- Originally published in The Washington Post on August 22, 2004
It's time that Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele (R) ended his reticence and inaction on the death penalty.
Steele campaigned as a "new" Republican who believed in inclusion and
who was committed to racial justice. He promoted his long-held
opposition to capital punishment as being rooted in his religious and
moral convictions.
Soon after his election, Steele said that he found the results of a
2003 study by University of Maryland criminologist Raymond Paternoster
"personally troubling." That study revealed that African Americans who
killed whites in Maryland were 21/2 times more likely to receive the
death penalty than whites who killed whites and 31/2 times more likely
to be sentenced to death than African Americans who killed African
Americans.
The study further concluded that murderers in Baltimore County were 26
times more likely to be sentenced to death than killers in Baltimore
and 14 times more likely than murderers in Montgomery County. Of the 10
people on Maryland's death row, eight were sentenced in Baltimore
County, six are African American and all murdered whites.
These racial and jurisdictional disparities prompted Steele to say, "If
we're going to have a death penalty, fine. But it's got to be fair and
equitable in how you apply it. This is not an issue I'm running away
from."
Steele then vowed to form a task force to find ways to correct the
disparities in Maryland's capital punishment system, but so far, he has
done little to fulfill that promise.
With Steven Oken's death by injection on June 17, Maryland has resumed
executions, raising the stakes not only for those on death row but for
all Marylanders. But Steele's press secretary now says that the
lieutenant governor "will not talk about the death penalty, period."
Perhaps Steele is powerless to do much about Maryland's death penalty
system, given Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s stance on the issue. But
Ehrlich did give his blessings to the task force, and surely he
wouldn't want to be known as the governor who did nothing to correct
grievous and fundamental flaws and inequities in the state's criminal
justice system.
Steele should convene his task force and lobby Ehrlich to change his
views. At least then he would be remembered as a politician who
courageously stood up for his convictions and delivered on his promises.
If, furthermore, as the current evidence strongly suggests, his task
force concludes that the Maryland criminal justice system's flaws and
disparities are too great to be fixed and the death penalty should be
abolished, Steele's views will be vindicated, and he will be viewed as
a visionary leader -- hardly a bad thing for an ambitious politician.
-- Chris Byrd
The Washington Post