RALEIGH, N.C. - At a time when states such as Connecticut and Maryland are abolishing the death penalty, North Carolina lawmakers are considering a bill that would "kick start" capital punishment in the state after seven years without an execution.
The Capital Punishments/Amendments Bill could speed up the process of executions.
North Carolina's new state leadership is going against the national trend, said Tye Hunter, executive director of the Center for Death Penalty Litigation.
"We've had the change in government," he said. "We're sort of going in the opposite direction of the mainstream."
The bill also would remove the Racial Justice Act from state books. The act allows inmates to show that race was a factor in their sentencing or jury selection. Under current law, Death Row inmates would have their sentences converted to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
The removal of the law from state books goes far beyond the impact on inmates, Hunter said, since the Racial Justice Act was passed after several independent studies found that prosecutors discriminated against black jurors.
"African-Americans are still discriminated against and not trusted to be at the levers of power for these kinds of positions," Hunter said.
Senate Bill 306 is expected to go up for a vote next Wednesday. If passed, it will move on to the House for consideration. Supporters of the legislation say it will bring justice to people found guilty of the most serious of crimes.
The text of SB 306 is online at ncleg.net.
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A new statue at the U.S. Capitol honors Arkansas civil rights activist Daisy Gatson Bates.
The eight foot bronze statue is in the National Statuary Hall.
Bates has a newspaper in her arm, is holding a notebook and a pen, and is wearing a National Association for the Advancement of Colored People stick pin.
She and her husband owned and operated the Arkansas Weekly newspaper - that was devoted solely to telling the stories of the Civil Rights Movement.
Current president of the Arkansas NAACP Barry Jefferson said Bates is best known for her work with the Little Rock Nine - the students who integrated Arkansas public schools in 1957.
"When they was desegregating Little Rock Central High school," said Jefferson, "she stood and fought for that and stood with them and walked them in every single day."
After working with the Little Rock Nine Bates continued to fight for Civil Rights and was a speaker at the March on Washington in 1963.
She was president of the Arkansas NAACP from 1952 to 1961.
Each state can place two sculptures in the Statuary Hall. The Bates statue replaces one of a little-known 19th century Arkansas resident.
The decision to honor Bates had bipartisan support. Jefferson said the move is a sign that Arkansas is evolving.
"It's saying that we're trying to move in the right direction, and rewrite the wrongs that have happened for the state of Arkansas for Black people," said Jefferson, "by presenting her statue at the National Capitol to show that - hey, Arkansas is trying to grow, Arkansas is trying to move forward."
The third Monday in February is Daisy Gatson Bates day in Arkansas. She died in 1999 and was posthumously awarded the Medal of Freedom.
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The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas says it is monitoring protests at college campuses, after almost 60 students protesting the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were arrested during a demonstration at the University of Texas in Austin.
State troopers on horses and in riot gear were called in to control the crowd. ACLU Staff Attorney Brian Klosterboer said students planning to participate in peaceful protests should know their rights.
"We encourage everyone to follow the guidance of law enforcement even if they believe that law enforcement might be violating their First Amendment or constitutional rights," said Klosterboer. "It's important that people try to stay safe. Remember, they also have a right to remain silent. You can ask if you are free to leave."
Charges were dropped against the protesters in Austin. Students also held a sit-in at the University of Texas in Dallas and a walkout was held at the University of Texas in Arlington.
Following the arrests of the protesters, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said on the social media platform X that the students belonged in jail, and accused them of hate speech.
Klosterboer said when state officials attack free speech, they undermine the core of democracy.
"Texas public universities were specifically designated by Gov. Abbott as traditional public forums," said Klosterboer. "That's where students and others who are engaging in any kind of speech, whether it's passing out Bibles and religious literature or engaging in protests for human rights. That's where free speech is at its apex."
He added that if someone feels their civil liberties have been violated, they can file a complaint on the ACLU website.
The demonstrations in Texas are part of nationwide protests calling for a ceasefire between the Israeli forces and Hamas.
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The Montana chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union has filed class-action lawsuit challenging a measure barring people from listing a gender on their birth certificate other than the one they were born with.
Montana lawmakers passed Senate Bill 280 in 2021, which requires a court order to change gender on a birth certificate. A state court issued an injunction against the measure but now the state health department has put a total ban on changes to sex designations on birth certificates.
Akilah Deernose, executive director of the ACLU of Montana, called the measure part of a "concerted and unrelenting attack" on the civil rights of people who identify as transgender.
"We've previously sued on the birth certificate issue," Deernose pointed out. "Once again, we're seeing the state implement laws and rules and policies that unfairly target transgender people."
On the other side, some people argued birth certificates contain vital statistics and should be based on the facts at the time of birth. The suit awaits action in state court.
Deernose noted beyond privacy rights, the birth certificate measure has the potential to force a person to declare themselves to be someone other than who they are, based on their declared identity.
"And who they know themselves to be," Deernose observed. "That puts them at risk of discrimination and also forces them to out themselves every time they share those identity documents."
The suit also challenges a motor vehicle department policy forbidding changing sex designations on driver's licenses.
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