Martin O'Malley, Michael Busch

I could be wrong, but I bet that for the majority of people, the decision of whether to support capital punishment is based mostly on a personal sense of justice and morality. I bet the economics of the practice figures little or not at all.

Which is why I find it interesting that Gov. Martin Oโ€™Malleyโ€™s central argument for repealing the death penalty in Maryland is an economic one. In her article for Maryland Reporter, Ilana Kowarski lays out Oโ€™Malleyโ€™s commissionโ€™s astounding claim that the state spends three times as much to convict and sentence a Death Row inmate as it does to convict and sentence a murderer to life imprisonment, as well as death penalty advocatesโ€™ challenge of those numbers.

But thereโ€™s no way this comes down to dollars and cents for anyone on either side of this issue โ€” is there? I mean, whatever you believe about the death penalty, it strikes me as pretty tacky to use a simple cost-benefit analysis to determine whether you should kill someone. Isnโ€™t this inherently a moral issue?