HR 301 - Capital Punishment Study Commission; create
Sponsored By
- (1) Stephenson,Pam 92nd
- (2) Lucas,David 139th
- (3) Dukes,Winfred 150th
- (4) Morgan,Alisha 39th
- (5) Mosby,Howard 90th
- (6) Williams,Earnest 89th
Committees
- HC:JudyNC
- SC:
Current Status
02/24/05 - House Second ReadersFirst Reader Summary
A RESOLUTION creating the Georgia Capital Punishment Study Commission to study the death penalty; to provide for the powers, duties, and compensation of its members; to suspend executions until such time as a report from such study commission is submitted to the General Assembly and the General Assembly and the Governor act in response to recommendations from the study commission; to provide for related matters; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
Status History
| Date | Action |
|---|---|
| 02/23/2005 | House First Readers |
| 02/24/2005 | House Second Readers |
Versions
05 LC 19
6516
House
Resolution 301
By:
Representatives Stephenson of the
92nd,
Lucas of the
139th,
Dukes of the
150th,
Morgan of the
39th,
Mosby of the
90th,
and others
A
RESOLUTION
Creating
the Georgia Capital Punishment Study Commission to study the death penalty; to
provide for the powers, duties, and compensation of its members; to suspend
executions until such time as a report from such study commission is submitted
to the General Assembly and the General Assembly and the Governor act in
response to recommendations from the study commission; to provide for related
matters; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
WHEREAS,
life is the most valuable possession of a human being; and
WHEREAS,
the state should exercise utmost care to protect its
residentś
lives from homicide, accident, or arbitrary or wrongful taking of life by the
state; and
WHEREAS,
there has been increasing public awareness of cases of individuals wrongfully
convicted of murder, in Georgia and elsewhere in the nation; and
WHEREAS,
the General Assembly is troubled that the possibility of mistake in the death
penalty process may undermine public confidence in our criminal justice system;
and
WHEREAS,
the execution of an innocent person by the State of Georgia would be a grave and
irreversible injustice; and
WHEREAS,
there is public concern that racial and socioeconomic factors influence
decisions to seek or impose the death penalty; and
WHEREAS,
there is a lack of any meaningful procedure to ensure uniform application of the
death penalty in each county throughout the state; and
WHEREAS,
the experience of this state with the death penalty has been characterized by
significant expenditures of money and time;
and
WHEREAS, in order for the state to protect its moral and ethical integrity, the state must ensure a justice system which is impartial, uncorrupted, equitable, competent, and in line with evolving standards of decency.
WHEREAS, in order for the state to protect its moral and ethical integrity, the state must ensure a justice system which is impartial, uncorrupted, equitable, competent, and in line with evolving standards of decency.
NOW,
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
There
is created the Georgia Capital Punishment Study Commission. The commission shall
be composed of 11 members. Appointments should reflect the diversity of the
population of Georgia. Members shall be appointed as follows: three members
appointed by the Governor, two of whom shall be appointed from the religious
community in Georgia and one from the social work profession; two members
appointed by the Senate Committee on Assignments, one of whom shall be
Republican and one of whom shall be Democrat; two members appointed by the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, one of whom shall be a Republican and
one of whom shall be a Democrat; the director of the Office of the Multicounty
Public Defender or his or her designee; the Attorney General or his or her
designee; the president of the State Bar of Georgia or his or her designee; and
the director of Murder
Victimś
Families for Reconciliation or his or her designee. Members shall be appointed
within three months of enactment of this resolution. The commission shall
choose a chairperson from among its members. Any vacancy in the membership
shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment.
SECTION
2.
