By Emma Epperly
WNPA Olympia News Bureau
The Senate passed a bill on Feb. 15 to remove the death penalty from Washington state statute and replacing it with life in prison without parole.
Senate Bill 5339 passed with 28 in favor, 19 opposed, with senators Phil Fortunado, R-Auburn and Lynda Wilson, R-Vancouver, excused.
Republican senators Judy Warnick, R-Moses Lake and Brad Hawkins R-Wenatchee, and sponsor Maureen Walsh, R-Walla Walla voted in support of the typically democratic bill.
Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, joined other Democrats Tim Sheldon, D-Potlatch, and Dean Takko, D-Longview, in voting against the bill.
The Senate passed a similar bill last year prior to the state Supreme Court declaring the death penalty as applied was racist and arbitrary.
The bill was never brought to a vote in the House.
House Bill 1488 is the companion to the bill passed in the Senate and has yet to hear public testimony.
Sen. Steve O’Ban, R-Tacoma, said he believes it is possible to create a death penalty that the Supreme Court would approve, saying the Senate has a “lack of will” to find a solution.
Sen. Jamie Pedersen, D-Seattle, spoke in support of the bill citing the testimony that took place in the Law and Justice Committee which he chairs.
Former state Secretary of the Department of Corrections Dick Morgan testified in support of the bill in committee on Feb. 5, speaking on behalf of several other previous DOC secretaries.
Morgan said hundreds of prisoners have committed similar crimes and were sentenced to life without parole yet from a management viewpoint they pose no greater risk than those on death row.
“There is punishment that exceeds normal imprisonment and that is placement in the highest security level … ,” Morgan said.
“That basically results in no physical human contact with another person while that punishment is in place,” he said. “It’s profound, it’s desocialization of an inmate in they’re violent enough, if the misconduct warrants it.”
During the floor debate Sen. Keith Wagoner, R-Sedro-Woolley read a statement from the killer of Jayme Biendl, a correctional officer murdered in 2011 by an inmate already serving life in prison.
Wagoner argued that if the death penalty is taken off the table there is no further punishment for inmates who commit crimes while serving life in prison.
Sen. Mike Padden, R-Spokane Valley, ranking member on the Law and Justice Committee, acknowledged pursuing the death penalty is difficult and expensive.
“I’m not a zealot for the death penalty,” Padden said. “I’m somewhat of a reluctant supporter.”
Since 1904, 78 people have been executed in Washington state, according to the Department of Corrections. The last execution took place in 2010.