The Only Black Member of the Nebraska Legislature Wages Battle to Abolish the Death Penalty
Sunday, March 20, 2005 at 11:50AM
TheSpook
For nearly a quarter century, Ernie
Chambers has waged a seemingly quixotic war against Nebraska's death
penalty. Each year since 1973, the Omaha lawmaker and only black member
of the Legislature, has introduced a bill to abolish capital
punishment. He vehemently argues, among other things, that capital
punishment is unfairly applied -- especially against minorities. He has
known few victories. The closest he came to having the law changed was
in 1979, when his bill passed on a 26-22 vote but was vetoed by
then-Gov. Charley Thone. Twenty years later, he teamed with Sen. Kermit
Brashear of Omaha, who tweaked Chambers' measure to instead call for a
moratorium on executions while the Legislature studied whether the
death penalty is fairly applied. The bill was vetoed by then-Gov. Mike
Johanns, but lawmakers later went on with the study. Undaunted,
Chambers introduced a ban (LB760) again this year, which he presented
to the Judiciary Committee on Wednesday. "This is something that needs
to be done," Chambers said. "As long as I'm in the Legislature, I'm
going to fight to try to bring that about." In the published
description of his bill, Chambers says: "The experience of this state
with the death penalty has been fraught with errors, frustration and
delay due to constitutional mistakes in the statutes, defective legal
procedures and ... lack of uniformity in application and inordinately
heavy expenditures of money and time." [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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