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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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On this Day: Racial Justice Act Exposes Racial Bias; Then Is Repealed

April 22, 2019

April 20, 2019

Cumberland County Judge Gregory Weeks issued the first decision under North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act

Originally posted on EJI’s History of Racial Injustice:

 

On April 20, 2012, Cumberland County Judge Gregory Weeks issued the first decision under North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act, ruling that racial bias had played a role in Marcus Robinson’s 1991 trial and commuting Mr. Robinson’s death sentence to life imprisonment without parole.

Marcus Robinson, an African American man who was eighteen at the time of the crime, was sentenced to death in Cumberland County for the murder of a white person. North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act (RJA), which was narrowly adopted in 2009, authorized relief for death row defendants who could prove that race was a “significant factor” in jury selection, prosecutorial charging decisions, or the imposition of the death penalty. The RJA authorized defendants to bring claims based on evidence of discrimination at the statewide, judicial division, or district/county level.

According to a Michigan State University Law School study, during the time period Mr. Robinson was tried, North Carolina prosecutors used peremptory challenges to remove black people from capital juries more than twice as often as they did white people, and that disparity was even more pronounced in Cumberland County. At Mr. Robinson’s trial, prosecutors removed only 15% of white prospective jurors, compared to 50% of the qualified African American jurors. At an evidentiary hearing on the RJA challenge, EJI Director Bryan Stevenson testified regarding the history and broader context of racial discrimination in jury selection. Following the decision, prosecutors immediately made plans to appeal and the state legislature passed measures that weakened the RJA.

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Last weekend we had the joy of spending the day at Last weekend we had the joy of spending the day at Second Chance Fest: Hope on Haywood. 

We loved reconnecting with Gene Ellison, who hand prints all of NCCADP’s t-shirts, and spending time with our friends at Deep Time (@deeptimeavl), a coffee roastery creating employment, support, and spiritual community with people impacted by incarceration.

Second chances mean stronger communities!
Texas has executed Edward Busby. He was the 12th p Texas has executed Edward Busby. He was the 12th person executed in the US and the 4th person killed by Texas in 2026. Edward's death also marks Texas' 600th execution in the modern death penalty era.

#EdwardBusby #NoMoreDeathRow #EndTheDeathPenalty #Texas
Oklahoma has executed Raymond Johnson. He was the Oklahoma has executed Raymond Johnson. He was the 11th person executed in the US and the 2nd person killed by Oklahoma in 2026.

We hold in our hearts everyone carrying the weight of this grief today, including the loved ones of the victims, Raymond's loved ones, and his legal team.

#RaymondJohnson #NoMoreDeathRow #EndTheDeathPenalty #Oklahoma
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