death penalty news

April 12, 2005


NEW YORK:

Assembly Committee Kills Death Penalty Bill

The Democratic-controlled state Assembly's powerful Codes Committee voted 
11-7 Tuesday not to send legislation aimed at reinstating New York's death 
penalty to the full house for a vote, a move that may effectively kill the 
effort for this year.

Such legislation has been pushed hard by Republican Gov. George Pataki and 
the state Senate's Republican majority leader, Joseph Bruno. New York's 
death penalty was reinstated in 1995 by the Legislature and the newly 
elected Pataki who had vowed, as part of his successful campaign to oust 
then-Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo, to bring capital punishment back.

Cuomo, in 12 years as governor, had routinely vetoed death penalty 
legislation. The 1995 death penalty law was effectively declared invalid by 
a ruling from the state's highest court last year. Since the law took 
effect in 1995, no person in New York has been executed.

"I'm very pleased," said Albany's Roman Catholic bishop, Howard Hubbard, 
after the committee vote. "I think the death penalty has not proven 
effective and is morally repugnant." While he has been a death penalty 
supporter in the past, state Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a Manhattan 
Democrat, has cooled to the policy in recent months.

(source: AP)

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