| Arrestee Biographies |
Jan. 17, 07 SCOTUS protest
BIOGRAPHIES
OF ARRESTEES
Beth Brockman, from Durham, NC, is the mother of two children, ages 10 and 5.
She is a member of People of Faith Against the Death Penalty and has been
arrested four times in the last year for trespassing outside of Central Prison
in Raleigh while attempting to stop executions from taking place. She is active in the movement on various
local and international human rights issues – including abolition of the death
penalty, nuclear weapons and torture.
Brian Buckley, 34, lives in Charlottesville, VA and he fancies himself as a handyman.
Ron Kaz is a 53-year-old carpenter from Charleston, SC. He is a lifelong abolitionist and one of the
founding members of Charleston Peace in the 1980s. Ron is also a core member of groups such as
Amnesty International, CAFE, the SC Progressive Network, and the Secular
Humanists of the Lowcountry. Ron was
arrested at the Supreme Court on January 17, 2002 as part of the action to
commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Gilmore execution.
Scott Langley
is a 30-year old community activist who currently resides outside of Raleigh,
NC at the Silk Hope Catholic Worker with his wife and 3 month-old
daughter. Scott is an active member of
People of Faith Against the Death Penalty and Amnesty International. He has been working on a death penalty photo
documentary since 1999 and has had images from the exhibit published
worldwide. Scott is a 24 year native of
Texas, where he started his work as an abolitionist. Scott came to DC in a car that runs on used
vegetable oil from a restaurant.
Rachel Lawler
lives in Montpelier, VT where she is studying Pre-Law at Woodbury
College and is a team member of the C.O.S.A. re-entry program at the Montpelier
Community Justice Center. She is a founding member of Vermonters Against the
Death Penalty. Rachel has been actively
involved against the death penalty in numerous states including Vermont,
Connecticut, Washington DC, Virginia, and North Carolina. She has an undying
love for hot sauce.
Thomas W. Muther, Jr. is a 56 year-old psychiatric RN from Topeka,
KS. A past vice-president of the Kansas Coalition Against the Death
Penalty, he first became active in the abolition movement in 1994, the year
Kansas reinstated capital punishment. In 1997, he was one of the “DC-18”
who was arrested on the steps of the Supreme Court for peacefully demonstrating
against the DP. He has also been active as an opponent of child-abuse --
advocating for legislation that would outlaw corporal punishment -- as well as
other human rights and environmental issues. He is the proud uncle of 9
nieces and nephews and is a movie fanatic.
Jack Payden-Travers is Director of Virginians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. Since the late 1960’s he has been active in the
movement for peace and social justice.
Since leaving his position as a history professor in 2002, Jack has
worked solely on the death penalty, and also now serves on the Board of
Directors of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. Jack and his family presently reside in Lynchburg, VA where he has volunteered with Gateway, a residential
treatment program for men in recovery and with Daily Bread, a local soup
kitchen. He is past chair of the Local Human Rights Committee of Central VA.
Anna Shockley, a 53-year-old mother of two grown
daughters, immigrated to this country in 1973 and lives in South
Carolina's Francis Marion National
Forest with her
husband and several retired farm animals. She works as a research assistant at
South Carolina State University and is a student at the College of
Charleston. She is a member of the Carolina Alliance for Fair Employment
and the webmaster of Charleston Peace. |
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