Trending Topics

Delaware Senate passes bill to abolish death penalty

The bill now goes to the House, where it faces an uphill battle

By Randall Chase
Associated Press

DOVER, Del. — The Delaware Senate has passed a bill to abolish the state’s death penalty.

The legislation, approved by an 11-9 vote Thursday, mirrors a bill that passed the Senate in 2013 by only one vote before dying in a House committee.

The bill now goes to the House, where it faces an uphill battle. Democratic Gov. Jack Markell has not said where he stands.

The legislation removes execution as a possible punishment for first-degree murder, leaving life in prisonwithout parole as the only sentence.

The bill would not apply to the 15 killers now on Delaware’s death row.

Democratic Sen. Karen Peterson is the bill’s chief sponsor. She said death penalty opponents believe capital punishment is arbitrary, discriminatory against minorities, costly to taxpayers and ineffective as a deterrent to crime.