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NC Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty

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Teens are no longer sentenced to death in NC, but many are still victims of the death penalty

March 15, 2022 · Elizabeth Hambourger

April Barber at her 1992 trial. She was tried as an adult and spent 30 years in prison for a fire she set at 15. Gov. Cooper commuted her sentence this week.
Photo courtesy of Wilkes-Journal Patriot

Few of us would choose to be judged solely on the choices we made as teens. But that is exactly what our criminal justice system does when it imposes extremely harsh punishments on mere children. Until 2004, juveniles could even be sentenced to death. There are still nineteen people on North Carolina’s death row condemned to die for crimes they are accused of committing before they turned 21. 

Today, the death penalty is off the table for crimes comitted before the age of 18. But there are still over 300 people convicted as children and serving extreme sentences in North Carolina prisons. According to the News and Observer, more than 80 percent of people sent to North Carolina prisons for crimes they committed as juveniles are people of color.

However, last week saw some progress towards reversing this brutal trend. The Juvenile Sentence Review Board, created by Governor Cooper, ordered the release of three people sentenced as juveniles. All three had already served at least two decades in prison. In addition, the North Carolina Supreme Court overturned the conviction of Utaris Reid, who was sentenced to life without parole for a crime he allegedly committed when he was just 14. In that case, evidence has emerged since the trial of the teen’s innocence. 

Even though these four people were never sentenced to death, they were still victims of the death penalty. As longtime civil rights and capital defense attorney Henderson Hill wrote in his introductory essay to CDPL’s Racist Roots project, the death penalty “sits at the top of” the criminal justice system, “condoning all its other cruelties.” As long as we have a death penalty, a lifetime in prison, even for a child, can be framed as a mercy. 

Hill is featured in CDPL’s upcoming film adaptation of the Racist Roots project, which tells the story of the racist origins of North Carolina’s death penalty and the modern movement to end it. As he explains in the film, “If you’re going to get rid of  life without parole, if you’re going to get rid of mandatory sentencing, you’ve got to take the big gorilla out of the room. And that’s the death penalty.”

Racist Roots: The Film will be released in late March. NCCADP and CDPL will be scheduling in person and online screenings and discussions of Racist Roots throughout the state. For more information and to request a screening for a group in your community, visit the Racist Roots website and view a trailer featuring Henderson Hill here.  

Filed Under: Children in Prison, Life Without Parole, Racial Bias

Elizabeth Hambourger is a senior staff attorney at the Center for Death Penalty Litigation.

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Join us for the We Keep Us Alive event at Pullen M Join us for the We Keep Us Alive event at Pullen Memorial Baptist Church! You can find the entrance in the back of the church by the parking lot. #NoMoreDeathRow
Today's the day! You're invited to join us from 2- Today's the day! You're invited to join us from 2-6 PM at Pullen Memorial Baptist Church in Raleigh to mark 19 years since the last execution in North Carolina. We'll be diving deep into what abolition means for ourselves and our communities. 

With 6 incredible workshop options, art from death row, live music, the debut of Nick Courmon's poem "Inescapable," and a march to Central Prison for a vigil – we guarantee you won't want to miss this free event. 

Scroll through the post to take a look at the workshop line-up!

All are welcome. Register at bit.ly/WeKeepUsAlive or at the link in our bio.
Tomorrow, we hit the streets, and we need you. We Tomorrow, we hit the streets, and we need you.

We're marching to the gates of Central Prison to tell the state of North Carolina: NO more death row. NO more death penalty. It's time for it to go.

At the prison, we'll hold vigil for the 43 lives taken in the modern death penalty era and stand in solidarity with the 121 people who are currently living under the shadow of death row, most of whom are inside those prison walls right now.

📸 Photo descriptions:
1️⃣ Death row exonerees Edward Chapman and Henry McCollum, alongside spoken word artist Nick Courmon (who will debut his new poem "Inescapable" tomorrow).
2️⃣ Henry McCollum placing signs along the road with the names and years of life of all 43 people executed in NC’s modern death penalty era.
3️⃣ Members of our Family Survivor Engagement Group, leaders who fought for the commutation of 15 death sentences, bringing their lived experience to the front lines.
4️⃣ Edward Chapman holding a sign for Kenneth Boyd, someone he knew personally, executed by NC in 2005.

Hear from many of these folks and more tomorrow at We Keep Us Alive. RSVP at bit.ly/WeKeepUsAlive or at the link in our bio.

Here's the schedule for the day – join for any part you're able:

2:00 PM | Community gathering at Pullen
2:50 PM | Abolition-focused workshops at Pullen
4:35 PM | March to Central Prison from Pullen
5:00 PM | Vigil at Central Prison
5:40 PM | Closing and refreshments
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