Voices for Death Row Inmates Banner of Hope

Voices for Death Row inmates got together with London artist Carrie Riechadrt and came up with the idea of a Hankies for Hope banner ... this banner is made from cotton hankies .. hankies being something we wipe tears of sadness away with. During the time the death penalty was in practice in the United Kingdom, the judge when passing a death sentence would place a black hankie on his head as he did so .
Each hankie represents a soul , a soul awaiting their fate or already executed . The name, prison ID number and State is written on the hankie. There are also birds flying free. Bird cages ,hearts , angels , candl
es , leaves and flowers painted onto the banner, again all symbolic.
They have been stitched together with orange ribbons between each one , orange being the colour of oppression and the colour of the jumpsuit a death row inmate wears when being moved from one place to another ... so this banner is very symbolic in everyway
This banner has grown over the last few months …but we want people to add the names of their loved ones and pen pals to the Banner of Hope.

If you would like to add a name of an inmate who has been executed or is on death row please contact us via our facebook page or via our website
Below see our Banner of Hope SO FAR!! More names will be added soon


The Banner of Hope So far

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Saturday 22 September 2012

Everybody Hurts "Voices for Death Row"


Robert Wayne Harris RIP

"I'm going home. I'm going home," ... "Don't worry about me. I'll be alright. God bless, and the Texas Rangers, Texas Rangers."


'I'm going home and God bless the Texas Rangers': Killer executed for slaying five people at a car wash after he was fired
Robert Wayne Harris received lethal injection less than two hours after U.S. Supreme Court refused appeals
12 years ago he shot five people at car wash in Irving
Also confessed to abducting and killing a woman
Lawyers claimed he was mentally impaired and 'died without having a fair trial'
'Guilt was crystal clear' - Lead prosecutor

Donald "Duke" Palmer RIP



On 21st September 2012,  I lost a lovely friend. Donald Duke Palmer. To the media and many he was a double murderer. To me and many others we knew there was so much more to him that something he did when he was under the influence of cocaine and alcohol 23 years ago at the age of 20. I will write more about this soon when I can get my thoughts straight. I am happy Duke is at peace now. I am sad for his family, his f
riends and myself. The world is not a better place without Duke. His execution makes no difference to the world really. So why did they bother? The answer can only be revenge. Not justice. He had already served a life sentence as it was. So he was no risk to anyone.

Dukes Goals where: Enjoy life, no matter the circumstances, and die a better man.

You know what? I think he achieved that and so much more.

Sleep with the angels my friend. You are now with God

Karen x





May 8th, 2006  Monday, 


Seventeen years ago, today, my reactions destroyed four families; The Sponhaltz family, the Vargo/Stone family, the Hill/Nogy family, and my own family.

No one really knows how sorry I really am.

I was extremely sorry even before I was arrested.

As I watched my kids grow up without a father, I got to see some of the stuff Mr. Sponhaltz's and Mr. Vargo's children must have gone through. I thought of Mr. Sponholtz's children every year in May, because he was returning chairs borrowed for his child's birthday on May 8th, 1989.

I am so, so really sorry. 


That child grew-up with birthdays reminding him of his father's death. That child's mother trying to be strong for the child every May. Mr. Vargo's son was waiting to be taken to baseball practice.


I've always wanted to say "I'm sorry" to their families. Knowing it'll never be enough, but wishing to say it anyway. I never wanted to cause them MORE pain by writing to them.


I see my kids struggling to make their way through life without me. I can only hope Mr. Sponhaltz's and Mr. Vargo's children will find their way without THEIR fathers.


I would trade my life to undo the past. I'll end up giving my life for revenge. But, maybe my execution is necessary in order for the Sponhaltz and Vargo/Stone families to understand that hating me isn't the answer, nor the way to find peace. Maybe they'll figure that out once there's no one to hate anymore.


I never set out to kill Mr. Sponhaltz and Mr. Vargo. I never meant to kill anyone. But, I can't undo May 8th, 1989. I can only believe I am forgiven by God and go forward in my life. This is the 17th year I've felt all of this, and have thought of, and prayed for, both families. May God continue to bless them, and send His peace and comfort to each and everyone of them.


"Duke" 


http://ohiodeathrowinmate.blogspot.co.uk 

Goals: Enjoy life, no matter the circumstances, and die a better man. 



Sunday 9 September 2012

Voices Bracelets for Sale

One of our supporters has donated these bracelets she has had made for us to sell at a small cost of £3.50 including postage. The price may slightly be higher if the postage is overseas. 

