Connecticut governor signs death penalty repeal

Associated Press
(CBS/AP) HARTFORD, Conn. - Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has signed legislation into law that abolishes Connecticut's death penalty for future crimes.
A spokeswoman said the Democrat signed the bill Wednesday afternoon at a private ceremony with lawmakers, clergy and family members of victims.
Malloy called it "an historic moment" as Connecticut joins 16 other states that have abolished capital punishment. He said it was a moment "for sober reflection, not celebration."
The bill was signed the same day that a new Quinnipiac University poll showed 62 percent of Connecticut voters support the death penalty. The same survey found 47 percent of voters disapprove of Malloy's handling of the issue, while 33 percent approve.
A former prosecutor, Malloy said his position on the death penalty has evolved over the years.
The legislation only abolishes the death penalty prospectively; it won't affect the 11 men already on death row, including Steven Hayes and Joshua Komisarjevsky, the two men convicted in the killing of Dr. William Petit's family, the Hartford Courant reported.
Last year, strong public sentiment for Petit, whose wife and two daughters were brutally murdered in 2007, prevented the bill's passage.
Lawmakers struck a compromise that ensures those currently convicted of a capital felony will get life imprisonment without possibility of release, not death.
But the bill does not apply to those 11 awaiting the death penalty.
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Obviously knowing that you might very well get the death penalty in this part of the country is not a huge consideration before someone decides to take someone elses life.
"We kill people to teach people that it's wrong to kill people."
Obviously knowing that you might very well get the death penalty in this part of the country is not a huge consideration before someone decides to take someone elses life.
"We kill people to teach people that it's wrong to kill people."
Oh yeah.. what a "momentous" occasion- protecting the CRIMINALS and telling even the most sadistic evil murderer that the very worst that can EVER happen to them, even if they shoot 50 people in a mall some day, is they stay in jail with 3 hots and a cot.
I hope all the naive and confused people who think it's either okay to execute an innocent person or believe we never have, will finally stop posting their uncredible and mostly false rhetoric. Life in prison isn't lenient.
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It is funny hearing the loony left make the argument against the death penalty by saying there is a chance an innocent life might be taken.
Yet that same left loon is all for abortion which kills an innocent life every time it is performed. It must the very confusing to be a left loon.
Just one more ego-maniac among the many "serving" the people of the United States today.
Life without the possibility of parole does not neccessarily think what you think it means.
There is a program called "The First 48" on a cable network.
Almost every show deals with real people who have committed one or more murders.
Usually; at the end of the show there is a statement that the person charged with the crime is innocent until proven guilty.
HOWEVER; sometimes the person has been convicted and sentencenced to life without parole.
This is followed with a statement that the person will not be eligible for parole until 20??.
To me; this makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
While this does not guarantee the criminal will be paroled in 20??; it does allow for the possibility this person will be out on the streets at some point in time and could re-offend.
One of the main reasons persons convicted of felonies are walking the streets; long before they should be; is plea bargaining.
No matter how horrendous the crime (child molestation is the most frequent) these pedophiles are allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges in return for lighter sentences.
Charles Manson was sentenced to life without parole, but every so often he gets to appear before a parole board to explain why he feels it is now safe for him to return to a life among the public.
None of this makes any sense.
In certain instances "if you can't do the time; don't do the crime" really does apply and the full sentence should be carried out.
deter the rape and murder of the Petit family.