Six death row exonerees will speak at the 2011 Anti-Death Penalty Alternative Spring Break, which will be held in Austin, Texas from March 14-18, 2011. The six exonerees spent more than 50 years on death row for crimes they did not commit: Anthony Graves, Clarence Brandley, Shujaa Graham, Ron Keine, Gary Drinkard and Albert Burrell.
Register now. All events are free and open to the public, both students and non-students. The first two days will be held on the campus of The University of Texas at Austin in a room to be announced. The second two days will be held at the Texas Capitol.
On Wednesday, March 16, the six death row exonerees and students participating in the alternative spring break will attend a “Day of Innocence” Lobby Day Against the Death Penalty at the Texas Capitol, including a panel discussion with the six death row exonerees at 3:00 PM in the Texas Capitol (room to be announced). Students will also organize a rally against the death penalty at 5:30 PM on the South Steps on March 16.
The Anti-Death Penalty Alternative Spring Break is a unique opportunity for people interested in human rights and the death penalty to spend so much time learning from and working with so many death row exonerees. Register now so that you can hear their powerful stories of how innocent people can be wrongfully condemned to death. They made it out alive, but other innocent people are still on death row.

Anthony Graves is the most recent death row exoneree in Texas. He was released and exonerated on October 27, 2010 after 18 years in prison, including 14 years on death row in Texas, for a crime that he did not commit. His story was profiled in an article entitled “Innocence Lost” by Pamela Colloff in Texas Monthly a few weeks before his release. Photo of ANthonny receiving $3,000 in donations from Texas Moratorium Network’s Scott Cobb.
Graves was convicted for allegedly taking part in the barbarous murder of six family members in Burleson County in 1992. Killed were Bobbie Joyce Davis, her 16-year-old daughter and four grandchildren, all under the age of 10. In addition to being shot, the victims were stabbed and beaten with a hammer, and the house was set on fire. The only thing that linked Graves to the killings was a statement by co-defendant Robert Earl Carter, who claimed that he set the fire but that Graves had slain the family. In 2000, just minutes before Carter’s execution, he recanted that statement, and said he was totally responsible for the crimes.
In 2006, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that not only had prosecutors withheld evidence in Graves’ case, they also used false testimony. The case was overturned and a new trial ordered. Graves was taken from Death Row to the Burleson County jail to await another day in court. Rather than retry him, however, county prosecutors dismissed his case, and Graves walked out of jail last October a free man.


After spending three years on death row, Shujaa and his co-defendant continued to fight for their innocence. A third trial ended in a hung jury and after a fourth trial, they were found innocent. As Shujaa often says, he won his freedom and affirmed his innocence in spite of the system
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