Death Penalty Focus
Death Penalty Focus is a non-profit organization dedicated to the abolition of the death penalty through public education, grassroots and political organizing, media engagement, and coalition building. DPF also serves as a support network and as a liaison among anti-death penalty groups nationwide and across the world.
The group opposes the death penalty as "ineffective, racist, and fiscally inefficient." In 1999, the organization said the death penalty is "an ineffective and brutally simplistic response to the serious and complex problem of violent crime.” DPF has partnered with numerous families of victims of violent crime to abolish the death penalty.
DPF is governed by a Board of Directors composed of activists, political, religious, and civic leaders, along with legal scholars and attorneys involved in death penalty litigation. In addition, DPF has an Advisory Board composed of community and religious leaders, celebrities, writers, and representatives of labor and human rights organizations who support anti-death penalty work.
History
Founding
DPF was founded in 1988 by a group of people committed to the abolition of the death penalty in California. Former Governor Pat Brown became a founding member of DPF. Michael Millman was also a founding member of DPF. The goal was to build a broad-based coalition against the death penalty. The L.A. Times wrote that DPF "has become the clearinghouse for a variety of rallies, leafletting and marches throughout the state." Mike Farrell has served as president of DPF since 1994.Rallies and protests to stop executions
In the early 1990s, Pat Clark served as the executive director. The organization was based out of Oakland at that time. DPF organized rallies and protests against the execution of Robert Harris. Clark spoke out in opposition to lethal injection: “It is intended to put a humane face on killing, when reality is that the death penalty, capital punishment, is a barbaric practice that has no place in a civilized society. We object strenuously to efforts to make the death penalty more palatable to the public.” Claudia King served as executive director of the organization.In 1995, Lance Lindsey took over as the Executive Director. Lindsey organized protests outside of San Quentin State Prison. Lindsey told SFGate: "We are sensitive and compassionate to the horrible suffering of these victims and their families... but we're just saying that using violence to stop more violence just perpetuates the cycle of violence." DPF, under Lindsey's leadership helped organize several coalitions: California People of Faith Working against the Death Penalty, Californians for a Moratorium on Executions, and the California Crime Victims for Alternatives to the Death Penalty.
In 2004, DPF joined the Committee to Save Kevin Cooper. They protested, held a press conference, and distributed flyers to the public. The organization played a role in organizing opposition protests to the execution of Stanley Tookie Williams in 2005
Abolition campaigns
DPF has been described as "the strongest voice in California’s abolition movement" by San Francisco Magazine.In 2005, DPF worked with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and others to oppose the death penalty. The campaign distributed leaflets at churches, encouraged religious leaders to speak about the death penalty, and they collected signatures for a moratorium campaign to pause executions in California.
In 2011, Jeanne Woodford, the former warden of San Quentin Prison, took over as executive director. Shortly after, DPF led the campaign for 2012 California Proposition 34 that would have abolished the death penalty in California.
In 2015, Farrell spoke at the annual meeting of the Oregonians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. He said in a subsequent phone interview: "What we don't understand in this country is the cost to us, and I don't mean financial. It's the terrible social moral cost we haven't come to grips with."
In 2023, DPF President Mike Farrell praised California Governor Gavin Newsom's decision to dismantle the state's death row.