Clinton grimaced as Jackson recounted his painful
story and closed by asking her, "How can you still take your stance on the death penalty in light of what you know right now?"
The Democratic front-runner gave a halting answer, clearly still grappling with her heavily qualified position on the death penalty. Clinton says she still supports the death penalty, but only for extreme terrorism cases that end up under federal jurisdiction. Clinton's rival, Bernie Sanders, opposes the death penalty in all circumstances.
"This is such a profoundly difficult question," Clinton told the audience at the town hall, televised by CNN.
"I have said I would breathe a sigh of relief if either the Supreme Court or the states themselves began to eliminate the death penalty.
"Where I end up is this," she said. "And maybe it's a distinction that is hard to support. ... The kind of crimes I'm thinking of are the bombing in Oklahoma City ... the plotters and the people who carried out the attacks on 9/11.
"But a very limited use of it in cases where there has been horrific mass killings. That's really the exception that I still am struggling with. And that would only be in the federal system.
"But what happened to you," she told Jackson, "is a travesty."
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