Voices for Death Row Inmates Banner of Hope
Voices for Death Row inmates got together with London artist Carrie Riechadrt and came up with the idea of a Hankies for Hope banner ... this banner is made from cotton hankies .. hankies being something we wipe tears of sadness away with. During the time the death penalty was in practice in the United Kingdom, the judge when passing a death sentence would place a black hankie on his head as he did so .
Each hankie represents a soul , a soul awaiting their fate or already executed . The name, prison ID number and State is written on the hankie. There are also birds flying free. Bird cages ,hearts , angels , candl
es , leaves and flowers painted onto the banner, again all symbolic.
They have been stitched together with orange ribbons between each one , orange being the colour of oppression and the colour of the jumpsuit a death row inmate wears when being moved from one place to another ... so this banner is very symbolic in everyway
This banner has grown over the last few months …but we want people to add the names of their loved ones and pen pals to the Banner of Hope.
If you would like to add a name of an inmate who has been executed or is on death row please contact us via our facebook page or via our website
Below see our Banner of Hope SO FAR!! More names will be added soon
The Banner of Hope So far
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Monday, 21 January 2013
Contact us UPDATE
We have changed the link to this page slightly. Our contact details all remain the same. We have added a number so that people can TEXT us also.
Friday, 18 January 2013
Honour Dr King and Say NO to the Death Penalty
Last year this great group marched or rode with the Abolition Movement in the MLK Parade. We handed out flyers, talked on the mic and honored Clarence Brandley who lost ten years of his life to the racist justice system in Montgomery County.
It still exists today. Montgomery County is still trying to execute innocent men. This time it is Larry Swearingen and he has an execution date for February 27. Nine forensic experts say Swearingen is on death row for a murder he couldn’t have committed, yet Texas courts won’t grant a new trial. We must stop it!
We invite you to join us this Monday at 9AM a couple of blocks east of Minute Maid Park on Texas Avenue near Chartres or St. Emanuel.
Call 713-503-2633 if you can't find us. Dress in layers as it will warm up to 66 degrees Monday and bring a snack. We will have water.
"As one whose husband and mother-in-law have both died the victims of murder assassination, I stand firmly and unequivocally opposed to the death penalty for those convicted of capital offenses. An evil deed is not redeemed by an evil deed of retaliation. Justice is never advanced in the taking of a human life. Morality is never upheld by legalized murder."
-- Coretta Scott King
How many innocent people has the US executed?
As a report reveals the innocence of a man put to death in Texas in 1989, we examine the US' use of capital punishment.
More than two decades after the US state of Texas executed Carlos DeLuna, an investigative study has revealed that he was in fact innocent.
DeLuna was put to death in 1989 for stabbing and killing a petrol station cashier, Wanda Lopez, in 1983.
Now a team from Columbia University claim to have proven DeLuna's innocence. James Liebman, a law professor, and his students say DeLuna's conviction was the result of a poor police investigation, unreliable eyewitness testimony and a weak defence.
"There was no DNA that was ever found or used in this case. [The] team went to Corpus Christi in 2003 to try to get the physical evidence from the case to run a DNA analysis but that physical evidence had been checked out of the prosecutor's office and lost."
- Shawn Crowley, the co-author of Los Tocayos Carlos
Their report concluded that the murderer was Carlos Hernandez, a man who bore a striking resemblance to DeLuna.
Over the last two decades support for capital punishment in the US has been on the decline.
Nonetheless, despite the work of many groups that have raised questions about the fairness of the American justice system, around 60 per cent are still in favour of the death penalty.
Today, there are more than 3,200 people on death row. So far this year, 18 people have been executed.
But the number of death sentences is dropping every year, and more than a dozen US states have now abolished capital punishment.
Death penalty opponents say there is no way to know how many innocent people have been executed in the US.
Over the last 40 years, more than 130 have been released from death row.
"If I was to rewrite the laws I would add many procedural safeguards against the possibility of making [an] error, like requiring DNA, changing the standard of proof from beyond a reasonable doubt to any doubt whatsoever and requiring a [competent] defence lawyer…."
- Bruce Fein, a constitutional lawyer
Nate Fields is among those exonerated inmates. In 2009, he was acquitted of a double murder after spending almost 20 years in prison, including more than 11 years on death row.
Among other things, this is what Fields told Al Jazeera after reading about Columbia University's investigation into the DeLuna case: "The main reason why the death penalty should be abolished is because of the human factor and that is going to continue to play out as long as we have the death penalty. As humans we are going to make mistakes. Just because there are 12 people in the jury doesn't mean they can't get it wrong, they can …because of the human factor …. With the death penalty you can't bring a man back from the graveyard."
So, what are the flaws in America's implementation of capital punishment?
Joining presenter Shihab Rattansi on Inside Story Americas to discuss this are guests: Shawn Crowley, the co-author of Los Tocayos Carlos, the report that seeks to establish that Carlos DeLuna was innocent; Bruce Fein, a former US associate deputy attorney-general and a constitutional lawyer; and Richard Dieter, the executive director at the Death Penalty Information Center.
"Most of our criminal justice system is based on plea-bargains and compromises but the death penalty once it's carried out can't be taken back, we have no room for error so it is a systemic problem as well as a procedural one."
Richard Dieter, the executive director at the Death Penalty Information Center
THE CARLOS DELUNA CASE:
DeLuna was accused of killing a petrol station clerk, Wanda Lopez, in 1983. He was executed in Texas in 1989
A Columbia Law School report on the execution found significant problems with the conviction, particularly that it was based on the testimony of a single, unreliable eyewitness
The report says another man had admitted to killing Lopez, that DeLuna had an ineffective defence lawyer and that he had suffered during his execution due to a problem with the injection
The five-year investigation into DeLuna's case found him not guilty of the crime he was executed for, and suggested that police had botched the investigation
THE DEATH PENALTY IN THE US:
More than 3,200 people remain on death row
About 60 per cent of Americans support the death penalty, although support has dropped in the last 20 years
So far 18 people have been executed in 2012, while 43 people were executed in 2011
More than 1/3 of all executions took place in Texas, which has executed 482 people since reinstating the death penalty in 1982
Out of the 50 US states, 17 have abolished the death penalty
China, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iraq conducted the most executions in 2011, the same year the US ranked fifth worldwide
The US is the only Western country that imposes the death sentence
Source: http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidestoryamericas/2012/05/2012518112115143387.html
STOP the execution of Kimberly McCarthy
The family, friends and supporters of Kimberly McCarthy are petitioning Governor Rick Perry and the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole in effort to save Kimberly from being put to death by the State of Texas. Kimberly suffered from a severe addiction to crack cocaine in the 1990's, and her life went into a downward spiral, into the underworld of drugs. Her association with the wrong people coupled with her out of control drug use became a lethal combination which led to tragedy. Prior to her drug use Kimberly had no criminal record and was in the field of helping and healing the sick as an occupational therapist! When she was introduced to drugs her life took a dark and destructive turn that led to tragedy! A tragedy that she lives with daily and is deeply remorseful for. Over the years Kimberly's faith in God has strengthened. Her spirit and personality touch each and every person she encounters. We are asking that Kimberly's sentence be commuted. That the State of Texas show mercy!! Killing Kimberly will not bring the victim back. It will only create more suffering and heartache. More victims. She could be such a positive influence to others. God can use her to touch the lives of other women headed down the road to destruction.
Sincerely
PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION:
http://www.change.org/petitions/stop-the-execution-of-kimberly-mccarthy
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