Subscribe to Our Newsletter

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name(Required)
Email(Required)
Address(Required)
Check all that apply:

  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

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
  • Get Involved
  • Donate

Search NC Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty

Alan Gell

Learn more: Death is far more expensive than life

At Alan Gell’s 1998 murder trial, the crucial evidence came from two teenage girls. The girls said they watched Alan shoot Allen Ray Jenkins to death in the driveway of Jenkins’ Bertie County home. It happened on the night of April 3rd, 1995, they told the jury, during a robbery gone wrong. The jury sent Alan, then 22, to death row. In exchange for their testimony, the girls were allowed to plead guilty to second-degree murder and sentenced to just ten years.

Alan’s defense attorneys wouldn’t find out until years later that the prosecutor had a recording of the girls plotting to make up a story to incriminate Alan. What’s more, Mr. Jenkins’ body was not discovered until April 14th, eleven days after the robbery the girls described. And the prosecutor withheld statements from seventeen of Mr. Jenkins’ friends and neighbors, who told investigators they saw him alive well after April 3rd. The statements proved that Alan could not have been the killer, because he was out of state or in jail on a car theft charge from April 4th until after the time Mr. Jenkins’ was found dead.

In 2002, four years after Alan was sent to death row, a judge overturned his conviction because of the hidden evidence. The state medical examiner reversed her earlier testimony, and said she now believed the date of death was days after Alan could have been involved in the killing. Nevertheless, the N.C. Attorney General’s Office continued to press for Alan’s execution. In 2004, the state retried Alan for Mr. Jenkins’ murder.

The jury deliberated less than three hours before acquitting Alan and sending him home. He married the love of his life in 2015.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Footer

Contact

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

Follow Us on Instagram

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
Follow on Instagram

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2026 · NC Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty · All Rights Reserved · Website by Tomatillo Design