DCODP Monthly Meeting – Monday, October 27, 5:30pm

Join us at our Monthly DCODP Meeting as we plan to repeal Delaware’s death penalty in 2015. Find out what you can do to help end Delaware’s ineffective, costly, and biased death penalty. Monday 10/27/14 at 5:30 pm. LOCATION: Wilmington Friends Meeting House, 1st floor Social Room, 401 N. West St, Wilmington, DE 19801. Park in the parking lot on the 5th Street side or on the street. Ring the doorbell at the West Street entrance. Call 302-379-0488 for info. All are welcome! Invite a friend!

Monthly DCODP Meeting Monday, September 22 at 5:30pm

Join us at our Monthly DCODP Meeting. We will discuss specific actions you can take to help repeal Delaware’s ineffective, costly, and biased death penalty. Monday 9/22/14 at 5:30 pm. LOCATION: Wilmington Friends Meeting House, 1st floor Social Room, 401 N. West St, Wilmington, DE 19801. Park in the parking lot on the 5th Street side or on the street. Ring the doorbell at the West Street entrance. Call 302-379-0488 for info. All are welcome! Invite a friend!

13th Annual Stumpy’s Marathon raises funds for DCODP, Sunday, 9/7/14.

Trail Dawgs is sponsoring the 13th annual Stumpy’s Marathon, a 26.2 mile run for pack supremacy. Join the fun and raise money for a great cause: Delaware Citizens Opposed to the Death Penalty! Sunday, September 7, 2014, 8AM, Newark, DE. To pre-register, go to Stumpy’s Marathon.

Whether you’re a Republican/Libertarian/Conservative or a Democrat/Liberal/Peace-Loving-Granola type you can learn about the death penalty and have fun.

Stumpys 2014 Death Penalty for Conservatives

Stumpys 2014 Death Penalty for Liberals

 

DCODP Monthly Meeting – Monday August 25, 5:30pm

Join us at our Monthly DCODP Meeting as we renew our strategy to prepare for new legislators and a new legislative session. Find out what you can do to help end Delaware’s ineffective, costly, and biased death penalty. Monday 8/25/14 at 5:30 pm. LOCATION: Wilmington Friends Meeting House, 1st floor Social Room, 401 N. West St, Wilmington, DE 19801. Park in the parking lot on the 5th Street side or on the street. Ring the doorbell at the West Street entrance. Call 302-379-0488 for info. All are welcome! Invite a friend!

Volunteer at Summer Festivals to help end Delaware’s death penalty

Summer Festivals

The DE Repeal Team will be tabling at festivals around Delaware this summer.
We are looking for volunteers to help us out! Email alex@derepeal.org if you are able to attend.

African American Festival

Saturday, June 28th
Dover, DE

Nanticoke River Festival

Friday and Saturday, July 11th and 12th
Seaford, DE

Delaware City Day

Saturday, July 19th
Delaware City, DE

People’s Festival 4 Peace Tribute to Bob Marley

Saturday, July 26th
Riverfront, Wilmington, DE

Wyoming Peach Festival

Saturday, August 2nd
Wyoming, DE

Eastern Shore AFRAM Fest

Friday and Saturday, August 8th and 9th,
Seaford, DE

 August Quarterly Festival

Saturday and Sunday, August 30th and 31st
Wilmington, DE

Brandywine Arts Festival

Saturday and Sunday, September 6th and 7th
Wilmington, DE

Newark Community Day

Sunday, September 21st
Newark, DE

DCODP Monthly Meeting Monday June 23, 2014 at 5:30pm

Join us at our Monthly DCODP Meeting as we strategize about next steps in the effort to end Delaware’s ineffective, costly, and biased death penalty. Help us plan for tabling during the Summer Festival season. Monday 6/23/14 at 5:30 pm. LOCATION: Wilmington Friends Meeting House, 1st floor Social Room, 401 N. West St, Wilmington, DE 19801. Park in the parking lot on the 5th Street side or on the street. Ring the doorbell at the West Street entrance. Call 302-379-0488 for info. All are welcome!

DCODP Monthly Meeting Monday 5/26/14 at 5:30pm

Join us as we discuss our next steps after the recent reversal of Jermaine Wright’s conviction and death sentence. We will have our usual monthly DCODP meeting, Monday 5/26/14 at 5:30 pm. Yes, it really is scheduled on Memorial Day. LOCATION: Wilmington Friends Meeting House, 1st floor Social Room, 401 N. West St, Wilmington, DE 19801. Park in the parking lot on the 5th Street side or on the street. Ring the doorbell at the West Street entrance. Call 302-379-0488 for info. All are welcome!

DCODP monthly meeting Monday 4/28/14 at 5:30pm

Senate Bill 19 can still pass this year! Join in the effort at our monthly DCODP meeting, Monday 4/28/14 at 5:30 pm. LOCATION: Wilmington Friends Meeting House, 1st floor Social Room, 401 N. West St, Wilmington, DE 19801. Park in the parking lot on the 5th Street side or on the street. Ring the doorbell at the West Street entrance. Call 302-379-0488 for info. All are welcome!

LOBBY DAY with IMAC on Tuesday, 4/8 in Dover.

Join the Interdenominational Ministers Action Council (IMAC) for a rally and lobby day Tuesday April 8th in Dover.

Rev. Beamen will lead a delegation of IMAC members and others who want to see the death penalty repealed in our state. Please join IMAC and the DE Repeal Project on this important lobby day.

TIME: Tuesday, April 8th — 11:45am to 2pm (stay longer if you are able)

GATHER at Wesley United Methodist Church — 209 South State Street, Dover, DE 19901.

