New Jersey Legislative Commission Recommends Abolition of the Death Penalty
Published by Hanno Kaiser January 2nd, 2007 in Law and SocietyMore good news from New Jersey.
Amid growing unease about capital punishment and a state moratorium on executions, a legislative commission recommended today that New Jersey become the first state in more than 35 years to abolish the death penalty. With just one of its 13 members dissenting, the commission said there was “no compelling evidence” that
the death penalty served a legitimate purpose and increasing evidence that it “is inconsistent with evolving standards of decency.” The panel recommended replacing capital punishment with the sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The death penalty is a moral outrage, unbecoming to any civilized nation in the 21st Century. Banning it would do New Jersey proud.
Technorati Tags: law, death penalty
License
This work is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 2.5 License.
Search
Categories
- Admin (10)
- Carpe Diem (1)
- Constructivism (4)
- Culture (38)
- Flusser (1)
- Hobbes (4)
- Jurisprudence (71)
- Kant (6)
- Law and Economics (16)
- Law and Society (91)
- Philosophy (53)
- Privacy (7)
- System Theory (6)
- Theories of Punishment (18)
- Uncategorized (17)
Posts by author
Hosted by SiteGround
No Responses to “New Jersey Legislative Commission Recommends Abolition of the Death Penalty”
Please Wait
Leave a Reply