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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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Mental Illness

Juveniles and people with intellectual disabilities are legally exempt from the death penalty because of their diminished capacity to understand and control their actions. Serious mental illness can reduce culpability in the same way, yet North Carolina offers few protections. For example, there is no law allowing judges to remove the death penalty from consideration because of mental illness, and defendants can mount an “insanity” defense before a jury, but juries rarely grant relief on this basis.

Some of the people who have been sentenced to death in North Carolina have schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders that can cause delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thinking, and disruption of memory and perception. Some are suffering from severe post-traumatic stress disorder, either because they are war veterans or suffered severe childhood trauma.

It is exceedingly difficult for defendants with severe mental illnesses to receive a fair trial. Many defendants with mental illnesses are paranoid and distrustful of their attorneys, leaving them unable to provide their defense team with critical information. Some cannot remember what may have happened or where they were. Additionally, if they are taking psychotropic medications to control their illness, they may appear apathetic and remorseless at trial; if they fail to take these medications, however, defendants may become belligerent or frightening in front of the jury.

Across the US, the majority of people executed have suffered under the weight of mental illnesses.

Last Updated: February 16, 2022

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

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Tennessee has executed Byron Black, an elderly, wh Tennessee has executed Byron Black, an elderly, wheelchair-bound man with dementia and intellectual disabilities. The state refused to deactivate his implanted defibrillator prior to his execution.

Byron was the 28th person executed in the US this year. He was the 2nd person killed by Tennessee in 2025 after the state paused executions for 5 years.

Rest in peace, Byron. We remember your life and mourn your execution.

#EndTheDeathPenalty #NoMoreDeathRow
What does a world without executions look like? Wh What does a world without executions look like? What if abolition is about creation as much as it is about resistance?

Join us Saturday, August 16 for an afternoon of workshops, art, reflection, and collective power as we remember those taken by North Carolina's death penalty and boldly imagine what comes next.

When? August 16 | 2–6 PM
Where? Pullen Memorial Baptist Church, 1801 Hillsborough St, Raleigh, NC
Why? Community and collective liberation!

Register at bit.ly/WeKeepUsAlive or at the link in our bio.
Brenda is joining us in Raleigh on August 16 to op Brenda is joining us in Raleigh on August 16 to oppose the death penalty. Will you?

As we face down the capital punishment system in North Carolina, Brenda's words ring true: "We have to diligently keep organizing against the death penalty because we're near a breakthrough and victory will be ours."

Join us in Raleigh on August 16 to mark the 19th anniversary of the last execution in our state. Let's imagine our collective abolitionist future together.

Register and learn more at bit.ly/WeKeepUsAlive or at the link in our bio.

See you out there 🪧
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