NEWS & EVENTS
Reception with Human Rights Documentation Initiative (HRD) on Tuesday, September 14, at the Benson Library, UT AustinSubmitted by Virginia Raymond on Tue, 08/31/2010 - 03:01.
Sep 14 2010 - 5:00pm - Sep 14 2010 - 7:00pm
Fall trainings: Thursday evenings, September 23 - November 11; Friday afternoons, September 24 - November 12Submitted by Virginia Raymond on Tue, 08/31/2010 - 02:55.
Aug 23 2010 - 6:00pm - Nov 12 2010 - 4:30pm
Yard sale on Saturday, October 2 in Austin -- Help us buy a digital camcorder!Submitted by Virginia Raymond on Sat, 07/17/2010 - 23:13.
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Selection from interview with Jamaal Beazley
Submitted by lavagirl on Fri, 07/03/2009 - 18:12.
Sometimes it takes a couple of minutes for the video to load. Please be patient, but also feel free to let us know about any problems you have so that we can work the glitches out. Jamaal Beazley is the brother of Napoleon Beazley, who was executed by the State of Texas on May 28, 2002. At the time of this interview, not quite six years later, Jamaal was living in Huntsville, finishing his senior year at Sam Houston State University and working at Walmart. Jamaal wanted to be interviewed by the Texas After Violence Project in front of The Walls, where Napoleon was executed, but the weather made it impossible to film outside. Thanks to Linda Dodson, Richard Lane, and Terrie Newman at the Huntsville Public Library for allowing us to conduct our interview there. (We arrived without notice, sopping wet and carrying a camera and tripod, asking for sanctuary -- and they graciously helped us without batting an eye.) In this interview, Jamaal describes his memories of Napoleon in high school and their community in Grapeland. He continues with memories of visiting Napoleon on death row, and concludes with an account of the execution. Napoleon Beazley was 17 years old on April 19, 1994, when he fatally shot Mr. John Luttig in Tyler, Smith County, Texas. The death sentence and execution of Napoleon Beazley sparked international protest because many nations, and states within the U.S. had banned the death penalty for people who were juveniles at the time of their crimes. Within three years of the execution of Napoleon Beazley, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled by a 5-4 vote in Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551 (2005) banned the practice. Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority that executing minors violates the U.S. Constitution's Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, "evolving standards of decency," and an "overwhelming" international consensus. Click to see the full transcript of Mr. Jamaal Beazley's interview. Please cite the source if you quote from this interview. For more information about the legal aspects of the case, see the Napoleon Beazley page of the American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section, Juvenile Justice Committee or the International Justice Project Brief Bank. The Two Lives of Napoleon Beazley, a play by John Fleming, ran at the Austin Playhouse on South Congress in Austin, Texas in 2005, and by the Incumbo Theater Company at the Flamboyan Theater of the Clemente Soto Velez Cultural Center in New York, N.Y. in 2008. Barry Pineo reviewed the Austin production in the Austin Chronicle on July 15, 2005. See also: Selection from interview with Ireland Gene Beazley, Father of Napoleon Beazley Information about the interview: Narrator: Jamaal Beazley Copyright Jamaal Beazley and the Texas After Violence Project 2009. Permission for educational, non-commercial use granted provided the user fully attributes the source of the material and this website: ASA format: MLA format: * This date is the date the video was posted online. This date will not change. The asterisk in the model citation is for instruction only; do not include it in your citation. |