This money is to help us with the next protest. This project will be an ongoing one if people are interested in buying them. 

The bracelets say Voices and some say Abolition. Please send a PM via our facebook page if you wish to buy one and state which one you would like.

Thank you

Karen Torley
for The Admin Team






Injustice in Alliance, Ohio - The Wrongful Conviction of David Thorne and Joe Wilkes


Charles Dean Hood: The Long Goodbye


Saturday 8 September 2012

Clive Stafford Smith



Clive Stafford Smith on "The worst 15 minutes of your life"


Stop the execution spree in Gambia



 'By the middle of next month all the death sentences would have been carried out to the letter.' – President Jammeh, speaking on 19 August 2012
'These past few days have been something like a nightmare. We don't know what’s happening – who is dead and who is alive. And we don’t know who will be next.' - wife of a death row prisoner in Gambia
On Thursday 23 August eight men and one woman on death row in Gambia were dragged from their cells without warning and shot by firing squad. They died without being able to say good bye to their families, and they were not warned that they were going to be killed. Stop the executions
They were the first people to be executed in the country for 27 years. Their deaths confirm that President Yahya Jammeh was not bluffing when he threatened to kill all death row inmates by the middle of September. Now, at least 38 others are at serious risk of meeting the same end.

In Gambia this cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment is being used on those convicted of political charges. Many inmates claim to have had confessions tortured out of them and we are concerned that those being executed didn’t receive fair trials in the first place. Read more background information
We have no time to waste – send the email below to the Gambian authorities now and tell them to stop Jammeh’s sickening plan immediately.


Ted Bundy Interviews




Warden Talks About Executions







What Happens on Execution Day? A Death Penalty Documentary


Everybody - Universal Declaration of Human Rights


Cleve Foster Innocent on Texas Death Row


On this site you will be able to view my side of a crime that I was convicted of, wrongfully, I might add, and sentenced to death by lethal injection.
I want you, "the people", to look at what I will have posted here for me, and see for yourself the kind of justice I received from the state of Texas. Please bare in mind, that during the trial, the jury was never informed about Sheldon Ward's confession...written & audio taped while in police custody, and I was never given the opportunity to take the stand in my own defense.
I'm 48 years old, and I'm very forward. I've no intention of wasting your time. So when you see what I have to say, and if you agree with me, please let other people know of me and my case.
I'M INNOCENT and on Death Row, and I need your help. A "21 YEAR VET".
Sincerely,
Cleve W. Foster III
A.K.A. "Sarge" or "Duke"

Jeremy Irons talks about the death penalty


This needs to happen!!!!

There should be a simple law: if police or prosecutor withold exculpatory evidence and the defendant is convicted, this defendant is wrongfully imprisoned, so, charge them with wrongful imprisonment, and prosecute it to the fullest extent.

Michael Keenan freed, murder charge from 24 years ago dismissed by Cuyahoga County judge (photo gallery)


Murder charge against Michael Keenan dismissed
EnlargeMichael Keenan, still in handcuffs, confers with one of his attorneys during his hearing before Judge John J. Russo at the Cuyahoga County Justice Center today. A murder charge against him was dismissed.Murder charge against Michael Keenan dismissed gallery (5 photos)


CLEVELAND, Ohio --  A Cuyahoga County judge this morning dismissed a 24-year-old murder charge against Michael Keenan, who had spent about two decades on death row with co-defendant Joe D'Ambrosio.
The decision was a dramatic change of events from Wednesday, when it appeared that Keenan was prepared to plead to involuntary manslaughter charges in order to be released from prison right away.

Judge John Russo set bond at $5,000 today, essentially allowing Keenan to be freed immediately.

Keenan was prepared to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter Wednesday for the 1988 slaying of Tony Klann if he could walk out of the Justice Center a free man.
But the proposed plea deal with county prosecutors hit a snag when Keenan balked at the prospect of spending five years under supervised release with regular visits to a parole officer.
So prosecutors and defense lawyers resumed their negotiations.
Keenan, 62, was twice convicted of killing Klann in 1988 in Cleveland's Rockefeller Park. D'Ambrosio, who also was convicted of killing Klann, was freed in 2009 after a federal judge determined that evidence that could have exonerated him had been withheld from his trial attorneys.

Another federal judge ruled in April that Keenan had to be tried again or have his verdict set aside.
Both Keenan and D'Ambrosio spent many years on death row, always professing their innocence. 

