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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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Kenneth Neal

Learn more: Many death sentences result from egregiously unfair trials

When Kenneth Neal went on trial for the murder of his estranged girlfriend in 1996, he was not the only person in the courtroom recently accused of a crime. His court-appointed defense attorney was a convicted child pornographer whose fall from grace had been widely publicized in the same rural county just a few years before Kenneth’s trial. The poor defense Kenneth received was likely the reason he spent 19 years on death row, despite having an IQ of 69. He was finally resentenced to life without parole in 2015 because of his intellectual disability.

Kenneth was convicted in the 1995 killing of Amanda McCurdy, his longtime girlfriend and the mother of his child. She had recently asked Kenneth to move out of the home they shared, and Kenneth was unable to cope with the loss of his relationship, home, and child. One of 11 children of a tenant farmer, Kenneth grew up in extreme poverty and dropped out of school before completing ninth grade. He couldn’t afford an attorney, so the court assigned him Douglas Osborne.

Osborne was a notorious figure. In 1989, while an assistant district attorney, he was caught in a federal sting and convicted of buying sex tapes involving children as young as seven. The tapes portrayed incestuous sex between siblings and their parents. His arrest received more publicity than most, because he was a prosecutor and came from a well-known Rockingham County family. In the months between his arrest and trial,  Osborne was the subject of multiple front-page stories in local newspapers, which followed the case from the initial charges all the way through to conviction.

Osborne spent a year in federal prison and had his law license suspended for five years. He finished probation and regained his law license just a year before Kenneth’s trial. During the trial, his attorney failed to present evidence that could have spared Kenneth a death sentence, including his low IQ, extreme poverty, and history of family violence. No experts testified to his intellectual disability, and the only testimony about Kenneth’s mental health came from a psychologist not licensed to practice in the United States without supervision.

Interviews with jurors after the trial proved that they knew about Osborne’s crimes and discussed them as they were weighing Kenneth’s fate. One juror said the attorney’s conviction was “the most disgusting type of crime there is” and that Kenneth “could not have done worse” than to have Douglas Osborne as his attorney.

Filed Under: Unfair Trials

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

Follow Us on Instagram

Leaning in and listening well. Our Director of C Leaning in and listening well. 

Our Director of Communications reflects on their first weeks with NCCADP and the quiet, powerful urgency of this work. 

Read the new blog post at the link in our bio.

#endthedeathpenalty #nomoredeathrow #abolitionnow
LGBTQIA+ people, especially Black and Brown trans LGBTQIA+ people, especially Black and Brown trans people, have long been targeted by systems of state violence. From Stonewall to Raleigh, the fight for freedom begins and ends with abolition. 

As we celebrate Pride, we remember: the struggle for queer liberation is deeply connected to the fight to end the death penalty. 

📸: State Archives of North Carolina

#prideisprotest #abolitionisliberation #endthedeathpenalty #queerliberation #nccadp #pridemonth #pride #nomoredeathrow
Yesterday we had the chance to attend HomeComing: Yesterday we had the chance to attend HomeComing: Voices of Rural Reentry, an honest and moving performance by our partners @hiddenvoicesus and @jubileehomenc. 

It centers the stories of people returning from incarceration and the challenges they face – like housing insecurity, job barriers, and systems that punish instead of support.

As the show tours the state, we hope you'll take the opportunity to see it. The conversation that follows is just as powerful. 

Grateful to be in this work with these partners.

#HomeComingNC #RuralReentry #NCCADP #EndTheDeathPenalty #NoMoreDeathRow
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