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Covering state lawmakers, bills, and policy emerging from Jefferson City.

Missouri lawmakers consider bill to abolish death penalty

(via Wikimedia Commons/Noahudlis)

A move to abolish the death penalty in the Show-Me State is getting a hearing before a Missouri Senate committee.

Senate Bill 816 is sponsored by Sen. Paul Weiland, R-Imperial. He told the committee on general laws that being a pro-life Republican should also include the end of life.

"When I got involved in public life, one of my motivations was defending human life," Wieland said. "So to me it made logical sense, in order for me to be congruent with my conscience, that I would in fact be against the death penalty, and even further, I would work to try to end the death penalty here in the state of Missouri."

Weiland also argued that the death penalty does not make Missouri, nor the rest of the United States, look good in the eyes of the world.

"America right now executes more people than any country, except for China, Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia," Wieland said. "Those aren't necessarily countries I think you'd think of when you talk about human rights, freedom and justice."

Credit (via Wikimedia Commons/Noahudlis)

Several people testified in favor of the bill, including Nimrod Chapel, president of the NAACP's Missouri state conference. He told the committee that the death penalty in Missouri is disproportionately pronounced against African Americans.

"If you murder a white person, a white woman in particular, you're nearly 14 times more likely to get executed than those who murder black men," Chapel said. "The slogan that you hear, that 'Black Lives Matter,' is directly in response to this kind of disproportionate application of state law."

Mark Richardson, prosecuting attorney for Cole County, strongly disagreed that racial disparities exist in the application of capital punishment in Missouri.

"As of 2005, there were 46 prisoners under sentence of death in Missouri, (and) of those 46, 24 were white and 22 were African American," Richardson said. "Based on the murders committed, not the population statistically, but who's committing the murders, there appears in our state to be no disparity."

Richardson, speaking on behalf of the Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys, also testified that the death penalty not only protects the public, but staff members at state prisons.

"Throwing the death penalty off the table," he said, "I would be forced to tell the victim's family of a murderer of a young man, say, that started as a corrections officer, who's murdered in prison, that we will just send that inmate right back to the prison where he came from, and have no ability to deter our worst offenders from attempting and committing murders against prison staff, guards or other inmates."

The hearing had to recess because the Missouri Senate was scheduled to convene at 4 p.m., and Senate rules forbid committee meetings to occur while the full Senate is in session. The hearing on the death penalty abolition bill is scheduled to resume next week.

The bill's chances of success appear remote, as most of the Republican majority in the Missouri General Assembly support the death penalty, as does Gov. Jay Nixon, a Democrat.

Missouri executed six death row inmates last year and 18 total since lethal injections resumed in late 2013.

Follow Marshall Griffin on Twitter:  @MarshallGReport

Copyright 2016 St. Louis Public Radio

St. Louis Public Radio State House Reporter Marshall Griffin is a native of Mississippi and proud alumnus of Ole Miss (welcome to the SEC, Mizzou!). He has been in radio for over 20 years, starting out as a deejay. His big break in news came when the first President Bush ordered the invasion of Panama in 1989. Marshall was working the graveyard shift at a rock station, and began ripping news bulletins off an old AP teletype and reading updates between songs. From there on, his radio career turned toward news reporting and anchoring. In 1999, he became the capital bureau chief for Florida's Radio Networks, and in 2003 he became News Director at WFSU-FM/Florida Public Radio. During his time in Tallahassee he covered seven legislative sessions, Governor Jeb Bush's administration, four hurricanes, the Terri Schiavo saga, and the 2000 presidential recount. Before coming to Missouri, he enjoyed a brief stint in the Blue Ridge Mountains, reporting and anchoring for WWNC-AM in Asheville, North Carolina. Marshall lives in Jefferson City with his wife, Julie, their dogs, Max and Liberty Belle, and their cat, Honey.