Source:
NY TimesCHICAGO — After more than a decade of debate over whether the state’s system of capital punishment could ever be fair, state lawmakers voted on Tuesday to end the death penalty in Illinois.
The move, which came only hours before a new group of lawmakers takes office in Springfield on Wednesday, leaves the future of capital punishment to the Democratic governor, Patrick J. Quinn, who has not indicated whether he will sign the legislation. If Mr. Quinn agrees to the ban, Illinois will join 15 other states without capital punishment.
A heated, sometimes graphic debate preceded a vote in the State Senate, which is dominated by Democrats. Senator Kwame Raoul, a Democrat who led efforts to end death sentences, reminded his colleagues of the state’s record of at least 13 condemned prisoners, including one who came within 50 hours of execution, who were found to have been wrongfully convicted. Supporters of the death penalty, meanwhile, described heinous cases and said there were still some circumstances so intolerable as to require execution.
The Senate voted 32 to 25 to approve the ban. The State House, also controlled by Democrats, approved the measure last week on a 60-to-54 vote. But the future of capital punishment has been in question here for years.
Read more:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/12/us/12death.html?_r=1&hp