Finally, death sentences should end

True social change does not come easily or quickly. It often happens incrementally, as people take steps, sometimes reluctantly, away from one direction and toward another one. Rarely can there be universal agreement about the best ways for humans to behave, but as more and more people accept certain modifications to social norms, life can actually change. So it is with capital punishment in Connecticut. Over recent years, as the arguments for and against capital punishment have been made at legislative sessions in Hartford, the trend has slowly drifted more in the direction of ending state-sponsored death sentences. It might have happened in 2009, if not for the horrendous 2007 murders of the Petit family in Cheshire that justifiably caused universal rage and pushed public opinion back toward supporting capital punishment. Then-Gov. M. Jodi Rell vetoed the 2009 bill that had passed the Senate and House repealing capital punishment.The bill before the state Legislature now, which has been passed by the Senate and is expected to come before the House by mid-April [The House sent the bill forward to the governor late Wednesday, April 11, after more than nine hours of discussion on the floor], seems to be on a solid path to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s desk for his signature. He has indicated he will sign the bill, despite the fact that it has been changed from the original form that he and many in the Legislature supported.The current bill keeps in line for execution the 11 inmates now on the state’s death row, which capital punishment opponents find unconscionable. However, the way that the system now works, only those prisoners who want to be executed wind up dead. Serial killer Michael Ross, the only condemned person to be executed in Connecticut since 1960, had his life terminated by lethal injection in 2005. Ross was determined to die, waiving any further appeals after having appealed his rape and murder convictions for 17 years. The steps taken in the current bill to end capital punishment in Connecticut may not be enough for some, but they are steps toward a better society. The bill should pass and be signed into law, and Connecticut should finally admit that it does not believe in executing prisoners. This state’s criminal justice system will deal with those who are convicted of the most heinous crimes in other ways, rather than using a threat of death that doesn’t materialize unless the prisoner decides to die. It is disappointing that state Sen. Andrew Roraback (R-30), now running for U.S. Congress in our 5th District, decided to back off his longstanding support for repealing the death penalty in Connecticut and voted against the current bill. One can always find justifications for voting against a bill that is imperfect, but if perfection were the only acceptable benchmark in judging any legislation, none would be worthy of a positive vote.

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