NC NAACP Letter to Attorney General Cooper and other State Leaders Regarding Recently Revealed Evidence of Unconstitutional Bias in Jury and SBI Procedures
Dear Attorney General Cooper and State Leaders:
Since our founding in 1909, the NAACP has been concerned about inequalities and abuses by the United States and the individual states' prosecutorial and law enforcement agencies.Agencies in North Carolina have not been exempt and have engaged in many of these abuses. Racially discriminatory hiring and voting practices created virtually all-white prosecutorial, law enforcement and judicial agencies as late as the 1970's in North Carolina. ...
Statement by Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, at the
Signing of the Racial Justice Act by Governor Perdue
We, the NAACP, stand here today to commend the sponsors of the Racial Justice Act (State) Rep. Larry Womble, (State) Rep. Earlene Parmon and (State) Senator Floyd McKissick and their stalwart commitment to the Racial Justice Act even when sometimes they were told to pull the bill or weaken it. We stand shoulder-to-shoulder to commend every advocate group and religious body who worked for years to see this law passed. We stand as the oldest largest civil rights organization in the state and country to commend Governor Perdue today for signing this act into law.
Today on August 11th, Alex Haley, the author of Roots was born. One of his famous quotes was “either we deal with reality or reality will deal with us.” This Racial Justice Act is not about trying to let criminals go as some have absurdly suggested. It does not open up old wounds for victims because both proponents and opponents support the Racial Justice Act as well as families who have been victims of horrendous murders. Anyone who uses this language to speak against the bill is wrongfully maligning a good piece of legislation which looks squarely at the reality and the empirical data which shows how race impacts the application of the death penalty.
'We' Is the most important word in the social justice vocabulary. The issue is not what we can't do, but what we CAN do when we stand together. With an upsurge in racism/hate crimes, criminalization of young black males, insensitivity to the poor, educational genocide, and the moral/economic cost of a war, we must STAND together now like never before.'
Amina Turner North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP
114 W. Parrish Street, Second Floor
Durham, NC 27701
919-682-4700 | 866-626-2227 |
Fax: 919-682-4711
Email: execdirnaacpnc@gmail.com
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