On World Death Penalty Day, An Activist Reflects

October 10, 2013

Andrea Hall was among the activists looking on when Gov. Martin O’ Malley signed Maryland’s death penalty abolition bill this May (Photo Credit: Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images).
Andrea Hall was among the activists looking on when Gov. Martin O’ Malley signed Maryland’s death penalty abolition bill this March (Photo Credit: Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images).

By Andrea Hall, Regional Death Penalty Abolition Coordinator, Mid-Atlantic Region

I was late to the party, but I won’t be leaving early. I joined Amnesty’s death penalty abolition team in May 2011, just as the Maryland repeal campaign was kicking into high gear. I stood on the shoulders of giants, helping finish the decades-long work of those who came before me.

I joined the movement because I felt strongly that the death penalty is dead wrong. I grew up in Texas, where for many, executions are as revered as football, a cause for celebration. That lack of respect for the dignity of the human person has stayed with me.

However, the more I learn about capital punishment, the more passionate I become. I now know that while abolishing the death penalty is our goal, it’s really the first step in reforming a criminal justice system that is arbitrary, racially skewed, costly, and fails to meet the needs of victims.

When we achieved victory in Maryland this year, I knew that my work was far from finished. As I navigate new challenges in the mid-Atlantic states, I am mindful that we still have a long way to go, but we can replicate our success, and we will.