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Poll: Are you in favor of the death penalty?

California’s death penalty has been the subject of a decade of litigation. During that time, the death row population has grown from 646 to 751.
<a href="https://highschool.latimes.com/author/houstonmitchell/" target="_self">Houston Mitchell</a>

Houston Mitchell

March 30, 2015

Governor Jerry Brown is asking the California Legislature for $3.2 million to open nearly 100 more cells for condemned men at San Quentin State Prison. The proposed expansion would take advantage of cells made available as the state releases low-level drug offenders and thieves under a new law voters approved last year.

California’s death penalty has been the subject of a decade of litigation. One case led to a halt to executions in 2006. Another resulted in a federal judge’s ruling last July that the state’s interminably slow capital appeals system is unconstitutionally cruel. Through it all, the death row population has grown from 646 in 2006 to 751 today.

“Until the litigation is resolved, this cost-effective proposal allows [the state corrections department] to safely house condemned inmates going forward,” corrections department spokeswoman Terry Thornton said last week.

You can read more about this here, then come back and vote in our poll: Are you in favor of the death penalty?