A push to end the death penalty in Montana fell short by just one vote in the state House this week.
The effort came to an impasse after lawmakers came to a split 50-50 vote Monday, thus signaling the end of the measure for this year’s session, the Billings Gazette newspaper reported. The state Senate has passed legislation abolishing the death penalty, but the House has not.
Supporters of the House bill say people on death row should spend their lives in prison without parole instead of facing the death penalty.
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The cases of the two men who currently are on death row in Montana are under appeal in the state’s court system. There have been a total of 74 executions in the state’s history.
Voting on the measure came as several states are engaged in discussions about the constitutionality and high costs of the death penalty in the 32 states that enforce the practice. The botched execution of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma last year brought the issue to the forefront. Amid the debate, officials in many of the states have scrambled to find new suppliers of lethal injection drugs after several pharmaceutical companies stopped carrying the medication because of criticism stemming from ethical concerns.









