The measure now moves to the Senate, where it will be considered
when that chamber returns to the Capitol next week. Lawmakers
approved
Senate Bill 3539 with the required 60 votes after waging an
earlier emotional, hourlong debate. But it was the $20 million
annual cost of death penalty cases that convinced state Rep. Pat
Verschoore, D-Milan, to change his previous "no" vote to "yes."
"I was on both sides of this issue. But then you think of the
potential cost savings of this bill, and the state needs all of the
savings we can get," Verschoore said. "Besides, my wife was on me to
vote for it."
Even the House sponsor of the legislation cited the savings
element, as the state grapples with a budget deficit approaching $15
billion that legislative leaders are attempting to close with loans
and an increase in both the personal and corporate income taxes.
"Let's instead put that money where it really matters," said
state Rep. Karen Yarbrough, D-Broadview. "Let's give law enforcement
some training that they need to wage the fight against crime. Let's
give victims of these heinous crimes the support and services that
they long deserve."
The measure calls for the money in the state's capital litigation
trust fund, which covers partial costs of litigating death penalty
cases, to be funneled to law enforcement and services for victim's
families.
But state Rep. Jim Sacia, R-Pecatonica, a former FBI agent, could
not be swayed by that provision. He recalled that Brian Dugan
confessed to the 1985 killing of 7-year-old Melissa Ackerman in
exchange for avoiding the death penalty.
"We wouldn't have had information on the heinousness of this
crime had we not had the tool of the death penalty," Sacia said.
Dugan in 2009 was found guilty of the murder of 10-year-old
Jeanine Nicarico, and he is now on death row.
State Rep. Robert Pritchard, R-Hinckley, however, said issues of
life and death aren't that cut and dried.
"I agree there are cases that we'd like to have that perpetrator
put to death," Pritchard said. "But it's arbitrary how and who we
pursue in those cases."
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State Rep. Will Burns, D-Chicago, agreed, noting that the death
penalty has often been biased in its implementation.
"If you're an African-American who kills a white victim, you're
more likely to be sentenced to death than a white person who kills a
black person," Burns said. "That if you're low-income, if you are
uneducated, you're more likely to be sentenced to death than someone
who has more education and more money."
Former Gov. George Ryan in 2000 halted all executions, following
media investigations that uncovered wrongly sentenced death row
inmates, and he instituted a moratorium on the death penalty while
possible reforms were studied. Ryan then cleared out death row in
January 2003, commuting the sentences of all inmates. Former Gov.
Rod Blagojevich and Gov. Pat Quinn have upheld the moratorium.
Convicted felons continue to be sentenced to death row, which now
houses 15 inmates.
The executive director of the Illinois Coalition to Abolish the
Death Penalty celebrated Thursday's House passage.
"It's clear our lawmakers know what many Illinoisans see: the
death penalty is broken beyond repair, and it must end now," Jeremy
Schroeder said in a written statement.
[Illinois
Statehouse News; By MARY MASSINGALE]
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