm restrictions, including a ban on assault rifles and high-capacity magazines. Sen. Brian E. Frosh said there will be a reintroduction of a bill he sponsored last legislative session that prohibits the sale of guns with magazines of 10 rounds or more. “[The proposed bill] can protect people, save lives and it certainly does not infringe on Second …

Craig

1:14 am on Friday, January 11, 2013

Democrats in MD are progressive and constantly moving "forward." From our dear senate leader Mike V. Miller (fat, ugly white male - 26 years in power) to our awesome governor O'Malley (white male - pretends to play guitar) to our brave House leader (Michael Busch - white male)... MD is a proven progressive place where all peoples and women in particular are represented. AWESOME!   more ›

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