WASHINGTON — Governor Ralph Northam on Wednesday signed a bill
that abolished the death penalty in Virginia, making it the first Southern
state and the 23rd overall to end capital punishment amid rising opposition to
the practice.
اضافة اعلان
Before signing the bill, Northam pointed to Virginia’s
413-year history of capital punishment, during which it executed more than 1,300
inmates, more than any other state. He also noted racial disparities in the use
of the death penalty: During the 20th century, he said, 296 of the 377 inmates
Virginia executed for murder — or about 79 percent — were Black.
“Ending the death penalty comes down to one fundamental
question, one question: Is it fair?” Northam said after he completed a tour of
the state’s execution chamber. “For the state to apply this ultimate, final
punishment, the answer needs to be yes. Fair means that it is applied equally
to anyone, no matter who they are. And fair means that we get it right, that
the person punished for the crime did the crime.”
“But,” he added, “we all know that the death penalty cannot
meet those criteria.”
The bill, which the Virginia House and Senate passed last
month, stipulates that the sentences of the remaining death row inmates be
converted to life in prison without eligibility for parole. The inmates will
also not qualify for good conduct allowance, sentence credits or conditional
release.
The bill’s signing comes as President Joe Biden faces
pressure from members of his own party to commute the sentences of the
remaining inmates on federal death row. It also follows a spate of executions
carried out by the Trump administration that renewed calls from the left to
abolish capital punishment.
In its final months, the administration executed 13 inmates,
more than a fifth of the prisoners that the Bureau of Prisons considered to be
on death row. The inauguration of Biden — who promised during the campaign to
work to end federal capital punishment — almost certainly marked the end of
that string of executions.
But what Biden plans to do with the remaining condemned
inmates remains unclear. His new attorney general, Merrick Garland, has also
expressed concerns about the death penalty.