Maryland lawmakers and the state attorney general are bucking calls to repeal the death penalty with a bill that would expand the types of evidence admissible in capital cases.
Sen. Norman R. Stone Jr., D-Baltimore County, is sponsoring a bill that would enable courts to use fingerprints and photographs to convict suspects of capital murder.
The bill rebuffs the legislature's highly publicized vote last year to limit admissible evidence in capital cases to "biological" or "DNA" samples, a video recording of the suspect committing the crime or a recording of the suspect's voluntary confession.
"The state legislature botched the death penalty in Maryland last year by weakening it and this is an attempt to fix a known, blatant flaw in last year's very bad bill," said Sen. David Brinkley, R-Carroll County.
But fingerprint evidence is subjective, and "comparing curls and swirls to see if they match" easily could send an innocent man to death row, said Jane Henderson, executive director of Maryland Citizens Against State Executions.
Source: Washington Examiner, March 8, 2010
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