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  A Moratorium on The Death Penalty Should Be Enacted In Illinois
            
  Due to the recent releases of newly exonerated Death Row inmates, 
            
  individuals and organizations are calling for a moratorium- a cooling off 
            
  period for state executions. The cases of just a few inmates makes it 
            
  apparent that this would be a necessary step to save innocent lives.
            
  After 17 years in prison, Illinois Death Row inmate Anthony Porter was 
            
  released from jail after a judge threw out his murder conviction following 
            
  the introduction of new evidence. This reversal of fortune came just two 
            
  days before Porter was to be executed. As reported in USA Today, Porter's 
            
  release was the result of investigative research as conducted by a 
            
  Northwestern University professor and students. The evidence gathered 
            
  suggested that Porter had been wrongly convicted.
            
  Were these new revelations and the subsequent release of Porter a lucky 
            
  break or a freak occurrence? Not likely, reports DeWayne Wickham, also of 
            
  USA Today. He points out that since the reinstatement of the death penalty 
            
  in the United States in 1976, of those sentenced to death, 490 people have 
            
  been executed while 76 have been freed from Death Row. This calculates into 
            
  one innocent person being released from Death Row for every six individuals 
            
  that were executed. This figure correlates with the 1996 U.S. Department of 
            
  Justice report that indicates that over a 7-year period, beginning in 1989, 
            
  when DNA evidence in various cases was tested, 26% of primary suspects were 
            
  exonerated. This has led some to conclude that a similar percentage of 
            
  inmates presently serving time behind bars may have been wrongly convicted 
            
  prior to the advent of forensic DNA typing.
            
  Amnesty International, in its 1998 report "Fatal Flaws: Innocence and the 
            
  Death Penalty", supports the American Bar Association's call ...