The Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment would study the risk of innocent people being executed and compare the costs of executing someone with the expense of imprisoning someone for life without parole.
The commission would issue a report on its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly by Dec. 15.
Republicans, citing Democratic Gov. Martin O'Malley's opposition to capital punishment, criticized the idea, saying the commission was being set up to recommend ending the death penalty. Christopher Shank, R-Washington, described the proposal as "a text book model on how to repeal the death penalty in your state."
"Ladies and gentlemen, the verdict is already in before the jury has even gone out," Mr. Shank said. "This bill is about the repeal of the death penalty, and I would suggest a 'no' vote."
But Delegate Sandy Rosenberg, D-Baltimore, said the bill was carefully amended to make sure the commission will be "open to discussion and consideration."
"We feel as a committee that we have amended the bill sufficiently so this bill, as it now stands, creates a credible task force - one that will objectively look at the issues," Ms. Rosenberg said.
Maryland currently has a de facto moratorium in place against capital punishment, because of a ruling in late 2006 by the state's highest court. The court ruled the state's protocol for the lethal injection procedure was implemented without proper approval by a legislative committee. Executions can't resume until the O'Malley administration submits new rules for the committee to approve.
Maryland currently has five men on death row. Only five inmates have been executed since Maryland reinstated the death penalty in 1978. Wesley Baker, who was put to death in December 2005, was the last person to be executed in Maryland.