Facts about the
- It would allow a person accused of a capital crime the opportunity of a court review of whether race played a part in the prosecutor’s decision to seek the death penalty.
- The bill would apply retroactively, so inmates currently on death row could make such arguments. If a defendant has already been sentenced to death, he may present evidence, if available, that his death sentence was improperly obtained on the basis of race.
- As in housing and employment discrimination cases, the Racial Justice Act will allow defendants to use statistical proof of racial bias or other evidence to support such a claim. For instance, a defendant could cite statistical racial disparities in how the death penalty is used.
- If a defendant succeeded in establishing his claim that race was a basis for his death sentence, the court could impose a sentence of life without the possibility of parole.
The letter was distributed to clergy by People of Faith Against the Death Penalty, and contains signatures from Baptist, Methodist, Catholic, Episcopal, Jewish, Buddhist, Muslim and other faith communities in
North Carolina has more than 150 inmates on death row, according to the N.C. Department of Correction. In
Supporters of the Racial Justice Act cite a 2001 study by researchers at UNC-Chapel Hill that found that the odds of a defendant receiving the death penalty in
Executions are currently on hold in
The bill’s advocates argue that the bill is just one step in ensuring innocent people are not sent to death. “You can overturn a wrongful conviction, but you can’t unpack a wrong grave,” the Rev. William Barber, president of the




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