VADP Annual Report, Insert, Final, 2019, 2020 February 3

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Challenge and Opportunity During 2019

Dear VADP Supporters,

This past year was a challenging one for VADP,
and set the stage for a 2020 rich with the prospect
of great progress toward death penalty abolition.

In January we had a legislative
breakthrough in the Virginia

General Assembly. The state >
Senate, in a 23-17 bipartisan

vote, approved a bill to exempt

people with severe mental ill-

ness from capital punishment. |

It was the first time that either

chamber of the legislature had

voted to limit the death penalty. Since 1991, when
we were founded, VADP has had to fight efforts
to expand the scope of capital punishment.

Even though this bill was defeated in the House

of Delegates, it was a watershed moment. Death
penalty reform, and even abolition, now seemed
within reach and no longer a far-off dream.

In February VADP joined with three evangelical
faith communities to bring Shane Claiborne to
Charlottesville. Shane is an evangelical leader,
popular author, and death penalty abolitionist.

Shane gave a powerful, faith-based argument for
ending capital punishment to an enthusiastic
audience of about 75 people. It was the first time
that, to my knowledge, VADP had ever had an
educational event in an evangelical church.

In March VADP hosted an awards luncheon in
Northern Virginia, delayed from its scheduled
October 2018 date due to circumstances beyond
our control. We were privileged to have social
activist and actor Mike Farrell give a powerful
keynote address and honor former Virginia death
row inmate Joe Giarratano. VADP presented Joe
with our Lifetime Achievement Award for his
tireless legal advocacy on behalf of other inmates
during 38 years of incarceration.

In October VADP held its 2019 awards luncheon.
We were fortunate to have Rennie Cushing, a New
Hampshire state legislator and a murder victim
family member, present our keynote address. He
shared the story of that state’s abolition campaign.

The November election for 100 members of the
House of Delegates and 40 Senators produced a
political earthquake, shifting party control in
both chambers. In 2020 there will a dramatically
different state legislature, far friendlier to the
death penalty abolition cause.

Despite this progress, VADP faces a financial
challenge. We still feel the serious impact of the
loss of a $40,000 grant (25% of our 2018 budget).
Thanks to increased contributions from supporters
like you, VADP had enough funds to get through
2019 without staff reductions.

However, we must raise $35,000 in new funds
during 2020 to replace two grants from religious
organizations for which we are no longer eligible.
With your continued and increased support, Vir-
ginia will become the first Southern state to abol-
ish the death penalty!

— Michael Stone, VADP Executive Director

Keynote speaker Rennie Cushing discusses how
New Hampshire abolished the death penalty,
at the VADP October 2019 awards luncheon.

<j VADP 2019 Annual Report

Progress Made Across Virginia

Dear VADP Supporters, As a result I received speaking engagements with
VADP’s strategy for repealing the death penalty political action and criminal justice reform groups.
depends on educating influential members of the I spoke to many Northern Virginia Democrats as
community. These people then carry our message Wel as Libertarians.

to their legislators who will vote on abolition. In Tidewater, I spoke to local Democrats and civic
groups, but made more significant
inroads with faith communities.

I was the keynote speaker at the
Prison Ministry Summit of the
Catholic Diocese of Richmond.

For almost three years, my work had been largely _—
focused on more rural parts of the state. In 2019 al
we made the strategic decision to shift the focus
of my work to Northern Virginia and Tidewater.

I continue to see a positive shift in opinion. More
people sense that the death penalty is an outmoded
relic of a previous century and it is time to end it.

Lalso spoke and led breakouts at
regional summits in Richmond,
Waynesboro and Norfolk. One
talk sparked a letter-writing
campaign by Holy Family Parish in Virginia
Beach to their legislators advocating repeal.

During 2019 I spoke to 27 groups across Virginia, [1
ranging from three to 75 attendees. I made great
progress in Northern Virginia where I spoke to

large meetings as well as small grassroots groups. . .
Ihave given presentations to several social

ministry groups in Tidewater Catholic parishes,
with more scheduled in 2020.

Many of these groups are now contacting their
legislators and spreading the word. Fairfax and
Loudoun County Democrats especially are
actively assisting with educating about repeal. — Dale Brumfield, VADP Field Director

Why Board Members Support VADP

Jayne Barnard, Williamsburg Todd Peppers, Salem

I was shocked to learn that Virginia holds the My research has shown me that the death penalty
“silver medal” for the most people executed since is wrong. It doesn’t deter. It costs too much. It’s
1976. The death penalty is disturbing when we applied in a discriminatory way against minorities
recognize the repeated failures of and the poor. It can lead to the conviction of the
our criminal justice system. innocent.

And for what? A punishment that ae It hurts prison staff, the execution

is not a deterrent; a costly process — team, and the families of both the

that re-victimizes families of those victims and the defendants.

murdered; and an institution that Plus it’s immoral. To paraphrase

dehumanizes both defendants and Sister Helen Prejean, it’s moral

those who must work with them every day. lunacy to argue that we should kill

Virginia can do better. Virginia can be better. to show that killing is wrong.

I am proud to be part of an organization that seeks _ am proud to be a member of Virginians for
an end to the death penalty and deploys the talents Alternatives to the Death Penalty and to join the
of its members to achieve that goal. fight against state-sanctioned killing.

4 VADP 2019 Annual Report


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