FEATURED POST

Activists Call on President Biden to End the Federal Death Penalty Before Leaving Office

Image
A conversation with Death Penalty Action Co-founder and Executive Director Abe Bonowitz. Now that Joe Biden is a lame duck president, activists are holding him accountable to make good on his promise to end the federal death penalty during his remaining six months as president. Biden’s election campaign in 2020 had pledged to end the federal death penalty and incentivize the remaining 27 states that still allow executions to do the same. While he made history as the first president in the United States to openly oppose the death penalty, there has been no movement to actually end federal executions during his nearly four years in office.

Alabama’s longest-serving death row inmate dies from pneumonia at 61

Alabama death row inmate Arthur Lee Giles, who served more than 40 years behind bars, has died from pneumonia. He was 61.

At the time of his death on September 30, Giles was the longest-serving inmate on death row. He was never executed after repeatedly appealing his sentence.

Giles was 1 of 2 men convicted in the 1978 murders of Carl and Wilene Nelson in Blount County, Alabama. Giles was 19 at the time and worked for the Nelsons picking fruit and vegetables on their farm. He and his accomplice, Aaron Jones, were convicted of going to the Nelson home to rob them, and then shooting the man and woman with a gun and stabbing them. Giles and Jones also stabbed and shot the Nelsons’ 3 children and Carl Nelson’s mother, all of whom survived. Jones was executed in 2007.

Giles was sent to death row for the 1st time in 1979. An appeals court overturned his case, but he was convicted again in 1982. In 1991, a sentencing hearing landed him back on death row, where he remained for the rest of his life. During that sentencing, 11 jury members chose death and 1 chose life without parole.

An obituary for Giles reads, “He fought his death sentence steadfastly, and remained ever hopeful that he would obtain relief in the courts. At the time of his death, his case was pending before the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta.”

The obituary further stated that Giles had been suffering from brain and lung cancer since 2018. It also alleged that Giles felt remorse for the crimes he committed as a young man.

“Art humbly acknowledged mistakes in his past, which resulted heavily from the extremely adverse and impoverished conditions in which he was raised, and he sought to demonstrate to everyone around him — attorneys, prison guards, and other inmates on death row — that he was a very different man in prison from the teenager he had been before, and that he sought to spread love, hope, perseverance and faith to everyone he encountered,” the obituary read.

According to the Alabama Department of Corrections, there are currently 170 inmates on death row. The department no longer lists Giles in its database.

Source: al.com, Staff, October 14, 2020


🚩 | Report an error, an omission, a typo; suggest a story or a new angle to an existing story; submit a piece, a comment; recommend a resource; contact the webmaster, contact us: deathpenaltynews@gmail.com.


Opposed to Capital Punishment? Help us keep this blog up and running! DONATE!



"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

Most Viewed (Last 7 Days)

Activists Call on President Biden to End the Federal Death Penalty Before Leaving Office

South Carolina executes Freddie Owens

Japan criticized as treating death-row inmates 'inhumanely'

'Better off without it': Washington closes execution chamber at state penitentiary

Alabama opposes defense attorneys’ request to film nitrogen execution

Texas | Broad Coalition Supports Robert Roberson’s Clemency Petition

Florida | 5 things to know about how the Parkland shooter’s life was spared