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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

  • Who We Are
    • Mission & History
    • Our Values
    • People Most Proximate
    • Coalition Members
    • Staff, Board, & Advisory Council
    • Our Funders
  • What We Do
  • Why End the Death Penalty?
    • Column 1
      • Racism
      • Innocence
      • Intellectual Disability & Mental Illness
    • Column 2
      • Public Safety
      • High Cost of Death
      • Waning Support
    • Column 3
      • Lethal Injection
      • Antiquated Sentences
      • Unfair Trials
  • Events
  • The Pledge
  • Blog
  • Commutations Campaign
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Search NC Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty

Why end the death penalty?

Decades-old death sentences are invalid by today’s standards

Most of the people on North Carolina’s death row were sentenced in the 1990s. By today’s laws and attitudes, almost none of them would have been sentenced to death.

More than 120 people sit on North Carolina’s death row, but most of their sentences are antiquated. About three-quarters of them were tried more than 20 years ago, during a very different era.

In the 1990s, public support for the death penalty was overwhelming and North Carolina juries handed down dozens of death sentences each year, more than Texas. But beginning in 2001, after several high-profile exonerations of innocent people on death row, juries became much more reluctant to impose death. And a wave of legal reforms transformed capital trials. New laws guaranteed capital defendants such basic rights as trained defense attorneys and mitigation investigators, and the right to see all the evidence in their case files. A court mandate requiring prosecutors to seek death for virtually every first-degree murder — the only such requirement in the nation — was ended.

Today, the death penalty is seen as a tool to be used sparingly, instead of a bludgeon to be wielded in virtually every first-degree murder case. Yet, new laws and shifting public opinion have had little impact on prisoners sentenced decades ago, who remain on death row year after year. 

We must not carry out antiquated death sentences.

Read CDPL’s report, Unequal Justice: How Obsolete Laws and Unfair Trials Created NC’s Outsized Death Row.

Right now in North Carolina:

People tried before 2001, when North Carolina’s death penalty reforms began to take effect, had:

  • No indigent defense agency to ensure them a trained capital attorney.
  • No right to see all the evidence in the prosecutor’s case file.
  • No laws requiring police to record confessions or conduct lineups according to best practices intended to prevent mistaken identifications.
  • No evidence presented to the jury about their backgrounds and family histories — information that often leads juries to spare people’s lives today.

Watch the story of Nathan Bowie, who has spent more than 25 years on death row for a crime committed as a teenager:

Last Updated: January 15, 2025

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Contact

NCCADP Alternate Logo
NCCADP
3326 Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd.
Building D, Suite 201
Durham, NC 27707
noel@nccadp.org
919-404-7409

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Our next coalition meeting is right around the cor Our next coalition meeting is right around the corner – and you're invited!

Four times a year we gather with our organizational partners and people across the state to strengthen our work and deepen our relationships to end the death penalty in North Carolina. Join us for our winter virtual gathering!

When: Tuesday, Feb 17, 1-2:30 PM
Where: Zoom 

Our quarterly statewide meetings are especially geared for people already familiar with NCCADP. If you’re new to our work, please attend our Monthly Info Session prior to registering.

Learn more and register at bit.ly/NCCADPWinter2026 or at the link in our bio.
Our first-ever Impact Report is out now ✨ 2025 wa Our first-ever Impact Report is out now ✨

2025 was a defining year for the movement to end North Carolina’s death penalty. We started the year with the triumph of 15 lives saved at the close of our Commutations Campaign. We navigated choppy legislative waters – with big wins and big challenges along the way. Through it all, we witnessed the collective power of people, with communities mobilizing for justice across the state again and again. Have a look at our 2025 Impact Report at the link in our bio.

Thanks for making this work possible.
You’re warmly invited to join the NC Coalition for You’re warmly invited to join the NC Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty on Sunday, 2/15, for a screening of Racist Roots, a 25-minute film that uncovers the deep entanglement between white supremacy, racial terror lynching, and NC’s death penalty. Following the film, hear from homicide victim family members Niconda Garcia and Jean Parks in a conversation moderated by NCCADP's Executive Director Noel Nickle.

This event is hosted by Swannanoa Valley Friends Meeting and is free and open to the public. Dinner will be provided. Registration kindly requested by 2/12 to assist with meal planning.

RSVP and learn more at bit.ly/SwannanoaRR or at the link in our bio.

#RacistRoots #NoMoreDeathRow #EndTheDeathPenalty
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