Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Money for Nothing? That's Rich!

At first I thought this was a satire but no, it's a real story on the AP Wire. I actually agree with the last quote, though:


Report: Death penalty cost $253M and executed no one in NJ

November 21, 2005

TRENTON, N.J. -- In the 23 years since New Jersey reinstated the death penalty, the law has cost taxpayers about $253 million and executed no one, according to a new study.

"Money For Nothing? The Financial Cost of New Jersey's Death Penalty" was released Monday by New Jersey Policy Perspective, a research group.

The report broke down the death penalty-related costs as follows:

_County prosecutors/state Attorney General's Office: $180 million;

_State Public Defender's Office: $60 million;

_State Department of Corrections: $6.8 million;

_Court Costs: $6.5 million.

That works out to $4.2 million for each death sentence imposed in New Jersey.

In 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the 40 state death penalty statutes that existed at the time, ruling that giving juries complete discretion over sentencing conflicted with the Eighth Amendment ban on "cruel and unusual punishment."

New Jersey, which first adopted capital punishment in 1796, passed a new death penalty law in 1982 that conformed to the high court's mandates.

Since then, New Jersey jurors have returned death verdicts 60 times. Ten people are now on death row at the New Jersey State Prison in Trenton. Most of the others have had their death sentences overturned and replaced with life in prison.

One died of natural causes and another was killed by a fellow death row inmate.

On a related topic, state Sen. Raymond Lesniak said he hopes to get a vote on a measure he wrote that would abolish New Jersey's death penalty law.

"We should abolish the death penalty to remove our potential to kill innocent people," he said. "By replacing the death penalty with life imprisonment without parole we will ensure that murderers are kept behind bars for the rest of their lives."

No comments: