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ICADP Mission Statement Believing that the death penalty is morally
wrong and is an ineffective, unnecessary and discriminatory response
to the problem of crime, we seek to abolish it by the development
and maintenance of programs that will: educate the public about the
death penalty; provide information and assistance to lawyers in capital
cases and others interested in the issue; monitor legislation affecting
this issue; and provide support for the men and women on death row
as well as their families. Staff Jane Bohman is Executive Director of the Coalition. Her commitment to activism and to ending the death penalty led her to serve on the ICADP Board and then the staff of the Coalition and its Moratorium Project. From August 2000 until her October 2001 appointment as Executive Director, Jane served as Program Director for the Moratorium Project. She implemented the education and organizing work of the organizations, concentrating on initiating and strengthening ties with other grassroots criminal justice reform and anti-death penalty organizations. As Executive Director, Jane has expanded ICADP's research function and statewide reach. Jane has testified before numerous legislative bodies regarding the death penalty and has appeared on CNN, MSNBC, the PBS News Hour and NPR, as well as national and international print outlets. She serves on the Board of Directors of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty and the Justice Coalition of Greater Chicago. 2007-2008 ICADP Board of Directors President: Patrick D. McAnany Vice-president: E. Garnet Fay Secretary: Gwen Farry, BVM Treasurer: Janet Kittlaus General Counsel: Shaena Fazal Richard Conser is a patent attorney, formerly employed as a chemical engineer and economist with Universal Oil Products. He has been active in the governance of the United Church of Christ and drafted its Illinois Conference resolution on the death penalty. Richard was formerly trustee, mayor and village attorney of Golf, IL and was president of United Way of Glenview-Golf. He also served as president of Harper House, serving homeless people in Uptown. Richard's interest in the death penalty was inspired primarily by Jack Nordgaard, Don Benedict, and Mary Powers. Mary Cummins-Enoch sends birthday and Christmas cards to the prisoners on death row, works on finding legal representation for prisoners, and does court watching at post-conviction death penalty hearings at 26th & California and Markham. Gwen Farry, BVM is a member of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary at 8th Day Center for Justice. Her previous ministries have been in Elementary Education, Hospital Chaplaincy and internal ministry with the BVM congregation. Abolishing the death penalty has been a deep concern for several years. Activities have included writing letters, attendance at the 2004 CEDP National Conference and writing to death row inmates. E. Garnet Fay is a member of the Society of Friends (Quakers) and represents the American Friends Service Committee at the Justice Coalition of Greater Chicago. He serves on the board of the Illinois Conference of Churches and serves as a liaison to these groups. Shaena Fazal is Executive Director of the Long-Term Prisoner Policy Project and a Soros Justice Advocacy Fellow. She previously was an Assistant Appellate Defender for the Office of the State Appellate Defender and a Constituent Advocate for Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky. She became involved in death penalty work as an ICADP volunteer in 1999, and was later employed by the ICADP, coordinating death row visits and monitoring conditions on death row. Betty Fields is originally from Ypsilanti, Michigan. After finishing high school, she spent six years in the military and then went to work for General Motors. In 1988 she moved to Normal, IL to help set up the Mitsubishi plant. Her daughter Lorraine Fields was murdered in 2004. It was Betty who discovered her daughter's body in a car in a vacant lot. The prosecutor wanted to give the murderer the death penalty. But Betty insisted from the beginning that she was opposed to that and convinced the State not to seek death. She sends her daughter's murderer cards and has told him that she has forgiven him. Aviva Futorian represented death penalty defendants in post-conviction proceedings and appeals before Governor Ryan commuted all death sentences in Illinois. She helps coordinate the ICADP's death row support and visiting program. She is the ICADP's liaison to the John Howard Association, where she is an officer and board member. She is president of the Long-term Prisoner Policy Project, a "think tank" focusing on problems of long term maximum security prisoners in Illinois; and she is currently working on an oral history and community development project in north Mississippi. Alice Harper-Jones is a life-long resident of Chicago and an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ. She is a member of Trinity UCC and currently serving as the social-justice minister at Kenwood UCC. Alice also serves in various UCC leadership positions at the local and Conference levels. She holds a BA from the University of Illinois, an MA from Chicago State University and a MD from Chicago Theological University. Alice serves in various social advocacy organizations. Terrence K. Hegarty has practiced as a trial lawyer since 1970, specializing in representing plaintiffs in catastrophic personal injury cases. He has been active in the Illinois State Bar Association as treasurer, member of the Board of Governors, and President. He has participated extensively in legal seminars and has written widely in legal periodicals. Sarah Heyer, who resides in Carbondale, has been a member of her local Death Penalty Moratorium Committee. She is also active in the Southern Illinois Prisoner Advocacy Committee, making it easier for family and friends to visit inmates in Tamms (the state's "supermax" prison) by providing visitors with breakfast, local transportation, and information (e.g., transportation and lodging options). Charles Hoffman graduated from the University of Illinois College of Law in 1974. He then joined the Peoples Law Office in Chicago, specializing in civil rights and criminal defense work. Since 1986, he has served as an Assistant Defender in the Supreme Court Unit of the Illinois State Appellate Defender, representing indigent defendants in capital cases. He has been lead attorney in 30 death penalty appeals in the Illinois Supreme Court. He has also taught a seminar on capital punishment at DePaul University Law School. In 2002, he received an "Outstanding Legal Services" award from the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. Margaret Jackson is the Assistant Regional Director for the AFSC-Great Lakes Region. She has worked for AFSC for over 13 years, beginning as a regional accountant. She is currently