RSVP to Abe Bonowitz at abe@abolition.org or 800-973-6548

PLAN:

  • There will be light snacks and we will receive a brief update on the campaign at Wesley United Methodist Church.
  • We will then march together the short distance from the church to Legislative Hall where we will pray together before entering the building. BE SURE TO BRING A PHOTO ID to get through security.
  • We will visit legislative leaders and then be present together as a group inside Legislative Hall as legislators and others enter the House Chamber.
  • Bring a friend, your photo ID, and wear comfortable shoes. The Delaware Repeal Project will provide materials to hand to our legislators.

Gov. Bill Richardson Press Conference Remarks

Governor Bill Richardson, the former Governor of New Mexico, came to Delaware to advocate for Senate Bill 19, the bill to repeal the death penalty. The following are his remarks from a press conference at Legislative Hall in Dover, DE on March 27, 2014.

GOV. BILL RICHARDSON PRESS CONFERENCE REMARKS
March 27, 2014

I am honored to be here in Dover today, capital of our country’s “First State.”

It’s my first visit to your beautiful Legislative Hall and while it is physically smaller than our “Round House” in Santa Fe, the issue before you—life or death—is as big and as important as it gets.

I am here to support the effort to repeal Delaware’s death penalty, Senate Bill 19.

I’d like to thank the bill’s sponsors for hosting me today:  Sen. Karen Peterson (D) and House prime sponsors, Rep. Darryl Scott (D) and Rep. Joe Miro (R), as well their other 11 House co-sponsors, many of whom are here with us today.

That’s 13 House sponsors, Democrats and Republicans, out of 21 votes needed for House passage.

I commend these sponsors for their work.

As many of you know, just over five years ago I signed into law the repeal of the death penalty in New Mexico.

Throughout my adult life, I had been a firm believer in the death penalty as a just punishment–albeit, only in very rare instances and only for the most heinous crimes.

But during my two terms as Governor of New Mexico, I started to challenge my own thinking on the death penalty.

The issue became more real to me because I knew the day would come when one of two things might happen: I would either have to take action on legislation to repeal the death penalty, or more daunting, I might have to sign someone’s death warrant.

The prospect of either decision was extremely troubling. But I was elected by the people of New Mexico to make just that type of decision.

In the past, I had believed that the death penalty served as a deterrent to some who might consider murdering a law enforcement officer, a corrections officer, or a witness to a crime. But people continued to commit such terrible crimes even in the face of the death penalty.

Let’s be candid here — there are decent, responsible people of good conscience on each side of this vitally important public policy issue. And yes, they disagree strongly.

However, what we cannot disagree upon is the finality of this ultimate punishment. Once a human being is executed, that act cannot be reversed.

Regardless of my personal opinion about the death penalty, I did not at that time nor do I at this time have supreme confidence in the infallibility of our criminal justice system as the final arbiter of who lives and who dies.

If the state—in this case, Delaware—is going to take upon itself this awesome responsibility—life or death—then the system to impose the death penalty must be perfect and can never, ever be wrong.

But the reality is that our system is not perfect—far from it. In fact, the system is inherently defective. DNA testing conclusively has proven that. In some cases, new evidence is brought to bear years after a verdict has been rendered. Witnesses recant their testimony.

The fact is that innocent people have been put on death rows and put to death all across the country.

It also bothers me greatly that minorities are overrepresented in the prison population across our country and on death row.

According to the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund, Delaware has the highest minority population on death row of any state, at 78%.

Furthermore, a study out of Cornell University found that in Delaware, a black defendant who kills a white victim is more than 6 times as likely to receive a death sentence than a black defendant who kills a black victim.

While I was considering whether to sign or veto the death penalty repeal law in New Mexico, I invited people to contact me with their views. I heard compelling arguments from family members who had lost loved ones and from law enforcement officers concerned about their on-the-job safety.

But I also heard equally compelling arguments from members of the clergy as well as from family members who also lost loved ones and from law enforcement officers who urged me to sign the repeal in New Mexico.

I respected everyone’s opinions and took their experiences to heart, as I am certain that all Delaware state legislators are doing right now.

As the Delaware House of Representatives considers Senate Bill 19, I would like to emphasize that repeal of the death penalty would actually keep Delaware families and communities safe.

Senate Bill 19 is a tough bill:  it will result in the state’s worst criminals being sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. They will never get out of prison. They will never threaten our communities again. Those convicted of murder will die in prison.

Since we repealed the death penalty in New Mexico, we have seen no big upswing in murder overall nor has there been a huge upswing in the death of law enforcement officers.

In fact, our murder rate is down significantly, and let me add that not a single legislator who voted to repeal the death penalty in New Mexico lost his or her seat in a re-election bid because of that vote.

More than 144 death row inmates have been exonerated across America since 1973—including four (4) New Mexicans—a fact that none of us can ignore.

I feel deeply about this issue.

Since leaving the governorship of New Mexico, I have become Co-Chairman of the International Commission Against the Death Penalty, traveling the world to make the case against its use.

Many of the countries that continue to support and use the death penalty are also the most repressive nations in the world, including China, North Korea, and Iran. That is not good company for the United States or Delaware.

In a society that values individual life and personal liberty above all else, where justice and not vengeance is the singular guiding principal of our criminal justice system, the potential for wrongful conviction and, God forbid, execution of an innocent person, stands as anathema to our very sensibilities as human beings.

That’s why I am here in Delaware today—to urge members of the State House of Representatives to release Senate Bill 19 from committee and to bring it forward for a full House debate and an up or down vote.

At the very, very least, Delaware deserves a vote on this important piece of legislation. It’s a matter of life or death.