(a)
The commission shall study all aspects of the death penalty as currently
administered in the State of Georgia, including, but not limited to, the
following issues:
(1)
Whether the selection of defendants in Georgia for capital trials is arbitrary,
unfair, or discriminatory in any way and whether there is unfair, arbitrary, or
discriminatory variability in the sentencing phase or at any state of the
process including, but not limited to, the issue of race, socioeconomic status,
or geography;
(2)
Whether there is a significant difference in the crimes of those selected for
the punishment of death as opposed to those who receive life in
prison;
(3)
Whether the death penalty is serving the needs of families of victims and the
general safety needs of the public, taking into account any other services that
might better serve their needs and whether those services are being
provided;
(4)
Whether the death penalty rationally serves a legitimate penological intent such
as deterrence;
(5)
Whether the death penalty as it is currently applied is consistent with evolving
standards of decency; and
(6)
Whether there is a significant difference between the cost of the death penalty
from indictment to execution and the cost of life in prison without parole. In
considering the overall cost of the death penalty in Georgia, the cost of all
the capital trials that result in life sentences as well as the death sentences
that are reversed on appeal must be factored into the equation.
(b)
The commission shall review:
(1)
The June, 2001, Protocols of the American Bar Association Section of Individual
Rights and Responsibilities;
(2)
Mandatory Justice:
Eighteen Reforms to the Death Penalty, a
report of The Constitution
Project́s
bipartisan, blue ribbon commission of capital punishment supporters and
opponents; and
(3)
Other nonpartisan, academic, or government inquiries into the administration of
capital punishment at state and national levels.
(c)
The commission shall make recommendations to guarantee that the application and
administration of capital punishment in this state and the public policy of this
state regarding capital punishment is free from bias and error and designed to
guarantee fairness and accuracy and propose new legislation, if
appropriate.
SECTION
3.
The
commission is entitled to the assistance and service of the employees of any
state, county, or municipal department, board, bureau, commission, or agency as
it may require and as may be available to it for its purposes and to employ
stenographic and clerical assistance.
SECTION
4.
The
commission shall undertake a study of the conditions, needs, issues, and
problems mentioned above or related thereto and recommend to the Governor and
the General Assembly any action or legislation which the commission deems
necessary or appropriate. The commission may conduct such meetings at such
places and at such times as it deems necessary or convenient to enable it to
exercise fully and effectively its powers, perform its duties, and accomplish
the objectives and purposes of this resolution. The legislative members of the
commission shall receive the allowances provided for in Code Section 28-1-8 of
the Official Code of Georgia Annotated. Citizen members shall receive a daily
expense allowance in the amount specified in subsection (b) of Code Section
45-7-21 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated as well as the mileage or
transportation allowance authorized for state employees. Members of the
commission who are state officials, other than legislative members, and state
employees shall receive no compensation for their services on the commission,
but they shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred by them in the performance of
their duties as members of the commission in the same manner as they are
reimbursed for expenses in their capacities as state officials or employees.
The funds necessary for the reimbursement of the expenses of state officials,
other than legislative members, and state employees shall come from funds
appropriated to or otherwise available to their respective departments. All
other funds necessary to carry out the provisions of this resolution shall come
from funds appropriated to the House of Representatives and the Senate. The
expenses and allowances authorized by this resolution shall not be received by
any member of the commission for more than ten days unless additional days are
authorized. The commission shall make a report of its findings and
recommendations, with suggestions for proposed legislation, if any; such report
shall be made on or before December 31, 2005. The commission shall stand
abolished on December 31, 2005.
SECTION
5.
The
General Assembly acknowledges the seriousness of the questions raised herein.
The General Assembly also acknowledges that the commission will need to
dispassionately examine all questions surrounding the use of the death penalty
in the State of Georgia. It is further acknowledged that the pressures of a
pending execution might affect the deliberations of the commission. It is
therefore recommended that no execution shall be carried out until the
commission has completed its report. Beginning on the effective date of this
resolution, if an execution warrant has been issued against a defendant, the
State Board of Pardons and Paroles shall stay any such execution, so that no
execution shall be carried out prior to the issuance of the report and final
action of the General Assembly and the Governor in response to the Georgia
Capital Punishment Study
Commissiońs
report and recommendations.
SECTION
6.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this resolution are repealed.