President of the board for Community Shares of Illinois, a workplace federation for progressive non-profits, and she recently became involved with MAC (Metropolitan Alliance for Churches), an activist arm of the Catholic church in South Suburbs. During her years at AFSC Margaret's knowledge about the injustice in the Criminal has increased significantly. She has always seen the injustice of the Criminal Justice system as it pertains to her community. The information she has learned over the past several years has only opened her eyes further to the injustice. Janet Kittlaus is ICADP's treasurer. She is liaison to the Metropolitan Chicago Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the League of Women Voters of Illinois. Married to Lloyd, she works with him in Lutheran Campus Ministry at Northwestern. They are parents of Mitchell and Jenny. Laura Kunard is a researcher at UIC's Center for Research in Law & Justice and a Ph.D. candidate in UIC's Department of Criminal Justice. She has studied a variety of death penalty issues in her academic work, and her dissertation will focus on capital jurors. She helps coordinate ICADP visits to death row. She also has visited death row inmates through the ICADP since 2000 and regularly shares her experiences with many in the UIC community. Brian Lagrone has been involved with youth initiatives since 1999. He was born and raised on Chicago's Westside. He intends to create a center for youth so that he can foster youth education and empowerment to benefit his home neighborhood. He is interested in criminal justice issues and youth crime prevention. He has a strong stance against the death penalty and is dedicated to abolition. He believes the answer to violent crimes lies in prevention not in reactive violence. Chris Lynch is a lifetime Chicagoan who has been involved in alternative education for almost 18 years. In his work at Jobs For Youth/Chicago, Inc., he has provided GED instruction to some 7,000 economically disadvantaged young people. This work with young people led to an interest in criminal and juvenile justice issues, and cemented his opposition to the death penalty. Chris is currently working to develop special programs for young people with criminal backgrounds, to assist them in overcoming barriers to employment. He is also a photographer and writer whose work has appeared on album covers, in the Chicago Reader , and in Spring Wind magazine. In 2000, his photography show at the Jett Sett Gallery became a benefit for ICADP. Ina Marks has been a volunteer for ICADP for a little over two years. She has done research and helped in the office. She has also been active on the faith-based organizing committee. From 1976 to 2003 Ina was an attorney with the Office of the Cook County Public Defender including work in the appeals, mental health and juvenile delinquency divisions. She also trained over 150 bar association lawyers to handle cases in the abuse courts. Ina has been an active volunteer with Jewish Council on Urban Affairs (JCUA). She has also done volunteer work with the Chicago History Fair/Chicago Metro History Education Center. Since retirement Ina completed a class on Excel at Truman College and a grant writing workshop at the Donor's Forum. Patrick D. McAnany is professor emeritus (1999) of Criminal Justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is an attorney (Harvard '60) and taught law at St. Louis University (1965-69) and at UIC and State University of New York at Albany (1978-79). His main research and teaching interests were corrections and juvenile justice, as well as the theory of sanctions. He has served on boards for several ex-offender organizations. Stephen L. Richards heads the Death Penalty Trial Assistance Division, which assists with death penalty defense litigation throughout Illinois. He is a former member of the Cook County Public Defender's Homicide Task Force and has supervised provision of defense services since becoming director of DPTA in January 2000. Steve also conducted research in support of the successful clemency campaign and testified before the legislature regarding death penalty reform litigation. Johanna Ryan is co-author of the ICADP's Annual Report on the state of the death penalty in Illinois. She has been prison visitor at all three condemned units in Illinois. Johanna has done extensive anti-death penalty organizing work in many communities throughout the state and continues to research the use of the death penalty in Illinois. W. Robert Schultz, III's career as a human rights activist has included disability, peace and justice, and gay rights issues. Robert's current work as field organizer at Amnesty International's Midwest Regional Office links him to the abolition movement in 13 states. Robert is a freelance writer and contributor to the Windy City Times, and BLACKlines, an African-American LBGT magazine he helped to launch. Sandra Shimon is a long-time resident of Oak Park. She is married and has three grown children. She runs her own business, a medical transcription company. Sandra is one of the most active members of the West Suburban Committee Against Capital Punishment. She has been attending all the hearings in the capital case of Ronny Atkins, which arose in Oak Park. She sponsored the first House Party for ICADP. She has been an activist all her life in various causes, including Death Sentence 2001 in River Forest. Rev. Tricia L. Teater is a Soto Zen Buddhist Chaplain and Priest in affiliation with Udumbara Zen Center of Evanston. She is the Director of their national Chaplain Training Program. She has worked in maximum security prisons and on death row in Indiana and Illinois for nearly 10 years, regularly conducting Buddhist meditation services, offering spiritual support and hospice care. She is also on the Advisory Board of the Long Term Prison Policy Project. Tricia is a Volunteer with Horizon Hospice of Chicago specializing in pediatric hospice and palliative care, as well as serving on the Ethics Committee. Tricia is the Director of Human Resources for the Office of Cook County Clerk David Orr. Robin Johnson-Thompkins is a paralegal, mother of three children and co-chair of Families of Inmates on Death Row. Robin is the daughter of former death row inmate Willie M. Thompkins. Robin has been involved in death penalty issues for almost 20 years, and began speaking on these issues publicly over the past few years. She has spoken at various and private events and assisted in the organization of news conferences. She continues to work diligently with various committees to abolish the death penalty. You can contact us about our programs at:
Illinois Coalition to Abolish The Death Penalty Executive Director Jane Bohman 332 S. Michigan Ave., Ste. 500 Chicago, IL 60604 Phone: 312-673-3816 Fax: 312-427-6130 email: info@icadp.org ©2007 Illinois Coalition to Abolish The Death Penalty |
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