Saturday, October 9, 2010

10-10-10 PADP Recognizes World Day Against the Death Penalty


PADP Recognizes World Day Against the Death Penalty

Join us at 2:00 PM Sunday 10-10-10 in front of the PA State Capitol in Harrisburg PA for a silent vigil for the 220 people on PA's Death Row (silence at @2:20 PM for 220 seconds) then come back to the PADP Office for a free screening of the movie "Deadline".
Movie “Deadline” trailer & website:
Give a call at 717-236-4840 if you need directions.

Also, during the entire month of October, we will be contacting our members to ask for their assistance in hosting a showing of this powerful documentary in their homes, community centers, schools or and houses of worship. So if you miss the 10-10-10 screening, dont worry. Contact us to set up your own event.
Call 717-236-4840 or send an email to info@padp.org for more information.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Powerful statement from lawyer of Teresa Lewis who was executed last night

I thought I would share this email with you, received from our national affiliate, NCADP...LBD:


Powerful statement from lawyer of Teresa Lewis who was executed last night


National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 5:29 PM
Reply-To: ncadp@mail.democracyinaction.org
To:

Dear friends:

Below is a message from Andrea Bible, of the National Clearinghouse for the Defense of Battered Women. Her email appeared in our mailboxes today, and with her permission, we're sharing it with you. It's long, but incredibly important. We thank her, the National Clearinghouse, and all of you for what you do.

Dear ones:

Today I am grieving.

I am grieving because last night, just after 9pm Eastern time, people in the State of Virginia killed Teresa Lewis.

I am grieving because the people who were given the power to decide whether or not to kill Teresa Lewis were unswayed by new evidence showing she was not the mastermind behind the crimes, as the judge who sentenced her to death believed her to be.

I am grieving because we live in a country where politicians and the courts believe it is ok to use the state's resources to kill someone.

I am grieving because we live in a country where politicians and the courts believe it is ok to use the state's resources to kill someone who functions at the level of a 13-year-old.

I am grieving because my colleagues and I, Teresa's attorneys, and many other advocates and supporters around the country who worked to prevent her senseless and unnecessary death were not powerful enough to stop it.

I am grieving because the alternative that I was fighting for -- that Teresa's life be spared -- would have meant that she would have spent the rest of her life prison in conditions of isolation and deprivation.

I am grieving because I keep hearing the voice of my friend Susan, who at age 19 plead to 25-to-life to avoid the death penalty for killing the man who held her hostage and abused her, saying, "It was exactly like my abuser. The state said that they were going to kill me, just like he used to tell me."

I am grieving because there are women whom I respect, admire, and am inspired by -- like Tracee, Ellen, Susan, Sara, and countless others -- who also faced the death penalty and now are serving Life Without Parole sentences.

I am grieving because I am remembering Deborah Peagler, who died earlier this year of lung cancer after being released from CA prison after serving more than 26 years; Debbie plead guilty in 1983 to avoid the death penalty, only to have her attorneys discover documents in 2005 showing that the prosecutor knew at the time that they did not have sufficient evidence against her to pursue the death penalty.

I am grieving because I know that the men who Teresa Lewis and her co-defendants killed didn't deserve to be killed either.

I am grieving because today, the state of Georgia is preparing to kill Brandon Rhode, whose execution was postponed earlier this week after he tried to commit suicide.

I am grieving because 35 states still have the death penalty, and there are 14 executions scheduled between now and the end of the year, and another six already scheduled in 2011.

I am grieving because our prisons are full of black and brown people, poor people, queer, transgender and gender non-conforming people, people with mental health issues, people with disabilities, people who have been subjected to horrors, people who have been neglected, people who are incredibly talented artists, people who are loving parents, people with incredible gifts, people who deserve the opportunity to express their full potential, people who deserve to live free of fear and deprivation, and people who, despite all they have endured, manage to sustain more moments of dignity and resistance and humor and humanity than I ever would have imagined possible.

I am grieving because sometimes it feels like too much; too much suffering and oppression and trauma and violence to stop.

I am grieving and I am outraged.

And I am hopeful.

I am hopeful because I know that I am a part of a powerful movement for justice, for healing, and for collective liberation.

I am hopeful because even in my grief, I feel profoundly connected to all of you who share this commitment to building another world, one where all people have access to the material, educational, emotional, and spiritual resources necessary to be safe in thrive in our communities.

I am hopeful because I am privileged to work with amazing women who join me everyday in the struggle for justice.

I am hopeful because I know that people all over the world expressed opposition to the killing of Teresa Lewis.

I am hopeful because I have witnessed, and been a part of, countless acts of resistance to the forces of violence and oppression.

I am hopeful because many of those acts of resistance have resulted in powerful, meaningful, liberatory changes.

I am hopeful because I don't have to look all that hard to see evidence that we are doing it, we are building the world we want and deserve.

I am hopeful because I have to be. There is no alternative.

And I am grateful.

I am grateful to each of you for being a part of the struggle alongside me, in your own ways.

I am grateful for the ways that each of you sustain me and my spirits, even from afar.

I am grateful for the many expressions of support and solidarity that people sent to Teresa, her attorneys, my colleagues, and me this week.

I am grateful to Teresa's attorney and to the countless other volunteer attorneys throughout the country who dedicate themselves to fighting for justice.

I am grateful that Gaile Owens, who was set to be executed by the State of Tennessee next Tuesday, had her sentenced commuted in July to life with the possibility for parole by Governor Bredesen.

I am grateful for the countless organizations and affinity groups and collectives and individuals who work so determinedly to create the change we want to see and to build the world in which we all deserve to live.

I am grateful for the opportunity to confront the dissociation and fatigue that comes from absorbing too much suffering and trauma, to tap into my grief and outrage, to express myself, and to move, once again, toward action.

And I am grateful for this life and the chance to be my best self. I hope to do right by it.

Onward,
Andrea

PS: Today I am going to make a donation to the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in Teresa Lewis' honor. If you want to join me in doing so, you can donate online at http://ncadp.org/

I also am feeling especially proud of the work of the National Clearinghouse for the Defense of Battered Women this week; if any of you want to send them some love this week, too, you can go to http://www.ncdbw.org/more.htm

And I also am always grateful for the work and leadership of Critical Resistance and their vision of creating genuinely safe and healthy communities that respond to harm without relying on prisons and punishment. To support their work, go to:http://criticalresist.live.radicaldesigns.org/article.php?id=55


Thursday, August 12, 2010

PADP News Update

PADP wishes to inform you about several items of interest, as well as a few important opportunities to get involved with our work!

· On Monday August 17, 2010, the state House Judiciary Committee will be holding a public hearing concerning Senate Bill 628. This important piece of legislation prohibits the use of the death penalty in cases of mental retardation. Though PADP is an abolitionist organization, we believe that while the death penalty is still in practice, it should be applied as fairly and as infrequently as possible. SB628 will protect mentally handicapped defendants from an inhumane form of punishment, and we need your help! We must show our state legislators that we support this bill, and that they should as well! The meeting will be at 10am, in room G50 of the Irving Office in the state Capitol.

· PADP is announcing a fund-raising challenge to its constituents! An anonymous donor has offered to match dollar-for-dollar every donation which is gained from our phone-drive. This means that for every dollar you donate to PADP, your total is, in actuality, doubled! So please give generously, it is only with your help that PADP can continue to work for equality, humanity and morality in our state.

· PADP is also offering several volunteer leadership opportunities. We are seeking a Local Group Leader, a Student Coordinator, and an Online Coordinator. These positions are invaluable to the success of our cause. Without the ability to mobilize our community in support of abolition, our voices will fall on deaf ears! For more information about the positions please visit: http://padp.org/content/action-center-volunteer, or email info@padp.org

· Our Facebook page has simplified it's URL, and can now be found at: www.facebook.com/padp.org, and our Twitter page is @padp_org!


Keep checking back for more updates!


Monday, July 26, 2010

Flawed Science, Flawed Morals, Flawed Justice




This weekend, CNN published a story explaining that a Texas state board ruled that arson investigators used "flawed science", resulting in the execution of an innocent man in 2004. In 1991, Cameron Todd Willingham was accused of deliberately starting a fire which killed his three daughters in their Corsicana Texas home. Now, 19 years after Mr. Willingham was first falsely accused, 18 years after Mr. Willingham was sentenced to death, and 6 years after he was executed by the state of Texas, the Texas Forensic Science Commission--among others--has found that this human being was, in fact, determined to be guilty by means of "flawed science". The evidence, reviewed by three different panels of experts, concluded that the fire should not have been ruled by arson. Thus, Mr. Willingham's trial was unfounded and Texas has not only unjustly added another name to the 462 inmates they have executed since 1976, but ended the life of an innocent human being.

That Mr. Willingham's life was ended prematurely by the state of Texas is not only flawed science, but flawed morals, and flawed justice. The death penalty is irreparable; it cannot be undone. If mistakes are made--as they have been in the past, and will certainly continue to be made in the future--it is not something the state can "fix" with money, programs, or studies. A human being's life is gone forever. Mr. Willingham is far from the first innocent man to be executed, however. The cost of murdering an innocent human being is far too high a price to pay for an inefficient, ineffective, and expensive form of punishment/deterrence. The execution of innocent men like Cameron Todd Willingham is a travesty for the state of Texas, the United States, and humanity as a whole. By executing human beings, the United States sacrifices any moral high ground that it may claim in its judicial process, and the fact that every year innocent lives are stolen because of a broken criminal justice system only further underscores the appalling nature of the death penalty, and the pressing need to ban this barbaric form of punishment. The death penalty is permanent. Nothing will bring back Cameron Todd Willingham. However, we can honor the memories of fallen innocent human beings by working to save the lives of the innocent human beings currently on death row, and the countless others who will inevitably be sentenced to death in the future. We must ban the death penalty in Pennsylvania, the United States and the world, forever.

Cameron Todd Willingham's final words:

"The only statement I want to make is that I am an innocent man convicted of a crime I did not commit. I have been prosecuted for 12 years for something I did not do. From God's dust I came and to dust I will return so the Earth will become my throne. I gotta go, Road Dog."

Source

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Kevin Keith Appeal





PADP, in conjunction with the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, is asking you to please take action to save the life of a potentially innocent man. Kevin Keith has been on death row since 1994. He was sentenced to death for the murder of Marichell Chatman, her seven-year-old daughter, Marchae, and her aunt, Linda Chatman, in a trail which lasted only three and a half months, and was based on potentially faulty eye-witness identification. Despite overwhelming evidence supporting his innocence, Kevin Keith is scheduled to be executed on September 15, 2010.

However, Mr. Keith's clemency hearing is set for August 11. We urge you to add your name to the clemency petition now, to forward this message to friends and ask them to join you by adding their names as well, and to share this information on Facebook, Twitter, and whatever other networking tools you use.


Please sign the petition, and help save yet another life.

Kevin Keith's website.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

HB 1996 Public Hearing

On Monday July 19, 2010, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Judiciary Committee held a public hearing concerning House Bill 1996 (also known as the Racial Justice Act), which amends Title 42 (Judiciary and Judicial Procedure) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, eliminating the possibility of the use of the capital punishment if "race was a significant factor in a decision to seek or impose the sentence of death". This bill seeks not only to lessen the number of individuals that receive the death penalty, but also to mend the appalling racial disparity on death row.

Among the presenters for the hearing were Rev. Dr. Roger Thomas, co-chair of the Pennsylvania Committee for the Analysis and Reform of Our Criminal System, who offered both a factual and spiritual analysis of the Act; Robert Brett Dunham, Assistant Federal Defender for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, who presented shocking statistics about the racial disparities of death row, both on a state and national level; and Jeremy J. Collins, Director of the North Carolina Coalition for a Moratorium, who offered a spirited testimonial regarding the effectiveness of North Carolina's own Racial Justice Act, which went into effect August 11th of last year.

Read an analysis of the Act from The Independent: here.

