Category: x-DRUPAL SITE

Hope on the Horizon

Image of graph that shows steep decline of the number of death sentences since 1990

In a year in which political campaigns and media drove public perception of rising crime to record highs, support for the death penalty in 2022 remains near the lowest it’s been in 50 years. Even among conservatives, support for the death penalty fell five percentage points, despite a barrage of media stoking fear in the lead-up to midterm elections. 

These kinds of perceptions have historically tracked with support for the death penalty. But in the face of ongoing pandemic and fear mongering, 2022 has proven that our work with allies across the movement continues to be effective. The end of the death penalty remains on the horizon. 

This is just one part of the story documented by our friends at the Death Penalty Information Center in their annual year-end report. This was the eighth year in a row with fewer than 30 executions and fewer than 50 new death sentences, with 18 and 21 respectively. The unwillingness of a jury to sentence Nikolas Cruz to death after he killed 17 people in a Parkland, Florida high school showed, once again, how arbitrary the death penalty is. Botched executions and problems with protocols led Alabama,Tennessee, Idaho, and South Carolina to halt executions, joining Oregon, California, Pennsylvania, and Ohio that already have moratoria in place. Kentucky passed a measure to ensure that people with serious mental illness cannot be executed, and Utah, Nevada, and Ohio all made significant strides toward legislative repeal of the death penalty.  

For those of us that have been part of the movement to end the death penalty, we also know that the horrifying reality remains the same: the people who are most vulnerable are those most likely to be sentenced to death and executed. At least 12 of the 18 people executed in 2022 had chronic serious childhood trauma, neglect, and/or abuse; eight had serious mental illness, and five had brain injury, developmental brain damage, or an IQ in the intellectually disabled range.

Graphic showing the majority of those executed suffered chronic childhood trauma and other challenges.
Graphic provided by The Death Penalty Information Center as part of its The Death Penalty in 2022: Year End Report

Our collective systems — including child protection, legal, and health — failed each of these people and their families over and over. We failed them. Most of all, we failed to intervene with the healing that they needed when they needed it meant, which meant we failed their victims, victims’ families, and other community members that continue to be harmed. 

In 2022 the death penalty system continued to hurt everyone it touched, including prison personnel and victims’ family members. It hurt Black and Brown people the most, including disproportionately executing people of color, and disproportionately executing people who kill white people. Substantial evidence emerged that Black people were removed from juries in death-eligible cases at two times the rate of white people in North Carolina, and more than two times the rate in Florida, where Black women were excluded two-thirds of the time. Three of the four exonerees in 2022 were Black, and one was Latina.  

While California enacted the Racial Justice Act for All to address these disparities, and states like Alabama took important steps that recognize the trauma of the death penalty and halted executions, Oklahoma doubled down on a commitment to death. In July, Oklahoma set 25 execution dates, setting a path to an unprecedented killing spree that has already claimed the lives of two people with serious mentally illness. 

Despite all of this, we can find hope as the year closes in the steady decline of the death penalty. We can look to Ohio, where repeal is on the horizon, and Arizona where leaders are paving a path to repeal. We can be inspired by action in Oregon, where Governor Kate Brown commuted all 17 of the state’s death sentences, and to Nevada, where Governor Sisolak is poised to do the same. Most of all, we can look to each other, knowing that what we’re doing together is bringing an end to the death penalty. Our work will continue in 2023.

Filed under: Death Penalty, Death Penalty

Toolkit available for organizations serving crime survivors

EJUSA VOCA ToolkitAs part of our growing work to bring racial equity to victims’ services, EJUSA published a comprehensive toolkit to help groups apply for Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) funding. The toolkit is geared towards organizations serving crime survivors – particularly in communities of color – that have not had access to federal funding in the past.

EJUSA Grassroots Capacity Building Specialist Latrina Kelly-James led a webinar to introduce the toolkit and help organizations understand the funding that is available. Over 45 organizational leaders participated, and many more have downloaded the toolkit or reached out for support in applying for funds.
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Filed under: Emma done, Nevada, Sarah needs to check, x-DRUPAL SITE

Urgent: Tell Congress not to cut victims services

#DontCutVOCAWe need your urgent action to help save critical funding for victims services.

Every year, Congress sets a level of spending from a fund known as VOCA. These are not tax dollars. Many of these funds go to community groups to support vital services like trauma intervention and counseling for people who have been harmed by crime and violence.

