America made big strides in 2019 on its path to dismantle the racist, unfair, and inhumane death penalty. Today, dramatically fewer states permit the death penalty than any time in the modern era, and the number of people on death row is at a 27-year low.

Bi-partisan supermajorities in the New Hampshire legislature abolished the death penalty in May, making it the 21st state to formally reject the punishment. Governor Gavin Newsom imposed a sweeping moratorium on executions in California, closing the death chamber in the state with the largest death row in the country and prohibiting the execution of 737 death row prisoners. Four states — California, Oregon, Colorado, and Pennsylvania — are now under official Governor-imposed moratoria, bringing the total number of states that wouldn’t carry out an execution to 25. Ten years ago, just 12 states prohibited executions. In other words, the number of states prohibiting executions has more than doubled in the last decade — a remarkable pace of change.

Read more: Oregon Limited the Death Penalty in 2019

The shift in states rejecting the death penalty is mirrored by the movement in public opinion away from capital punishment. The Gallup Poll has tracked public opinion about the death penalty versus life imprisonment since 1985. This year, for the first time since Gallup began tracking public opinion on this issue, a majority of Americans (60 percent) prefer life imprisonment to the death penalty. 

Part of this shift is the clear proof that the government does not always get it right — innocent people have been sentenced to death, including the 166 people who have been formally exonerated. This year brought even more proof that the death penalty cannot shake its innocence problem. In 2019, two men, Charles Ray Finch and Clifford Willians Jr., both of whom were convicted and sentenced to death in 1976, were exonerated and released. Additionally, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted an indefinite stay to Rodney Reed after a groundswell of public opposition clamored against his execution in light of powerful new evidence of his innocence. Other names like James Dailey, Richard Glossip, and Larry Swearingen also made headlines for credible innocence claims. For Swearingen, those news stories came too late

While a year of much progress, 2019 was also a year plagued by shameful state executions and the reckless attempt by the federal government to rush the executions of five men after a nearly two decade de facto moratorium. The Supreme Court allowed Alabama to execute Dominque Ray, a Black Muslim who was denied access to the spiritual advice of his Imam — a comfort guaranteed to Christian prisoners. Just weeks later, the Court stopped the execution of Patrick Murphy, a white Buddhist man, triggering concerns that race and religion played a role in the disparate outcomes. 

Other unconscionable executions from 2019 include: Georgia’s execution of Ray Cromartie without permitting a simple DNA test that could have fully exonerated him; Missouri’s execution of terminally ill Russell Bucklew in the face of evidence that his execution was likely to be torturous; and Tennessee’s execution of legally blind Lee Hall, Jr. The Supreme Court and the government of South Dakota alike failed Charles Rhines, allowing his execution despite evidence that his jurors sentenced him to death because of their anti-LGBT prejudice.    

This year was mixed in terms of the courts willingness to grapple with intractable problems of racial discrimination in the death penalty. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear cases from Oklahoma that challenged the systemic racial bias in the imposition of the death penalty, as well as from California, where the state supreme court had upheld the outrageous claim that a prosecutor’s decision to exclude jurors who did not oppose the OJ Simpson verdict was unrelated to race.

But the North Carolina Supreme Court granted review in six cases where the petitioners were yanked from death row, to life without parole, and back again — without due process or new trials — after they had proved racism infected their cases and the state legislature repealed its anti-discrimination law. And the U.S. Supreme Court issued a powerful decision in Flowers v. Mississippi, reaffirming its commitment to overturning cases in which prosecutors secured death sentences by systematically excluding qualified Black jurors from jury service. 

The modern death penalty has churned along for over 40 years since the Supreme Court permitted its reinstatement in Gregg v. Georgia, after finding it unconstitutionally biased and arbitrary in 1972. After more than 40 years, none of the major problems with the death penalty have been addressed. An outgrowth of lynching and slavery, the modern death penalty is still racially biased. Supposed to be reserved for the “worst of the worst” defendants, the death penalty is handed down more often for those with the worst lawyers — not the worst crimes. Geography, money, and race are still the best predictors of who will receive the death penalty. The good news from 2019 is that the country is accelerating in its efforts to finally break with the inhumane and unjust punishment.      

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Friday, December 13, 2019 - 11:00am

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WATCH THE CONFERENCE RECORDING
 

Prepare for critical civil rights and civil liberties battles in the upcoming November election and 2021 Legislative session with ACLU supporters across Oregon virtually at our Justice For All Membership Conference on September 12.

Learn about the fight ahead from ACLU staffers including ACLU National Chief Equity and Inclusion Officer, Amber Hikes. And then hear from our keynote speaker, educator, writer, public scholar and spoken word artist, Walidah Imarisha. Imarisha will ground us in Oregon’s Black History by examining institutional white supremacy and centering the resistance of Black communities and other communities of color as active changemakers. The keynote will highlight how history, politics, and culture have shaped—and will continue to shape—the landscape not only for Black Oregonians, but all Oregonians.

Registration is required. To make this event inclusive and accessible, there are four pricing options including free admission.
ASL interpretation and captioning will be available.
Questions? Contact Christina Nguyen at cnguyen@aclu-or.org

COMMUNITY AGREEMENTS
We agree to create a space which values and respects differences of race, ethnicity, immigration status, age, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, ability, and socio-economic circumstance. 

We will respect and contribute to the ACLU’s culture of belonging by fostering an equitable and inclusive experience in all aspects of community work by centering BIPOC (Black Indigenous People of Color) voices and experiences.

This looks like:
Listening to understand--making space for and prioritizing oppressed voices 
Speaking my truth responsibly--taking responsibility for your impact regardless of your intent. And, for white people and other privileged identities, to not put the burden on BIPOC and other oppressed groups to educate you about the harm that your actions/behavior created
Being willing to do things differently and experience discomfort--seeing discomfort and tension as an opportunity for growth, not a barrier to it

Event Date

Saturday, September 12, 2020 - 9:30am to
12:30pm

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9:30 - 9:40am
Conference welcome with ACLU of Oregon Interim Executive Director, Jann Carson
9:40 - 9:50am
Featured Speaker, ACLU National Chief Equity & Inclusion Officer, Amber Hikes
10:00 - 10:30am
Keynote Speaker, Walidah Imarisha
10:40 - 11:30am
Divesting from Police and Reinvesting in Black Communities Panel
11:40 - 12:30pm
Organizing for Immigrants' Rights Panel

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Walidah Imarisha

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Walidah Imarisha is an educator, writer, public scholar and spoken word artist.

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Amber Hikes

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Amber Hikes

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Amber Hikes is a social justice advocate, community organizer, and unapologetic queer black woman, and is the ACLU’s first Chief Equity and Inclusion Officer

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Saturday, September 12, 2020 - 12:30pm

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