I Lost My Father to Violence—Executing the Wrong Man Won’t Bring Justice

At the tender age of 9, I lost my father, Doug Battle, when he was killed during a robbery. Like many children faced with sudden violence, I asked a simple question with no answer: Why did you have to kill him?

Today, I am asking a different question… one that should concern all of us.

Why is the state preparing to execute Charles Burton, a man who did not kill my father?

In 1991, six men robbed an AutoZone store in Alabama. Mr. Burton had already left the store with the money. Derrick DeBruce remained inside and made his own decision, in accordance with no one, to shoot my father as he lay face-down on the floor alongside employees and customers. There is no evidence that Mr. Burton knew, or had any intent, that a shooting would occur.

Executing a man who did not commit the killing does not heal wounds or strengthen public trust. It weakens it.

Both men were initially sentenced to death. Later, DeBruce, the shooter, had his sentence overturned and the state agreed to resentence him to life without parole. Mr. Burton, the non-shooter, remains on death row.

If this is allowed to stand, this would represent a fundamental flaw in how capital punishment is applied in America.

Mr. Burton is now 75 years old, wheelchair-bound, and suffering from severe rheumatoid arthritis. He is frail, in declining health, and poses no threat to public safety. Yet the state plans to execute him using nitrogen hypoxia, a method that raises serious ethical and constitutional concerns.

As a child, I believed justice meant........

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