Home  :  University Home  :  Technology  :  MyLaw(webmail)  

Current Students  .  Faculty  .  Alumni  .  Making a Gift

 

Prospective Students  .  About SHU LAW  .  Applying to SHU LAW  .  Visit SHU LAW  .   Programs  .  Offices & Services

 
Home > Public Relations > Press Releases > April 14, 2008
 
GOVERNOR CORZINE SPEAKS ON REPEAL OF DEATH PENALTY
AT SETON HALL LAW CONFERENCE
 

Newark, NJ – Today Seton Hall University School of Law sponsored a day-long conference, LEGISLATION, LITIGATION, REFLECTION AND REPEAL: The Legislative Abolition of the Death Penalty in NJ, which explored the events and advocacy that led to the repeal of the death penalty in New Jersey and proposed ideas for models that could be adapted by other states across the country. The event was hosted by Seton Hall Law Dean Patrick Hobbs and Hon. James Zazzali, former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

Governor Jon Corzine, who served as the luncheon speaker commented, “There were many reasons to ban the death penalty in New Jersey. It is difficult, if not impossible, to devise a humane technique of execution that is not cruel and unusual, and to develop a foolproof system that precludes the possibility of executing the innocent. New Jersey spent more than a quarter of a billion dollars to maintain its capital punishment system since 1982, even though it had not carried out a single execution for more than four decades, demonstrating little collective will or appetite to enforce this law.

“But for me, the question was more fundamental. State-endorsed violence begets violence and undermines our commitment to the sanctity of life. We in New Jersey are proud to be the first state to prohibit the death penalty since it was permitted by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976, and we are proud to serve as leaders on this profound issue of conscience.”

The conference included panel discussions with leading death penalty-repeal advocates., prosecutors and public defenders, private attorneys and former New Jersey State Supreme Court justices. Distinguished speakers included:

  • Senator Raymond J. Lesniak, Senate Sponsor of Repeal Bill and author of The Road to Abolition: How New Jersey Abolished the Death Penalty

  • Hon. Deborah T. Poritz, Chief Justice, Supreme Court of N.J. (Ret.)

  • Hon. James H. Coleman, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of N.J. (Ret.)

  • Hon. Alan B. Handler, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of N.J. (Ret.)

  • Hon. Peter G. Verniero, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of N.J. (Ret.)

  • Senator Christopher “Kip” Bateman

  • Miles S. Winder, III, Member of N.J. Death Penalty Study Commission

    A Legislative Resolution was presented to Celeste Fitzgerald, Director of New Jerseyans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty for her tireless advocacy that helped lead to the repeal of capital punishment in the state.

    The event was co-sponsored by Fordham Law School’s Stein Center for Law & Ethics, The New Jersey State Bar Association and the New York City Bar Association Capital Punishment Committee.
     

###

Seton Hall University School of Law, New Jersey’s only private law school, and a leading law school in the New York metropolitan area, is dedicated to preparing students for the practice of law through excellence in scholarship and teaching, with a strong focus on clinical education. Seton Hall Law is located in Newark, NJ and offers both day and evening degree programs. For more information, visit law.shu.edu. APALSA is an organization of law students interested in the growth of the Asian legal community and in the development of Asian and Asian-American-related legal issues.

 
Janet LeMonnier
Communications Director
Seton Hall University
School of Law
Phone: 973-642-8724
lemonnja@shu.edu
April 14, 2008

Click here for the full program
and a list of speakers

 

Learn more about Senator Raymond J. Lesniak’s book:
The Road to Abolition: How New Jersey Abolished the Death Penalty, www.theroadtojusticeandpeace.com

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Seton Hall University School of Law One Newark Center Newark, NJ 07102 888-415-7271 lawwebmaster@shu.edu

[Report a Problem]