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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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Never Again: Creating a new vision of justice on the 16th anniversary of NC’s last execution

August 4, 2022

On August 18, it will be sixteen years since North Carolina strapped Samuel Flippen to a gurney and executed him in the middle of the night. Sixteen years since protesters stood outside Central Prison, dripping candle wax on their shoes, and some even getting arrested as they stood against this awful practice. 

All these years later, we are proud to say that we did stop the state-sponsored killing, but we also must not forget that the death penalty remains a clear and present threat in North Carolina. Capital trials are still a regular occurrence across the state, 136 people remain on death row, and only ongoing litigation prevents executions from resuming. NC lawmakers still have not taken the crucial step of abolishing the death penalty.

That’s why, from August 15 to 19, we are gathering for a week of in-person events to remember the 43 people executed under our current death penalty laws and to recommit to building a future without the death penalty. See all events here.

We will begin with a vigil of remembrance outside Central Prison on Monday, where we will read the names of those executed and toll a bell in their memory. Their deaths did nothing to make our society safer. They only created more violence, more suffering, and more grieving families.

We must also remember that those executed under modern laws represent just a tiny fraction of the people executed in North Carolina. The death penalty has been here since our state’s beginning, and it was used as a tool to enforce slavery and Jim Crow. This racist history remains deeply embedded in today’s death penalty.

That’s why we will host two very special screenings of Racist Roots, the Center for Death Penalty Litigation’s new film tracing the white supremacist origins of the modern death penalty. The screenings will be in Asheville and Chapel Hill.

But our movement isn’t just about mourning our losses, it’s also about building community and envisioning a better future together. That’s why we will finish the week with a community potluck and program at Pullen Park in Raleigh. There will be inspiring speakers and an opportunity to ask ourselves: If we defunded the death penalty, how could we use those resources in ways that would make our communites stronger and safer?

All of these events will raise the voices of people most proximate to the death penalty, those currently and formerly incarcerated and those who have lost loved ones to homicide and execution. 

Please join us to say, Never Again!, and to help us create a new vision of justice.

Filed Under: Blog

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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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Join us in Raleigh on May 18 for a film screening Join us in Raleigh on May 18 for a film screening & discussion with Ed Chapman, a death row exoneree 🎥

You're invited to a screening of "Racist Roots," a 25-minute documentary 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 14 years wrongfully convicted on NC's death row. This conversation will be moderated by NCCADP's director, Noel Nickle, and will include time for Q&A. 

Hosted by Raleigh Mennonite Church (@raleighmennonite), this event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be provided.

📍  Raleigh Mennonite Church, 121 Hillsborough St, 3rd Floor, Raleigh, NC
📆  Monday, May 18, 6:30-8 PM
🔗  RSVP at bit.ly/RMCRR2026
Today we honor every mother among us, including th Today we honor every mother among us, including those behind bars and those carrying love across impossible distances. Happy Mother's Day from all of us at NCCADP. 🩵
On April 25, NCCADP gathered with impacted communi On April 25, NCCADP gathered with impacted community members in Winston-Salem for Returning to the Circle, a restorative gathering for collective healing. Unlike many of our public-facing programs, this day was not centered on advocacy or education for others. Instead, it was centered on the people who so often carry that work themselves.

Throughout the day, participants ate and sang together, created art, joined restorative Circles, and spent time with one another. 

This work matters because movements cannot survive on urgency alone. Restorative justice reminds us that taking care of our community is intrinsic to the work of ending the death penalty. It is how we build a different future.

Special thanks to so many people who helped to make this gathering possible – Lynda Simmons, Leah Wilson-Hartgrove, Jodi McLaren, Shannon Gigliotti, Brenda Hooks, the Hartgrove family, each and every volunteer who made the event happen, Rev. Nathan Parrish and Peace Haven Baptist Church, and of course, everyone who joined us for this special day.
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