
The proposed bills would remove capital punishment as a sentencing option for aggravated murder, and mandate instead a sentence of life in prison without possibility of parole.
"Death penalty sentences are unequally applied in the state of Washington, they are frequently overturned and they are always costly," Governor Jay Inslee (D) said during a news conference at the Capitol in Olympia, Washington, on Monday. "I could not in good conscience allow executions to continue under my watch as governor under these conditions."
Inslee placed a moratorium on capital punishment in 2014. In 2015, the Washington Association of Prosecuting Attorneys called for a public vote on whether the state should keep the death penalty.
Inslee was joined at the news conference by former Republican Attorney General Rob McKenna and two members of the GOP-controlled state Senate.
"This issue transcends politics," state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, a Democrat, told reporters, according to the Seattle Times.












Comment: The death penalty is costly, not a deterrent to crime and unfairly meted out to minorities. One Justice went so far as to call it 'cruel and unusual' punishment: