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NC Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty

Committed to ending the death penalty and creating a new vision of justice

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A death penalty as random as a lightning strike

April 8, 2019

April 8, 2019

It’s been nearly 50 years since the U.S. Supreme Court declared the death penalty unconstitutional nationwide, saying there was “no meaningful basis for distinguishing the few cases in which [the death penalty] is imposed from the many cases in which it is not.” States, including North Carolina, have spent the years since writing laws that — theoretically — allow us to cleanly sort those who deserve the death penalty from those who don’t.

All these years later, it’s clear we have failed.

Just look at the two most recent death penalty verdicts in North Carolina, in the cases of Seaga Gillard and James Bradley. Both involve tragic murders that caused unimaginable pain to the families of the victims.

The first was a double homicide by a person who had previously committed kidnappings, rapes, and robberies. The second was a single killing by a person who had committed two previous homicides, one of them a child. Both were black men who had killed white women.

Both were tried in urban centers, Raleigh and Wilmington. The same expert, a former prison warden, testified in both cases that the defendants could be safely housed in prison and would suffer a life of harsh deprivation there.

If you gave a detailed summary of these cases to a random sampling of people and asked which defendant should live and which should die, there would be no rational way to decide between them. Yet, the Raleigh jury sentenced to Gillard to death in March, and the Wilmington jury deadlocked last week, leaving Bradley with a sentence of life without parole.

This disparity isn’t just irrational and indefensible, it’s unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has already established that a death penalty that’s as random as a lightning strike is not justice, it is cruelty.

Filed Under: Arbitrary Use, Latest News

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We were so glad to meet Denise, Jackie, and Brenda We were so glad to meet Denise, Jackie, and Brenda at a recent Racist Roots screening with Ed Chapman. These three incredible women are restorative justice practitioners with our friends at Restorative Justice Durham. It meant a lot to connect with people doing this work every day and building pathways to real accountability and healing in their communities.
April is National Volunteer Month – and wow, we su April is National Volunteer Month – and wow, we sure have some amazing volunteers! 

These folks are the heartbeat of NCCADP. They show up as peace marshals during marches, share music and creativity at events, table with partners, hand-address mountains of letters, represent us on campuses and in communities across North Carolina, and give their time as interns and advocates. Again and again, they fearlessly show up.

These photos are just a small glimpse of the ways volunteers have pitched in over the past year. We're so grateful for each of you, for your time, your voices, and your belief in a different future.

If you've been thinking about getting involved, we'd love to have you with us. Learn more at nccadp.org/volunteer-intern-interest/ (or at the link in our bio).
Florida has executed Chadwick Willacy. He was the Florida has executed Chadwick Willacy. He was the 8th person executed in the US and the 5th person killed by Florida in 2026.

#ChadwickWillacy #NoMoreDeathRow #EndTheDeathPenalty #Florida
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