Delaware House postpones vote on reinstating death penalty

 (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)

(AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)

A top lawmaker in Delaware has postponed the Legislature’s vote Thursday on a bill reinstating the state’s death penalty because of a scheduling issue.

House Speaker Pete Schwartzkopf said in a statement that a lawmaker wanted to a call a witness who wasn’t available Thursday, when Schwartzkopf had scheduled the vote.

He said he plans to put the vote on the House agenda for Tuesday.

The bill was put on Thursday’s House agenda just hours after it cleared the Judiciary Committee on a 7-4 vote Wednesday.

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Consideration of the legislation comes amid a public outcry over the killing of a correctional officer during a prison riot and hostage-taking in February as well as the fatal shooting of a state trooper last week.

Chief sponsor Rep. Steve Smyk, R-Milton, said he has not done a vote count, but he believes there is more support for the measure among House lawmakers now than there was before the killings of prison guard Steven Floyd and trooper Stephen Ballard.

Smyk said he respects the arguments of death penalty opponents but that government has a responsibility.

“There’s no greater voice to remind legislators of that responsibility than to two murders, two executions, in such short order,” he said.

Opponents of the legislation argued that the death penalty is not a deterrent to crime, is too costly, is applied in a racially biased manner against blacks and other minorities, and amounts to state-sponsored murder.

“State sanctioned murder is still murder,” said Molly Keogh, president of Delaware Citizens Opposed to the Death Penalty.

But representatives of the law enforcement community have voiced overwhelming support for the measure.

“There are some truly evil people who commit heinous crimes against innocent citizens in this state,” said Lt. Thomas Brackin, president of the Delaware State Troopers Association. “You do need to have the ultimate punishment for the ultimate crime.”

Under the bill, jurors would have to find unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant should be executed. A judge would have to agree with the jury in order for the death penalty to be imposed but would have the discretion to sentence a defendant to life in prison even if the jury found that the death penalty was warranted.

A majority of Delaware’s Supreme Court justices declared the state’s death penalty law unconstitutional last August because it allowed judges too much discretion and did not require that a jury find unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant deserves execution.

That ruling came after the U.S. Supreme Court said Florida’s death sentencing law, which like Delaware’s gave judges the final say, was unconstitutional.

Democratic Gov. John Carney has said he supports the court ruling declaring Delaware’s death penalty law unconstitutional, but he has not promised to veto legislation reinstating capital punishment. Carney has not taken a public position on the pending legislation but has not ruled out supporting the death penalty for those convicted of killing a member of law enforcement.

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