We hardly give them a second thought if we notice them at all. But
the family members of people who have been executed are no longer willing
to suffer in silence. Their stories of survival after their parents,
children or siblings were executed should give the public yet another
reason to abolish the death penalty. At the very least, it should spur
debate about whether executions are creating a class of victims who are
being traumatized by state killing machines.
It goes without saying that family members and loved ones of murder
victims deserve sympathy and support. They deserve justice from the
courts, which should hold killers accountable, and if necessary, lock them
away for life.
But the criminal justice system is imperfect; innocent people facing
execution have been freed by post conviction DNA evidence. Some
prosecutors have engaged in unethical tactics to win murder convictions;
many poor defendants have been represented by incompetent lawyers; and
some courts, including the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, are focused on
process whether appeals were filed on time, for example rather than on
justice.
On Thursday, family members of people who were executed gathered in
Austin to launch an initiative called, "No Silence, No Shame." The event
kicked off this weekend's conference of the National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty.
Robert Meeropol, whose parents were executed in 1953 said no one has
studied how children are affected when a parent is executed or whether
society pays a cost for that. Meeropol founded the Rosenberg Fund for
Children to honor his parents, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were
executed in the 1950s for conspiring to pass atomic secrets to the Soviet
Union.
"Nobody ever talks about the children of those who have been executed,"
Meeropol said. "Nobody seems to care about them or know what impact this
will have on them. I have a particular mission to bring to the attention
of the American public that there are an untold number of children who are
victims, and we have no idea what toll executions are taking on their
lives."
If we needed another reason to abolish the death penalty, then
families, particularly children, of executed people have provided a good
one.

From the Austin American-Statesman