A Catholic priest who befriended D'Ambrosio in prison and was convinced of his innocence worked with lawyers to uncover evidence favorable to both defendants that had been withheld by county prosecutors at trial.
That evidence included police statements that concluded Klann could not have been killed at Doan Brook, as the prosecutors' only eyewitness to the killing claimed.
Eddie Espinoza, who pleaded guilty to manslaughter in connection with Klann's death and was given a reduced sentence, claimed that Keenan slit Klann's throat and D'Ambrosio stabbed him in the chest.
The withheld evidence also included information that the man who led police to Keenan, D'Ambrosio and Espinoza, had a possible motive for killing Klann.
Keenan's new trial was scheduled to begin Oct. 31, but he's now a free man.

Man who spent 24 years on death row now free after judge clears him of 1988 murder of teenage boy


Man who spent 24 years on death row now free after judge clears him of 1988 murder of teenage boy


  • Michael Keenan and Joe D'Ambrosio were both convicted of 1988 murder of Tony Klann
  • D'Ambrosio was freed in 2010 after judge cited that evidence that could have exonerated him was withheld 
   Judge who freed Keenan cited same reason


He spent 24 years on death row, but has been named a free man once more.
Michael Keenan, who was convicted in 1988 for the stabbing death of 19-year-old Tony Klann in a Cleveland Park, had the murder charge against him dismissed by a judge.
The dramatic turn in events began yesterday, when the clean-shaven 62-year-old was ready to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter charges in a bid to get out of jail.

Free at last: Michael Keenan, 62, is again free after a judge dismissed a 24-year-old murder charge against him
Cuyahoga County judge John Russo dismissed the aggravated murder count against 62-year-old Michael Keenan after determining evidence that could have exonerated him was withheld from his trial attorneys.
He set Keenan’s bond at $5,000, a low sum that the Cleveland Plain Dealer notes will allow him to leave prison very soon.

Keenan’s co-defendant Joe D’Ambrosio was freed in 2010 by a judge citing the same reason. 
A federal judge ruled in 2006 that prosecutors in D’Ambrisio’s murder trial withheld vital bits of information that could have exonerated him.
Keenan was convicted twice of killing Tony Klann in a Cleveland park and then dumping his body in Doan Creek. 
Keenan's attorney says a priest who befriended the co-defendant helped uncover evidence favourable to both men.
Released: Joe D'Ambrosio was on death row until a judge exonerated him in 2010
Released: Joe D'Ambrosio was on death row until a judge exonerated him in 2010
A federal judge in April had ruled that Keenan must be retried or the verdict set side.
Throughout the two decades he spent on death row, he and D’Ambrosio maintained their innocence. 
A man named Eddie Espinoza pleaded guilty to manslaughter in connection to the teenager’s death for a reduced sentence.
He was sent to prison in 2001, and died eight years later. 
He testified against them, saying that Keenan slit Klann’s throat while D’Ambrosio stabbed him.
The Plain Dealer notes that Keenan will again have to appear in court in October, but this time as a free man.

Pennsylvania Death Row Inmate Seeks Clemency



                                    Pennsylvania Death Row Inmate Seeks Clemency


AP via Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
Terrance Williams
A convicted murderer slated to be put to death in Pennsylvania next month has petitioned a state board for clemency, saying that he was  physically and mentally abused as a child by the men he killed.
If Pennsylvania officials reject his appeal, filed Thursday, Terrance “Terry” Williams, would be the first person to be executed in the commonwealth since the death penalty was reinstituted in the 1970s, aside from three prisoners who voluntarily accepted the death penalty, his advocates say.
Mr. Williams’ case is coming to a head at a time when the death penalty and processes used to conduct lethal injections are under fire in several U.S. states. California voters in November will decide the fate of the state’s death penalty law, and several states have had trouble obtaining the drugs in executions.
According to Mr. Williams’ petition, the jury in his case was never told at trial that he had been sexually abused by the two men he later killed.
Mr. Williams’ bid for clemency has the support of Mamie Norwood, the widow of a man he killed in 1984, according to an article in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Ms. Norwood wrote she has forgiven Mr. Williams and that his execution would go against her faith, the article said.
Some 22 former prosecutors and judges, 34 law professors, 40 mental health professionals and a number of faith leaders have also backed his clemency efforts, according to his legal team.
Separately, another issue in his petition is whether jurors were unaware that another of their choices, a life sentence, would have meant life in prison without the possibility of parole.