Law Proposed bill would prevent anyone under 25 with being charged with felony murder - Democrats' brilliant solution to reducing crime: legalize it!

by Vincent Hill | Mon, March 6th 2023, 12:35 AM UTC


Proposed bill would prevent anyone under 25 with being charged with felony murder

BALTIMORE (WBFF) — In Maryland, felony murder occurs when someone is killed while a felony crime, like robbery is being committed.

For example, a getaway driver hits and kills a pedestrian while fleeing the scene of a crime, they are guilty of felony murder, under current law.

Democratic Delegate Charlotte Cruchfield is looking to change that with her Youth Accountability and Safety Act, House Bill 1180.

Specifically, Delegate Crutchfield wants that to apply to anyone under the age of 25.

In recent weeks, the issue of age has been a hot topic when it comes to justice reform.

Governor Wes Moore's pick to run the Juvenile Justice Service, Vincent Schiraldi has said no one under the age of 21 should be introduced to the justice system, because the brain is not fully developed.

However, opponents of HB 1180, like Republican Delegate Susan McComas say Democrats are only using mental capacity when it comes to soft on crime policies.

“Proponents of the bill say that the human brain is not fully formed in the frontal lobes until age 25. But yet, we’re doing other things in the general assembly, letting children vote earlier and earlier, letting them get hormone inducing drugs to change their sex," said McComas.

Delegate McComas believes the bill, if passed, would lead to a spike in crime.

“If this bill passes, you’re going to have kingpins, you’re going to have gangs use juveniles to do their dirty work.," said McComas.

Law Enforcement officials like Harford County Sheriff Jeff Gahler agree.

Source (Archive)

Racial Equity Impact Note​

Department of Legislative Services​

Maryland General Assembly​

2023 Session
HB1180

Criminal Law - Youth Accountability and Safety Act​

Bill Summary​

This bill prohibits a person from being convicted of murder in the first degree if they are (1) under the age of 25 at the time of the offense and (2) committed the crime in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of an additional crime listed under § 2-201(4)(i)-(xii) of the Criminal Law Article.

Racial Equity Impact Statement​

The bill’s provisions prohibiting individuals under the age of 25 from being convicted of first-degree murder in specified circumstances would have a potentially meaningful impact on Black or African American individuals in this age bracket who face arrest for murder, in general, at a disproportionately high rate. The overall equity impacts of the bill, however, cannot be reliably estimated without detailed data on convictions, sentencing, inmates, parole activity, and recidivism rates.

Analysis​

The bill would prohibit an individual under the age of 25 from being convicted of first-degree murder committed in the perpetration of or an attempt to perpetrate various felonies including carjacking, arson, burglary, rape, and various sex offenses. The current penalty for first-degree murder, including felony murder as described in the bill, is imprisonment for life or life without the possibility of parole. A murder that is not in the first degree is considered second degree under statute, and a person who commits a murder in the second degree is also guilty of a felony and subject to imprisonment for a maximum of 40 years. Accordingly, the bill would reduce the overall sentence length for individuals who committed felony murder prior to turning age 25 that would have been otherwise sentenced to life imprisonment under existing law.

The Department of State Police reports 269 arrests for any degree of murder in 2020. Of the total, 111 arrests were for individuals under age 25 – 88 were Black or African American, 21 were white, 1 was American Indian and Alaska Native, and 1 was of unknown race.

As shown in Exhibit 1, Black or African American individuals were 79% of arrests for murder in 2020 despite comprising just 31% of the under age 25 population in the State. In contrast, white individuals were 19% of those arrested for murder, significantly lower than their 42% proportion of the under age 25 State population.

Arrest Data

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Though this data covers arrests for all types of murder, not just first-degree murder, it shows significant disparities in arrests for Black or African American individuals under age 25 in the State, making these individuals the most impacted by the bill’s provisions.

Sentencing Data

More recently, for fiscal 2022, the Maryland State Commission on Criminal Sentencing Policy (MSCCSP) received information for 106 individuals sentenced to 116 total counts of first-degree murder in circuit court. However, MSCCSP data does not distinguish between felony murder and other types of first-degree murder as listed in statute.

Incarceration Data

The Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services reports that in fiscal 2022, out of a total of 14,983 incarcerated individuals, 1,365, or 9.1%, were individuals under age 25. Of the overall incarcerated population, 30% is imprisoned with a murder conviction. The data does not specify how many of those individuals were under 25 when the murder occurred or what degree or type of murder was committed.

