American Civil Liberties Union

Death Penalty:
The death penalty is the ultimate denial of civil liberties. In the past 35 years, 129 inmates were found to be innocent and released from death row. The ACLU Capital Punishment Project is fighting for the end of the death penalty by supporting moratorium and repeal movements through public education and advocacy. We are engaged in systemic reform of the death penalty process, and case-specific litigation highlighting some of its fundamental flaws.


ACLU Blog of Rights

Freedom Files - Season 2
Ideological Exclusion

ACLU NewsfeedsACLU News Feed
ACLU Blog
ACLU Podcasts
ACLU Applauds Jury Decision to Spare Andrea Yates' Life (3/15/2002)

Statement of Diann Rust-Tierney, Director
ACLU Capital Punishment Project

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

WASHINGTON -- We are relieved that Andrea Yates will not face death for the senseless tragedy that occurred in Texas last summer. Yates is a woman suffering from serious mental illness and her possible execution should never have been an option. It took a Harris County Texas jury less than an hour to reach this conclusion. A nagging question however remains: how long will it take for Texas prosecutors and lawmakers to recognize the need for more restraint in seeking the death penalty? 

The Yates case -- and particularly its sentencing phase -- has been the center of national discussion over the past several days. Opinion makers, citizens and editorial writers from across the country called for life for Yates, recognizing that a further tragedy would have occurred if a mentally disturbed woman were sentenced to death. Further, it is likely that had Yates been tried in another state with more realistic laws regarding the definition of insanity, or a less trigger-happy approach to capital punishment, the question of her life or death would never have entered into the courtroom. 

Now that the immediate crisis is over, it is time for the people in the state of Texas, as well as across the country, to take an even closer look at an increasingly ridiculed Texas judicial system.



Click to show/hide issues list
Your Local ACLUcongressional scorecardmultimediaforumspublicationssupport usstorecontact