Brian Roberts
- Board Chair
Brian Roberts personally knows both the reality of murder
and the reality of the death penalty. His son Mark Williams, then 18 years old, was killed
during a drive-by shooting in Washington D.C. on Christmas Night, 2001.
And as a lawyer with more than a decade of experience in
criminal defense and capital litigation, Brian has witnessed one of his clients
executions.
I have basically seen it full circle, he says.
His sons murder only buttressed his opposition to the
death penalty. He strongly believes society needs to focus more on preventing
violence and less on retribution. We need to ask what caused this crime, he
says. The aura of violence that permeates many inner city lives, in particular,
is toxic. Too many young black men already feel that their lives are expendable
and that they wont live past their early 20s, he says.
Brian emphasizes that the death penalty is possible only
when a society de-humanizes a person. He says it is imperative that citizens of
the U.S. and around the world view death row inmates as individual human beings
and not automatic outcasts.
It is also necessary to remember that an execution makes a
society a killer, too. Killing is wrong no matter who kills, he says.
He believes in MVFHR because the only way we can get to
the point in our world of peace, healing and reconciliation is if victims
throughout the world come together and have a dialogue.
Brian recently served as the interim director of the
National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. He has worked as a staff
attorney with the Texas Resource Center, the New York Capital Defender, and the
D.C. Public Defender. He has also been the State Legislative Liaison and Program
Director for the NCADP.
He is currently the coordinator of the Institutional
Services Program for the D.C. Public Defenders office.
Printable Bio