North Carolina House Democrats Vote Yes for Racial Quotas on the Death Penalty and a Moratorium on Executions of 1st degree MurderersNC NEWS -- On July 15, 2009, 61 House Democrats voted for Senate Bill "NC Racial Justice Act" (SB461). Federal and State law already prohibits racial discrimination in imposing death sentence for first degree murder (and any crime). However, this bill goes far beyond current law by allowing use of statistics in a particular county or district to prove that since some other person was possibly discriminated against, that an alleged murderer may not be subject to the death sentence for first degree murder notwithstanding lack of real evidence of actual discrimination. Furthermore, since there is not a single county or district in the state with enough numbers for a valid statistical study. Evidence presented will be complete nonsense (based on population proportion rather than offender proportion). Of course, murderers have not agreed to this quota system and will continue their crimes. But they do appreciate the effective moratorium on executions. So who loses with this new legislation? Primarily, the families of victims of first degree murderers currently on death row. It is only the worst of the worst of the first degree murderers who actually get the death sentence. Some of the families of these victims have been waiting 8 to 15 years (typical) and up to 20 and 25 years for these sentences to be carried out. This bill will lengthen that period by several more years. Why? See Section 5 below. And none of these victims had any choice in the race of the person who murdered them. Future homicide victims. The Office of North Carolina Republican House Leader, Paul Stam, has presented the public and the press detailed studies gathered by the Attorney General that demonstrate the strong deterrent effect that a sentence of death for murder has on future homicides. Conservative estimates of the number of additional innocent homicide victims for every year during a moratorium would be about 50. They estimate that if this bill becomes law, it will add 3 to 4 additional years to the time on death row and that much time before any executions are carried out in this state. A death penalty that is not carried out has no deterrent effect. These 150+ additional victims are predominantly African American. We do not know their names, yet, and may never know their names because this is only the excess number of homicides caused by this moratorium. But they are real people whose families will grieve over their deaths. A half-dozen Democrats who promised their District Attorney or Sheriff that they would not vote for this legislation but did so. How will they explain that to the chief law enforcement officers of their districts? How will they explain it to the taxpayers and citizens of their districts, and how will they explain it to the families of the victims? The Sheriffs Association and the conference of District Attorneys strongly opposed the bill. These associations are majority Democratic by party. Taxpayers. Democrats are planning to raise an additional $1 billion in new taxes on our people in the middle of a recession. Is it really an appropriate use of resources to spend tens of millions of dollars to give additional hearings to 163 first degree murderers already on death row? Each of these convicted murderers has had multiple hearings already in front of 47 different judges (typically) over a span of 8 to 15 years, and some even more. Could these funds not have been used to prosecute this year's murderers or to hire teachers? A functioning law enforcement system. Attached are letters from four District Attorneys explaining this process.
However, there are some winners with this new abomination of legislation. The 163 blood thirsty criminals convicted of first degree murder now on death row are the principal beneficiaries. Collectively, 163 of them have committed 270 murders, 58 rapes, 40 kidnappings and hundreds of other violent felonies. Almost 1,200 felonies in total. Let me share with you some of their stories. You decide whether they are on death row because of their race or whether they are there because of their crimes.
Finally, what citizens might find most interesting is the debate over the justification for the adoption of SB461"NC Racial Justice Act" (Audio NCGA SB461 debate excerpt). |
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