Killing is
wrong. Killing Black people because they are Black is even more
wrong. Lynching Black people is exponentially wrong. So why was I
opposed to the state-imposed killing of John William King, the
despicable murderer of James Byrd, Jr.? I happen to think that there
are worse things that can happen to you than death. The now 44 year
old King could have gotten a sentence of life in prison and lived
miserably there for the rest of his life. In some ways, death is
salvation for him. Imagine being relatively healthy with nothing to
look forward to? Just sitting there, in jail, surrounded by the
Black people your white supremacists self purports to hate. That
might be torture worse than death.
James Byrd,
Jr. was dragged for almost three miles near Jasper, Texas in 1998.
John William King and two other men (one whose death penalty sentence
was carried out in 2011, another who was sentenced to life in prison)
were found guilty one of the most horrific hate crimes in modern US
history (Black men were also burned alive in the heyday of lynching).
Mr. Byrd’s family was present at the execution in Huntsville,
Texas. Byrd’s sister, Clara Taylor, noted that the murderer,
who maintained his innocence, showed no remorse when he was
convicted, and showed none when he was executed. He never
acknowledged, and never looked at James Byrd, Jr.’s family.
Does a man
whose body sported disgusting tattoos, including, according to one
news source, “one of a black man with a noose around his neck
hanging from a tree” deserve the death penalty? I say no.
Keep that filth alive and keep him miserable. His execution creates
a martyr for white supremacists. Had he lived he would have evolved
into nothing more than pitiful irrelevance. The death penalty has
been abolished in 20 states, with moratoriums on executions in other
states, most recently in California, thanks to Governor Gavin
Newsome. It ought to be abolished nationally.
According to
the Death Penalty Information Center
(https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/documents/FactSheet.pdf) nearly 1500
people had their death sentences carried out between 1976 and now.
Despite the fact that African Americans are just 13 percent of the
nation’s population, we were more than a third of those
executed after receiving a death sentence. People who killed white
people were far more likely to get the death penalty than people who
kill Black people. There are racial biases replete in the
application of the death penalty, with numerous studies supporting
the many ways the death penalty is unfairly awarded. According to
the Death Penalty Information, as an example, Washington state jurors
were “three times as likely to recommend a death sentence for a
Black defendant than a white one”. In Louisiana, someone who
killed a white person was nearly twice as likely to get the death
penalty as one who killed a Black person. The death penalty is
applied through a racial lens – based on the race of the
criminal and the race of the victim.
From that
perspective, the man who murdered James Byrd, Jr. committed a crime
so egregious that jurors acted contrary to the statistics, voting to
apply the death penalty to an avowed racist white man who
participated in the brutal murder of a Black man. But I am
frequently reminded of the 1920 Tulsa, Oklahoma lynching of Ray
Belton, an 18 year old white man who shot a taxi driver. Though
Belton confessed to his crime and said it was “an accident”,
he was denied the due process of a trial and conviction. After his
lynching, a Black newspaper editor opined that if a white person
could be lynched, so could a Black person. A year later, the
attempted lynching of the Black shoeshine “boy” Dick
Rowland because of the false accusation that he assaulted the white
elevator operator Sarah Page was the spark that led economically
envious whites to destroy the Greenwood (Black Wall Street) section
of Tulsa.
This walk down
history lane is extremely relevant to the present. If we could
execute the white murderer of James Byrd, Jr. (I try not to mention
the names of devils more than is necessary), we can execute a Black
person accused of something, whether they did it or not. Applying
the death penalty erodes our humanity, whether the accused is guilty
or not.
I think it is
far more appropriate to let a reprobate like James Byrd Jr.’s
killer simmer in his repugnance. If he had lived his life in prison,
with no hope, no help, no possibilities, that would have been a
greater punishment than death. While I respect the Byrd family and
ache with them at the gruesome murder of James Byrd Jr, I would
prefer a punishment for racist murderers that is both humane and
inhumane. We don’t execute them because we don’t stoop,
as a society, to the level of committing a crime we abhor. We ignore
them and exacerbate their misery be reminding them that they have no
hope of release.
The death
penalty is inhumane. It should be abolished.
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