Approximately 15% of inmates in fiscal 2022 were serving life sentences. This group would include all individuals convicted of first-degree murder under existing law. The portion of this group that are under age 25 and incarcerated for murder is not known, however. It should also be noted that the bill would also only apply prospectively for individuals charged and sentenced after the bill’s effective date.

Conclusion​

The bill’s provisions prohibiting individuals under the age of 25 from being convicted of first-degree murder in specified circumstances would allow these individuals to be released from incarceration after serving no more than 40 years in prison. This could allow an individual who may have committed a murder while committing another crime as a juvenile or young adult to have an opportunity to be released at a more mature age and possibly rehabilitate. Accordingly, this would have a meaningful impact on individuals in this age bracket, particularly Black or African American individuals who generally face arrest for murder at a disproportionately high rate. Without conviction data, an estimate of the number of individuals that may be directly affected by the bill in terms of sentence length cannot be determined. In addition, the larger overall equity impacts of the bill cannot be reliably estimated without detailed data on convictions, sentencing, inmates, parole activity, and recidivism rates.

Information Sources: Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services; U.S. Census Bureau; Maryland Department of Planning; Department of State Police; Maryland State Commission on Criminal Sentencing Policy; Department of Legislative Services

Analysis by: Elli Nikolopoulos

Published: 03/01/2023

Source (Archive)

Fiscal Policy Note (Archive)
Full Bill (Archive)
 

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If you are old enough to know something is wrong, you are old enough to be punished for it.

Baltimore wants to take back the murder crown from New Orleans and St. Louis.

There's a better argument for slapping murder charges on kids under 14 than there is something insane like this. Plenty of studies show that kids who kill at that age keep killing in their gangbanging lifestyle than ever becoming a productive member of society.
If I'm remembering correctly; with a proper upbringing, the ages of 8 to 12 are when competent children learn and solidify right from wrong. The mentally deficit or the ones lacking supervision / discipline; if they don't have it by then, they'll never have it. It's one of those things that you either learn early in life, or go without... and we know how that ends.
 
FYI...

An example of Felony Murder is if a person decides to rob a bank, during this bank robbery the robber fires his gun into the air and a customer has a heart attack, this customer then dies.

The question is if the robber is guilty of manslaughter / murder.

Another example, a person shoots out an electric substation as a diversion for a bank robbery. During the blackout the respirator batteries for a person at home fails and they suffocate. Is the person that destroyed the substation guilty of murder?
This is a way better example than what they gave:
For example, a getaway driver hits and kills a pedestrian while fleeing the scene of a crime, they are guilty of felony murder, under current law.
That's a horrible example, because that's just regular murder. Maybe manslaughter, depending on the circumstances. But it makes it sound like this bill would make it legal to mow down pedestrians like you're playing Twisted Metal. Even if this bill went into effect, the driver would still go to prison for killing someone. Hell, even without the bill I don't think felony murder would even apply.

From what I understand, the most common application is that you're robbing a store with someone and the other person murders the cashier. You are now on the hook for felony murder even though you had nothing to do with the actual murder. The reasoning is that you should know that robbing a place at gunpoint is dangerous to human life, therefore when a human life is lost in the process, you were indirectly culpable.

Personally, I like felony murder laws because I like anything that makes criminals' lives worse.
 
Thirty years and nothing has changed.


But, sure, make it so they can't get in trouble for it until you're 25.

Where the FUCK did this "You aren't an adult till 25!!!!" come from.

That's almost half a person's life that these people want to relegate to childhood.
My only rational guess is either car insurance dropping rates when young males hit 25, or the Obamacare thing where kids could stay on their parents plan until they turn 26.

Just like that, 25 is the new 18.
 
Get rid of the felony murder distinction then create a new criminal charge called High Niggardry and make the sentence public execution.
 
Note that this bill is a small chip against the wall of criminal justice system. As ludicrous as this all sounds, its merely the most permissive bill democrats think they can get passed. If for instance, they thought they could do away with murder charges against blacks who kill whites, they would do so in a heartbeat.

The fact they can't do that yet, both infuriates them and gives me hope more people can see this and be awaken to the reality of modern American race relations.
 
Felony murder exists so if two guys kill someone, they can't get off by blaming the other guy. The whole basis of The Thin Blue line.
 
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