What follows is PADP Director, Dave Kenyon's testimony to the House Judiciary Committee regarding Pennsylvania's Racial Justice Act:



July 14, 2010



The Honorable Thomas R. Caltagirone

Chairman, House Judiciary Committee

106 Irvis Office Building

PO Box 202127

Harrisburg, PA 17120-2127



The Honorable Ron Marsico

Chairman, House Judiciary Committee

218 Ryan Office Building

PO Box 202105

Harrisburg, PA 17120-2105



Dear Chairman Caltagirone and Chairman Marsico,


Thank you for the opportunity to submit written testimony for the July 19 House Judiciary Committee hearing on House Bill 1996. This legislation would provide a course of action for defendants facing death sentences in the commonwealth when the imposition or charge of capital punishment was sought in the case on the basis of race. Pennsylvanians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty supports HB 1996, and on behalf of the 12,000 members of PADP, I urge you and the members of the committee to support this legislation.


According to the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, of the 220 inmates on death row, 59%, are black. This ratio is extremely high when considering the population of African Americans in Pennsylvania is slightly less than 11%. Of the 130 black inmates on death row, 71% are from Philadelphia County. While blacks make up 44.8% of the population of Philadelphia County, a staggering 88.5% of the death row inmates from Philadelphia are black. Clearly, there is a disproportionate number of minority convictions for capital cases in Pennsylvania.


The American Bar Association warned of exactly this kind of racial (and geographical) skewing in it Pennsylvania Death Penalty Report. The recommendations resulting from the ABA report suggest the Commonwealth should eliminate racial and geographical bias from its death penalty system. House Bill 1996 would begin to address the need to alleviate a grave injustice that plagues Pennsylvania's judicial system. It will not be a panacea.


The Pennsylvania Supreme Court recommended the Commonwealth adopt a Racial Justice Act in its 2003 report Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Imposition of the Death Penalty. Citing the need for legislative action as implied in McCleskey v. Kemp, the report suggests codifying the ability of defendants to use statistical information to argue racial discrimination. By enacting HB 1996 Pennsylvania would join Kentucky and North Carolina in the attempt to enshrine the equal protection rights of the accused.


Both the ABA and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court advocate for a comprehensive data gathering system to track capital cases in the Commonwealth. The need for data to monitor the judicial system is great, particularly to gauge the effect if HB 1996 is passed.


The citizens of Pennsylvania deserve to reside in a society free from racial discrimination. Flagrant use of racial bias in seeking or imposing the death sentence in Pennsylvania erodes the judicial integrity of Pennsylvania and denigrates the concept of equality in the United States. House Bill 1996 can help to reverse the inherent injustice of racial and ethnic bias that is rampant in the system. It is for the aforementioned reasons PADP urges you to support this legislation.


Pennsylvanians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty thanks the House Judiciary Committee for the opportunity to express our position on this matter. Please feel free to contact us with any comments or if any additional information is needed.


Sincerely,


Dave Kenyon

Director, PADP

114 Walnut St.

Suite 3

Harrisburg, PA 17101

(717) 236-4840 phone

(717) 236-4850 fax

dkenyon@padp.org

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

William C. Holland

While speaking to the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections about inconsistencies in their records, we at PADP learned that on June 27, 2010, William C. Holland--a man who was awaiting execution by the state of Pennsylvania--had died of 'natural causes' at the age of 54. Mr. Holland had been sentenced to death on February 7th, 1986, meaning that he had been on death row for 24 years.

Yet there is no mention of him in area newspaper columns, obituaries, or even the state Department of Corrections. Mr. Holland's name has been all but erased from the records; a simple screen displaying the message 'prisoner not found' is all that results from of a search for his name on the Department of Corrections website. Mr. Holland is far from the first to suffer this fate. Because Pennsylvania has only executed three individuals since its reinstatement, to be sentenced to execution is nearly a guarantee that you will die on death row. However, the economic cost of maintaining prisoners on death row for such a long period of time is significantly higher than a 'life without parole' sentence. Meanwhile, the state legal system remains bogged down with endless case appeals. The Death Penalty Information Center examines the time between sentencing and execution on a national scale here:



(source)


There is no reason to doubt that the number is significantly higher in 2010.

If the death penalty were eliminated, this economic, social, and political cost would not be exacted upon the taxpayers of the state of Pennsylvania without their consent, and those on death row would not have to join the countless others--like William C. Holland--who have died waiting for the state of Pennsylvania to demonstrate its disregard for social justice.