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Why a Moratorium?
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The Death Penalty System in Texas*

Number of Executions - Texas leads the nation by far in number of executions. Since the U.S Supreme Court ruling in 1976 that allowed executions to resume after a four-year period during which they were considered unconstitutional, there have been 1164 executions in the United States. Texas has performed 438 of those executions, which amounts to about 37.6 percent of the national total. According to the 2000 census, Texas has only 7.4 percent of the nation's entire population.

Innocence - 133 innocent people have walked off Death Row in the modern era after spending up to 33 years condemned to death. Nine Death Row inmates in Texas have been fully exonerated of the crimes that sent them to death row. An innocent man named Ernest Willis walked off death row and into freedom in Texas on October 6, 2004. There are several people currently on Death Row in Texas with credible claims of innocence. There have also been reports in major media that three people executed in Texas were probably innocent, Ruben Cantu, Todd Willingham and Carlos DeLuna.

Executions are primarily a Southern tradition - The former slave-holding states, plus Oklahoma, have performed 80 percent of all executions since 1977. Texas and Virginia alone account for 45 percent of all executions. Since 1997, Texas, Virgina and Oklahoma have alone accounted for 61 percent of all executions in the United States.

Racism - 69.7 percent of all people on Texas's Death Row are non-white. Out of all the executions in Texas since 1982, no white person has ever been executed solely for the murder of an African-American. On Sept 10, 2003 Texas executed a white man for the murder of his white wife and a black female convenience store clerk. Of course, African-Americans are often sentenced to die in Texas for killing white people. For example, Napoleon Beazley, an African-American juvenile, was sentenced to death by an all-white jury for killing a white man. The last seven juvenile offenders executed in Texas were all African-Americans who committed their offenses at the age of 17.

Juveniles - There were 22 executions of juvenile offenders in the U.S. between 1985 and the last such execution in 2003. Texas executed 13 of those juveniles or about 59 percent. The United States was virtually the only place on Earth that had not abandoned the practice of executing juvenile offenders before the United States Supreme Court banned executions of juvenile offenders on March 1, 2005. Texas had scheduled five executions of juvenile offenders in 2004, before they were put on hold pending the U.S. Supreme Court decision. The Supreme Court ruling affected 29 juvenile offenders who were on death row in Texas on March 1, 2005. Their sentences were changed to life in prison. Since Texas did not have the option of life without parole at the time those juveniles were convicted, they could not be sentenced to life without parole.

Mental retardation - The governor of Texas vetoed a bill in 2001 that would have banned the execution of people with mental retardation. On June 20, 2002 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that executing people with mental retardation violates the U.S. Constitution's 8th Amendment prohibition against "cruel and unusual punishment", so now such executions are banned in every state. Despite the Supreme Court ban, Johnny Penry, who suffers from mental retardation, was sentenced to death again in Texas on July 3, 2002, but in 2008 the state agreed to a plea bargain for him to serve life without parole. In 2006, the U.S. Supreme Court had refused to reinstate Penry's death sentence. Texas has executed six people with mental retardation since 1982.

Life Without Parole - 35 of the 36 states that have the death penalty allow juries to sentence offenders to Life Without Parole instead of death. On June 17, 2005 Texas Governor Rick Perry signed a law giving Texas juries the option of sentencing capital defendants to Life Without Parole. New Mexico is now the only death penalty state that does not have a life without parole option. Alaska is the only other state that does not have life without parole and it does not have the death penalty either.

Cost - In 1992, the Dallas Morning News concluded that a death penalty case costs an average of $2.3 million, about three times the cost of imprisoning someone in a single cell at the highest security level for 40 years.

* The stats on this page regarding numbers of executions are as of May 19, 2009.


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Texas Students Against the Death Penalty

Texas Students Against the Death Penalty is the first state-wide, student-run anti-death penalty organization in Texas. TSADP is an organization of students from high school and college campuses around Texas. Vist TSADP and start a student anti-death penalty group on your campus.


Faces of the Innocent on Death Row
[Innocent on Death Row]

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[Death Row Search]

Execution Counters
[Texas Execution Watch Counter]

[Houston Crime Lab]

Click for newspaper endorsements of a moratorium
[Moratorium Endorsements]

Statewide Execution Vigils

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Huntsville - Corner of 12th Street and Avenue I (in front of the Walls Unit) at 5:00 p.m.

Austin - At the Texas Capitol on the sidewalk on 11th Street facing Congress Avenue from 5:30 to 6:30 PM.

Beaumont - Diocese of Beaumont, Diocesan Pastoral Office, 703 Archie St. @ 4:00 p.m. on the day of an execution.

College Station - 6 to 7 PM on execution days, corner of Texas Avenue and University Drive.

Corpus Christi - at 6 PM in front of Incarnate Word Convent at 2910 Alameda Street

Dallas - 6 pm, SMU Catholic Center, 3057 University Blvd (University Blvd. and Airline Rd)

Houston - To learn location or if a stay has been granted before you come out, call Burnham Terrell, 713/921-0948.

Lewisville - St. Philip the Apostle Catholic Church, 1897 W. Main Street. Peace & Justice Ministry conducts Vigils of Witness Against Capital Punishment at 6:00 pm on the day executions are scheduled in Texas.

McKinney - St. Gabriel the Archangel Catholic Community located at 110 St. Gabriel Way. We gather the last Sunday of the month, following the 11:00 Mass to pray for those men/women scheduled to be executed in the next month and to remember the victims, their families, and all lives touched, including us as a society.

San Antonio (Site 1) - Archdiocese of San Antonio, in the St. Joseph Chapel at the Chancery, 2718 W. Woodlawn Ave. (1 mile east of Bandera Rd.) at 11:30 a.m. on the day of execution. Broadcast on Catholic Television of San Antonio (Time-Warner cable channel 15) at 12:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. on the day of execution.

San Antonio (Site 2) - Main Plaza across from Bexar County Courthouse and San Fernando Cathedral - Noon

Spring - Prayer Vigil at 6 PM on evenings of executions at St Edward Catholic Community, 2601 Spring Stuebner Rd for the murder victim, for family and friends of the murder victim, the prison guards and correctional officers, for the family of the condemn man/woman, for the man/woman to be executed and to an end to the death penalty.


[DPIC]

[Bill Vaught Remembers]

[Death Penalty Art Show]


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Texas Moratorium Network, Austin, Texas Phone: 512-302-6715 Email:admin@texasmoratorium.org