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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?

Innocent people are sentenced to death

How many more innocent people’s lives must be destroyed before we end the death penalty?

Across the country, innocent people receive the death penalty with shocking frequency. Nearly 200 people have now been exonerated from America’s death rows. In North Carolina, twelve people have so far been exonerated after receiving death sentences, but not before serving a combined 157 years in prison. Henry McCollum was sentenced to death at 19 for a crime he had nothing to do with, and spent 30 years on death row before finally being freed.

Exonerations are often joyful events, but we should not mistake them for a sign that the system works. Only a deeply unjust system would routinely send innocent people — almost all of them people of color — to their deaths. When these horrible miscarriages of justice are finally exposed, state leaders do nothing to take stock of a capital punishment system that nearly killed another innocent person. Many death row exonerees do not even receive compensation for the time they served in prison. 

Meanwhile, every exoneration means that the person who caused harm was not held accountable. This realization often causes tremendous pain to surviving family members, who must accept that the person who killed their loved one may never face consequences.

There are almost certainly more innocent people on North Carolina’s death row today. This is reason enough to end the death penalty.

Right now in North Carolina:

  • Since the 1970s, twelve people have been exonerated after receiving death sentences in North Carolina.
  • Eleven of North Carolina’s twelve exonerees are people of color.
  • National studies suggest that one in every 25 people sentenced to death is innocent.

Stories of Innocent People on Death Row

Case File: Henry McCollum & Leon Brown

Brothers spent 31 years in prison before DNA proved them innocent

Henry & Leon were intellectually disabled teenagers when they were taken from their home in rural Robeson County, coerced into confessing to a brutal murder they didn’t commit, and sentenced to death. When they were finally released from prison in 2014, Henry was North Carolina’s longest-serving death row prisoner.
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Case File: Darryl Hunt
NC Exoneree Darryl Hunt

Because of a single juror, he was spared the death penalty for a rape and murder he did not commit

Darryl Hunt was not spared, however, from spending 19 years in prison — ten of those after DNA evidence showed he was not the culprit. After his release, he devoted his life to activism.
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Case File: Levon “Bo” Jones
NC death row exonoree Bo Jones

A single dishonest witness sent him to death row for 13 years

The state’s case against Bo Jones was based almost entirely on the testimony of one witness, who told police five different stories and received a $4,000 “reward.” He was released only after she officially recanted in 2008.
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Case File: Alan Gell

A prosecutor hid evidence and bribed witnesses to secure his death sentence

Alan Gell’s defense attorneys didn’t find out until years later that the prosecutor had a recording of key witnesses plotting to make up a story to incriminate Alan. The prosecutor also withheld statements from seventeen of Mr. Jenkins’ friends and neighbors, who told investigators they saw the victim alive well after the time when Alan could have committed the murder.
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Case File: Edward Chapman

Fourteen years after his exoneration, he’s still awaiting the pardon he deserves

Ed Chapman spent 14 years on death row, endured the executions of several friends, was cut off from his family, and wasn’t able to hug his mother before she died. Since his exoneration, he has struggled to put his life back together. North Carolina has failed to provide the most basic compensation for his wrongful conviction.
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Case File: Jonathan Hoffman

At the urging of a DA who wore a noose-shaped lapel pin, an all-white jury sentenced him to death

Prosecutors were later criminally investigated for making a secret deal with witnesses, who lied to implicate Jonathan Hoffman. He spent more than a decade on death row before being exonerated.
Learn More
Last Updated: February 16, 2022

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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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Join us on April 7 for a film screening & discussi Join us on April 7 for a film screening & discussion about NC's death penalty 🎥

You're warmly invited to 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. 

After the film, hear from Ed Chapman, who was exonerated in 2008 after spending nearly 14 years wrongfully convicted on NC's death row. This conversation will be moderated by NCCADP's executive director, Noel Nickle, and will include time for Q&A. 

Sponsored by the UNC Wrongful Convictions Club (@wccunc) and Carolina Justice Initiative, this event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be provided.

📍Murray Hall, Room G202, 121 South Rd, Chapel Hill, NC 27514
📆 Tuesday, April 7, 6:30–8 PM
🔗 Register at bit.ly/UNCRacistRoots2026 or at the link in our bio

Racist Roots is a project of the Center for Death Penalty Litigation (@centerfordeathpenaltylit).
Are you ready to get mobilized? Join NCCADP over Z Are you ready to get mobilized? Join NCCADP over Zoom on Tuesday, March 31 to learn all about North Carolina's death penalty – and how to get involved in the movement to end it. 

When: Tuesday, March 31 at 7 PM
Where: Zoom

Register at bit.ly/NCCADPMar2026
Join us over Zoom on March 31 to get mobilized! Le Join us over Zoom on March 31 to get mobilized! Learn all about the state of the death penalty in North Carolina – and how you can get involved in the movement to end it.

Learn more and register at bit.ly/NCCADPMar2026 or at the link in our bio.

#NoMoreDeathRow #NCCADP #NCDeathPenalty #EndTheDeathPenalty #NorthCarolina
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