A bill that would have authorized a firing squad to carry out the death penalty in Indiana failed to pass out of the House this week, reported WFYI.
Democrats
and Republicans joined together to oppose the legislation.
Lawmakers
in the House and Senate have introduced bills allowing the death penalty to be
carried out by firing squad, in part because of the difficulty of obtaining the
drug the state currently uses - pentobarbital. It is also expensive
and has a limited shelf life.
Some
states have moved to allow death by firing squads, including South Carolina,
but those executions haven’t been without problems. Last year, a man executed
by firing squad may have suffered before dying after the shooters missed
his heart.
“Just
because lethal injection has been problematic doesn't mean Indiana or any other
state is going to perform flawlessly when it comes to things like firing
squad,” said Robert Dunham, Director of the Death Penalty Policy Project.
Dunham has
been watching as the bill moved through the legislature and even came to
testify against the Senate version of the measure.
“One of
the questions you have to ask before Indiana talks about changing its method of
carrying out executions is whether Indiana should be carrying on executions at
all,” Dunham said.
Lawmakers
appear to be asking the same question.
Rep. Matt
Pierce (D-Bloomington) said he opposes the death penalty altogether - not just
the manner in which it is carried out.
“Do we
really think that the government and our criminal justice system is
infallible?” Pierce asked. “That we can actually perform an execution and not
risk killing an innocent person?”
Lawmakers'
concerns with the death penalty took center stage throughout Wednesday's
session. Another
bill makes changes to evaluations of whether the defendant in a death
penalty case has an intellectual disability. That bill passed shortly before
the firing squad bill failed.
Speaking
on the intellectual disability bill, Rep. Robert Morris (R-Fort Wayne), said he
was happy with the work done by author Rep. Garrett Bascom (R-Lawrenceburg) on
the issue.
“I look
forward to continued discussion with him to actually abolish the death penalty
as a whole,” Morris said.
Lawmakers
had added provisions to the bill around media representation at executions and
a requirement that a licensed psychologist would need to be in attendance to
provide mental health services for executioners with any issues related to
their participation.
Representative
Jim Lucas (R-Seymour) seemed frustrated that many lawmakers rose to voice their
opposition, not just to the bill, but to the death penalty altogether.
“I respect
and truly appreciate everyone’s passion and emotion on this issue. But the
actual issue is not the death penalty,” he said. “That’s been decided, over 200
years ago.”
The bill
failed by not having a constitutional majority, which means it could come up
for a vote again before Monday’s deadline.
A
Senate version of the bill is
effectively dead.
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