enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sister Helen Prejean on Capital Punishment, Justice, and ...

    www.aol.com/news/sister-helen-prejean-capital...

    First of all, the average wait of victims' families from the time a death sentence is given in the United States to execution is 17 years. All these years, that grief is public. The media are at ...

  3. Helen Prejean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Prejean

    Prejean served as the National Chairperson of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty from 1993 to 1995. She helped establish The Moratorium Campaign, seeking an end to executions and conducting education on the death penalty. Prejean also founded the groups SURVIVE to help families of victims of murder and related crimes.

  4. When families of murder victims speak at death penalty ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/families-murder-victims-speak...

    The Trump administration is spending its final months authorizing executions. Ten federal death row prisoners have been killed so far this year, ending a 17-year federal moratorium on applying the ...

  5. Governor Jeff Landry says Louisiana owes it to victims ...

    www.aol.com/governor-jeff-landry-says-louisiana...

    Louisiana has about 60 prisoners on death row. Landry called the death sentences a "contractual obligation to victims." "I and the Legislature are going to fulfill our commitments," he said.

  6. Marie Deans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Deans

    Marie felt that the families of murder victims need a "safe place from which they could speak out" because of tension she perceived among the families, abolitionists, and attorneys." [4] In 1979, Deans founded the Charleston chapter of Amnesty International. In 1982, Deans made her first visit to Virginia's death row.

  7. Death Penalty Focus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Penalty_Focus

    The group opposes the death penalty as "ineffective, racist, and fiscally inefficient." [2] In 1999, the organization said the death penalty is "an ineffective and brutally simplistic response to the serious and complex problem of violent crime.” [3] DPF has partnered with numerous families of victims of violent crime to abolish the death ...

  8. Relief, defiance, anger: Families and advocates react to ...

    www.aol.com/relief-defiance-anger-families...

    COLUMBIA, South Carolina (AP) — Victimsfamilies and others affected by crimes that resulted in federal death row convictions shared a range of emotions on Monday, from relief to anger, after ...

  9. Capital punishment debate in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_debate...

    Anti-death penalty groups specifically argue that the death penalty is unfairly applied to African Americans. African Americans have constituted 34.5 percent of those persons executed since the death penalty's reinstatement in 1976 and 41 percent of death row inmates as of April 2018, [ 84 ] despite representing only 13 percent of the general ...