RESTORATION OF THE
ANTI-DEATH PENALTY PROJECT

Matt Whalen, Project
Director
The American Civil
Liberties Union of Oklahoma is proud to announce the revitalization
of the ACLU of Oklahoma Anti-Death Penalty Project. This project has
been dormant for the past decade and members of this affiliate are
very excited to be back on the front lines fighting for an end to
this unconstitutional practice. The purpose of the Project is to
provide the people of Oklahoma with a resource dedicated to the
abolition of the death penalty through continuing public education,
lobbying efforts and litigation. The Project will assume a proactive
posture in the struggle to abolish the death penalty in our state,
and will accomplish this goal through educational presentations,
publications and public demonstrations designed to inform
individuals, civic leaders and government officials. It consists of
five sections that will carry out the objectives of the Project, and
is currently being supervised by Project Director Matt Whalen and
Legislative Coordinator Tammy Thomas. Each of the five sections
will, in turn, be headed by a section chairperson. I will be
responsible for coordinating the efforts of the different sections
and setting an agenda which will forward the stated purpose of the
project, subject, of course, to approval from the ACLU of Oklahoma
Executive Director and a five member advisory committee that is
currently being established.
The Project members would like to take this opportunity to thank all
of the people who came out to the Governor’s Mansion on July 17, for
the vigil of Terry Lyn Short. Short was pronounced dead at 6:08 PM
that day and was the 170th person executed by the state of Oklahoma.
As anti-death penalty activists stood in the rain for over an hour,
I realized how passionate many Oklahomans are in their disapproval
of state sanctioned homicide. The Project worked with The National
ACLU Capital Punishment Project to compose a letter to Governor Brad
Henry exhibiting our staunch disapproval of the Short execution. The
letter may not have achieved its intended purpose by stopping the
execution, but the individuals in this project have made a
commitment to not stand idly by. We will continue to do everything
we can to abolish this unconstitutional practice. Ideas on how we
can accomplish this task would be quite beneficial and are welcomed.
Please send correspondence to Anti-Death Penalty Project Director
Matt Whalen by e-mail at mattwhalen1@gmail.com or phone at (405)
524-8511.

Above: Members of the ACLU-OK and the Oklahoma
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty hold vigil outside the
Governor’s Mansion July 17 for Terry Lyn Short.