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Filed under: convert to action, Emma done, Needs new photo, x-DRUPAL SITE

NAE’s new statement reverberates around the country

National Association of Evangelicals

The National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) recently changed their 40-year pro-death penalty position, noting serious concerns with the death penalty and acknowledging growing opposition and differing views on the issue among Evangelicals. NAE’s board of directors voted for the resolution giving guidance to the NAE’s more than 45,000 congregations from nearly 40 different denominations, serving millions of Americans.

The media took notice.

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Filed under: Uncategorized, x-DRUPAL SITE

Act now to halt execution in Oklahoma

Richard Glossip

Time is running out for Richard Glossip.

In less than 24 hours, Glossip is scheduled be executed, despite mounting evidence of his innocence.

Call Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin now, and ask her to stay the execution to allow for further investigation. Her phone lines are being flooded, but she needs to hear from you that this execution should not go forward.

Governor’s main office number: (405) 521-2342

Governor’s voicemail for comments: (405) 522-8857

The pending execution has generated a huge outcry from all over the world. From Sister Helen Prejean, to former Dallas Cowboys Coach Barry Switzer, to Virgin mogul Richard Branson, to conservative US Senator Tom Coburn, to actress Susan Sarandon – even a juror from the original case came forward to say he wouldn’t have voted to convict Glossip if he’d had all the evidence that is currently available.

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Filed under: convert to action, Emma done, Needs new photo, x-DRUPAL SITE

Be sure Nebraska lawmakers get your ‘Thank You’ note!

Thank you, Nebraska Senators!

Don’t miss your chance to send a “Thank You” note to the Nebraska lawmakers who voted to end the death penalty.

We’re teaming up with our longtime partners atNebraskans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty to deliver your appreciation to all 30 Nebraska Senators who voted to override the Governor’s veto and end the death penalty in Nebraska once and for all.

Those lawmakers declared the death penalty is ineffective, costly, unfair, harmful for victims’ families, and risks dangerous mistakes. They made Nebraska the 19th state – and the first “red” state in over 40 years – to end the death penalty.

When lawmakers demonstrate such leadership, it is critical that we acknowledge it. Write a note to Nebraska Senators today!

With the encouragement of people like you, we’re confident that we will see more and more lawmakers stand up for justice!

Filed under: convert to action, Emma done, Needs new photo, x-DRUPAL SITE

Thank the Nebraska Senators who ended the death penalty

Thank you, Nebraska Senators!

It is vital that lawmakers hear from the people afterthey deliver, not just before a vote when we ask for their support. Last week, 30 Senators in Nebraska declared the death penalty is ineffective, costly, unfair, harmful for victims’ families, and risks dangerous mistakes. They made Nebraska the 19th state – and the first “red” state in over 40 years – to end the death penalty.

Help us collect thank you notes from around the world! We’re teaming up with our longtime partners at Nebraskans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty to deliver your appreciation to all 30 Nebraska Senators who voted to override the Governor’s veto and end the death penalty in Nebraska once and for all.

Send a personal message to the Nebraska repeal supporters.

Filed under: convert to action, Emma done, Needs new photo, x-DRUPAL SITE

Major Evangelical Group Calls for Death Penalty Repeal

NALEC press conference

The National Latino Evangelical Coalition (NaLEC) became the first national association of Evangelical congregations to join the effort to repeal the death penalty. NaLEC’s board of directors voted unanimously for the resolution and is urging its 3,000 member congregations to support efforts to end capital punishment across the country.

The President of NaLEC, Rev. Gabriel Salguero, said, “As Christ followers, we are called to work toward justice for all. And as Latinos, we know too well that justice is not always even-handed. The death penalty is plagued by racial and economic disparities and risks executing an innocent person. Human beings are fallible and there is no room for fallibility in matters of life and death.”

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Filed under: Uncategorized, x-DRUPAL SITE

EJUSA to headline at the CCDA Conference

Billy Moore and Shane ClaiborneEJUSA National Organizer Heather Beaudoin will be traveling to Raleigh, North Carolina later this month to attend the Christian Community Development Association’s (CCDA) conference. The annual gathering brings together more than 2,500 young, dynamic faith leaders who are making change in underserved communities around the country. CCDA will hold its first dialogue on the death penalty after EJUSA’s proposal for a workshop was accepted.

The workshop will bring Heather together with Reverend Billy Moore (pictured, left) and will include an overview of the flaws in the death penalty from a Christian perspective and an in-depth look at Moore’s experience of redemption after spending over 16 years on death row.

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Filed under: Uncategorized, x-DRUPAL SITE