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SR0297 |
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LRB096 12741 RLC 27121 r |
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| SENATE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, In January of 2000, former Illinois Governor |
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| George Ryan declared a moratorium on executions in Illinois; |
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| before the moratorium, 13 death row inmates were exonerated and |
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| found innocent of the crimes for which they were originally |
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| sentenced to death; and
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| WHEREAS, Since 2000, six more death row inmates have been |
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| exonerated and found innocent of the crimes for which they were |
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| originally sentenced to death; most recently, Nathson Fields |
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| was acquitted on April 8, 2009; the current number of |
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| exonerations in Illinois is 19, and Illinois is second only to |
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| Florida in the number of exonerations from death row; and
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| WHEREAS, There is no safeguard to ensure that an innocent |
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| person will not be put on death row; the Illinois Commission on |
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| Capital Punishment formed by Governor Ryan in 2000 to study the |
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| death penalty in Illinois concluded that "no system, given |
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| human nature and frailties, could ever be devised or |
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| constructed that would work perfectly and guarantee absolutely |
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| that no innocent person is ever again sentenced to death"; and
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| WHEREAS, Despite the implementation of reforms to |
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| Illinois' death penalty system by both the Illinois General |
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| Assembly and the Illinois Supreme Court, there remains no |
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LRB096 12741 RLC 27121 r |
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| sufficient safeguard against additional innocent persons being |
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| convicted of murder and sentenced to death; and
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| WHEREAS, The cost of the death penalty is prohibitive; the |
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| average cost of a trial in a federal death case is about 8 |
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| times that of a federal murder case in which the death penalty |
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| is not sought; every state that has done a cost study has found |
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| death penalty cases cost millions to hundreds of millions more |
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| than non-death cases, including cases in which the defendant |
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| receives life without parole; and
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| WHEREAS, A cost study done in the State of New Jersey found |
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| the death penalty has cost New Jersey taxpayers $253 million |
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| more than the costs that would have been incurred in a system |
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| with a maximum sentence of life without parole; the study |
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| examined the costs of death penalty cases to prosecutor |
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| offices, public defender offices, courts, and correctional |
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| facilities, and the report's authors wrote that the cost |
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| estimate is "very conservative" because other significant |
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| costs uniquely associated with the death penalty were not |
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| available and, "from a strictly financial perspective, it is |
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| hard to reach a conclusion other than this: New Jersey |
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| taxpayers over the last 23 years have paid more than a quarter |
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| billion dollars on a capital punishment system that has |
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| executed no one" the report concluded; since 1982, there have |
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| been 197 capital trials in New Jersey and 60 death sentences |
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LRB096 12741 RLC 27121 r |
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| imposed, of which 50 were subsequently reversed; there have |
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| been no executions, and 10 men are housed on death row; Michael |
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| Murphy, former Morris County prosecutor, remarked: "If you were |
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| to ask me how $11 million a year could best protect the people |
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| of New Jersey, I would tell you by giving the law enforcement |
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| community more resources; I'm not interested in hypotheticals |
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| or abstractions, I want the tools for law enforcement to do |
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| their job, and $11 million can buy a lot of tools"; and
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| WHEREAS, Death penalty cases are more expensive at every |
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| stage of the judicial process than similar non-death cases; |
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| death penalty cases cost more to try, hear, appeal, and |
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| incarcerate than non-death cases; a new study in the State of |
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| Maryland released by the Urban Institute on March 6, 2008 |
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| forecasted that the lifetime expenses of capitally prosecuted |
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| cases since 1978 will cost Maryland taxpayers $186 million; the |
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| study estimates that the average cost to Maryland taxpayers for |
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| reaching a single death sentence is $3 million - $1.9 million |
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| more than the cost of a non-death penalty case; the study |
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| examined 162 capital cases that were prosecuted between 1978 |
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| and 1999 and found that those cases cost $186 million more than |
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| what those cases would have cost had the death penalty not |
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| existed as a punishment; at every phase of a case, according to |
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| the study, capital murder cases cost more than non-capital |
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| murder cases; the 106 cases in which a death sentence was |
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| sought but not handed down in Maryland cost the state an |
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| additional $71 million and those costs were incurred simply to |
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| seek the death penalty even though the ultimate outcome was a |
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| life or long-term prison sentence; and
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| WHEREAS, The Cook County Public Defender routinely |
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| depletes its annual funds to pay for capital cases before the |
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| end of the fiscal year, and without the funds, the office is |
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| unable to pay for the help of expert witnesses, as well as the |
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| other additional costs of a death penalty case; the Cook County |
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| Public Defender's 2009 allotment of $1.75 million was exhausted |
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| this month, in large part because 60 percent of the money went |
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| to cover unpaid bills from 2008; and |
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| WHEREAS, The State's budget for Fiscal 2009 includes |
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| $10,642,100 for the Capital Litigation Trust Fund, created by |
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| the General Assembly in 2000; over the past six fiscal years, |
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| the Fund has been allocated just under $89 million; |
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| nevertheless, the Fund's expenditures account for only part of |
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| the true cost of maintaining capital punishment in Illinois - a |
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| cost that is difficult to estimate without conducting a |
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| comprehensive cost study; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-SIXTH GENERAL |
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| ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that the Illinois Criminal |
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| Justice Information Authority is directed to conduct a study of |
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| the costs of the death penalty in Illinois, including but not |
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| limited to the costs of seeking the death penalty, the costs of |
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| a capital trial, the costs of appeals, the costs of |
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| incarceration, and the costs of execution; and be it further
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| RESOLVED, That the Illinois Criminal Justice Information |
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| Authority is directed to conduct a parallel study of the costs |
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| of sentencing persons convicted of first degree murder to life |
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| imprisonment, so as to provide a direct cost comparison on the |
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| same level of detail as the costs of the death penalty; and be |
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| it further |
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| RESOLVED, That the Illinois Criminal Justice Information |
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| Authority is directed to provide to the Senate a preliminary |
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| report of its study during the 2009 veto session and a final |
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| report of its study and recommendations no later than January |
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| 29, 2010; and be it further
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| RESOLVED, That the Illinois Criminal Justice Information |
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| Authority is authorized to expend for this study any |
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| appropriation or other funds that may be legally available for |
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| this purpose.
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