That's the title of an AFP report this morning via Google News. LINK
Death penalty laws remain on the books of 36 of the 50 US states, and capital punishment is supported by some two-thirds of the American public.
But across the nation, states as diverse and far-flung as Montana, Kansas, New Mexico and Maryland are among those actively considering abolishing capital punishment in a bid to overcome ballooning budget shortfalls.
"It is quite unusual that we've seen this blossoming of state legislative activity this year. It's because there is a renewed inspection of the death penalty," Steve Hall, director of the anti-capital punishment group Standdown, told AFP.
Most of the states involved in the move are those which have only executed a few people -- five or less -- in the past 30 years since capital punishment was reinstated in 1976. But "state legislators across America seem to be re-examining the death penalty," he said.
The financial savings could be considerable.
Carrying out the death penalty can leave a state footing a bill that is 10 times higher than for an inmate serving life imprisonment.
On top of a complex and lengthy process, appeals can last years and the prisoners are often represented by lawyers paid by the state.
And:
In Kansas, which has not carried out a single execution since 1976 but has nine men on death row, financial concerns trump other considerations.
Republican state senator Caroline McGinn has proposed a bill banning the death penalty starting in July in order to reduce the state's budget deficit.
And:
In New Mexico, politicians are hoping to pass a repeal law this year. The state, which has only executed one person in 30 years and has only two people on death row, could save a million dollars, observers say.
On Monday, Montana was debating a bill to abolish the death penalty and replace it with life in prison without parole, after years of failed efforts to repeal the law.
The northwestern state has only executed three people since capital punishment was reinstated in 1976. And only two inmates are currently housed on its death row, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
Activists who have long fought to replace lethal injection, the most common method of execution, with life in prison, could finally see their efforts bear fruit, and maintain that public opinion is also changing.
Dave Wanzenried, a Democratic senator who authored the Montana bill, said victims' families are increasingly opposed to the death penalty, arguing against punishing one killing with another.
"There is a very high probability that someone would be wrongfully convicted and executed ... My question is why would we leave them on the books, execute somebody and then find out later that we were wrong?" he told AFP.
Details are in StandDown's state legislation category index. A version of this article also appears in Le Monde, here.
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