Gov. Martin O’Malley on Wednesday said he will commute the sentences of Maryland’s four remaining death-row inmates so that they will serve life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The four condemned men were caught in a legal limbo for nearly two years after the state legislature voted to abolish the death penalty. Though the inmates were sentenced prior to the ban, O’Malley said in a statement Wednesday that carrying out “essentially un-executable sentences” did not serve a greater good.
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The out-going Democratic governor is using his final few weeks in office to follow through on a years-long effort to bring an end to capital punishment. O’Malley came out publicly in opposition to the death penalty in 2007. Two years later he tried, and ultimately failed the first time, to see capital punishment in his state repealed. It wasn’t until 2013 that Maryland became the 18th state to ban the death penalty.
“In my judgment, leaving these death sentences in place does not serve the public good of the people of Maryland — present or future,” O’Malley said in a statement.
With the governor’s move, Maryland breaks from two other states — New Mexico and Connecticut — that have abolished capital punishment yet still have inmates serving out time on death row. No other state with capital punishment bans on the books has followed through with executing previously sentenced death-row inmates.









