Virginia first Southern state to end death penalty

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Oliver O'Connell
·1 min read
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Virginia Governor Ralph Northam, left, looks over the electric chair in the death chamber at Greensville Correctional Centre before signing legislation outlawing the death penalty in the state (AP)
Virginia Governor Ralph Northam, left, looks over the electric chair in the death chamber at Greensville Correctional Centre before signing legislation outlawing the death penalty in the state (AP)

Governor Ralph Northam has signed a bill into law abolishing the death penalty in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

The Democratic lawmaker said: “It is the moral thing to do to end the death penalty.”

Virginia is the first state in what was the Confederacy to abolish the use of the punishment.

Mr Northam signed the bill at the Greensville Correctional Centre near Garrett, where executions were previously carried out.

The state legislature passed bills ending the practice in late February. Virginia was one of the most prolific users of the penalty and has the longest history of implementing it, dating back to the first execution at Jamestown in 1608.

Governor Northam has criticised the death penalty as the “machinery of death.”

The state has executed 113 people since 1976, more people total than any state except for Texas — most of them were people of colour.

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