
New Mexico Governor Abolishes Capital Punishment
Deborah Baker
The Associated Press
March 19, 2009
Gov. Bill Richardson, who has supported capital punishment, signed
legislation to repeal New Mexico's death penalty, calling it the "most
difficult decision in my political life."
The new law replaces lethal injection with a sentence of life in prison
without the possibility of parole. The repeal takes effect on July 1,
and applies only to crimes committed after that date.
"Regardless of my personal opinion about the death penalty, I do not
have confidence in the criminal justice system as it currently operates
to be the final arbiter when it comes to who lives and who dies for
their crime," Richardson said.
The American Civil Liberties Union called it "a historic step and a
clear sign that the United States continues to make significant
progress toward eradicating capital punishment once and for all."
But the New Mexico Sheriffs' and Police Association opposed repeal,
saying capital punishment deters violence against police officers,
jailers and prison guards. District attorneys also opposed the
legislation, arguing that the death penalty was a useful prosecutorial
tool.
"I'm worried for our law enforcement officers who are out there
courageously doing their job every night. We've lost a layer of
protection and it's a sad day in New Mexico," Bernalillo County Sheriff
Darren White said.
New Mexico becomes only the second state after New Jersey to ban
executions since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in
1976. Fourteen other states do not impose capital punishment.
The repeal passed the state Senate by a 24-18 vote Friday and was
approved by the House a month earlier. With Richardson facing a
midnight deadline to decide whether to sign or veto the legislation, he
said he made the decision in the late afternoon after going to the
state penitentiary.
There he saw the death chamber and visited the maximum security unit
where those sentenced to life-without-parole could be housed.
"My conclusion was those cells are something that may be worse than
death," the Democratic governor said at a news conference in the
Capitol. "I believe this is a just punishment."
The governor also caught a glimpse of one of the two men on death row,
Robert Fry. The repeal doesn't affect the death sentences of Fry or the
other inmate, Timothy Allen, and Richardson said he wouldn't commute
those sentences.
Richardson said he has long believed -- and still does -- that the
death penalty was a "just punishment" in rare cases for the worst
crimes. But he said he decided to sign the repeal legislation because
of flaws in how the death penalty was applied.
"More than 130 death row inmates have been exonerated in the past 10
years in this country, including four New Mexicans -- a fact I cannot
ignore," he said.
"Even with advances in DNA and other forensic evidence technologies, we
can't be 100 percent sure that only the truly guilty are convicted of
capital crimes."
Currently, New Mexico allows for the death penalty for certain murders,
including killing a child, a law enforcement or correctional officer
and a witness to a crime. New Mexico has executed one person since 1960.
The governor solicited input over the weekend from state residents. He
said he got to 12,000 responses by phone, e-mail and visits, with more
than three-fourths in favor of repeal.
"It was never popular in New Mexico," said Patrick Tyrell, a social
worker and longtime lobbyist for repeal whose brother-in-law was
murdered in 1984.
Roman Catholic Bishop Ricardo Ramirez of the Diocese of Las Cruces,
said the governor "has made New Mexico a leader in turning away from
the death penalty with all its moral problems and issues of fairness
and justice."
A former congressman and member of President Bill Clinton's cabinet,
Richardson said he was disturbed that death rows contain so many
minorities. And, from a foreign policy perspective, the death penalty
"did not seem to me to be good moral leadership and good foreign
policy."
"This is a milestone that will make other states stand up and take
notice," said Larry Cox, executive director, Amnesty International USA.
In Montana, a proposed ban has cleared the Senate and is pending in the
House. In Kansas, a bill failed to clear the Senate this week.
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