George White

Arkansas City, Kansas
Co-Founder and Board Member

George's Links:

George White (By Abe Bonowitz)

Italian Academy For Advanced Studies In American Studies In America At Columbia University

Panelists Hash Over Death Penalty Views

Relatives Of Victims Promote Love, Forgiveness:  MVFR brings good-will message to the Valley with the Journey of Hope tour 
(By Guy E. Sharwood)


Groups For Abolishing The Death Penalty

Journey Speakers In Terre Haute

Media Advisory:  February 1998

 

Quote

"Charlene White loved life...that should be her legacy.  What began with a horrible act of violence should not memorialized by an act of vengeance.  Hate is a continuation, not an ending.   Tom, Christie and I say "Not in our names — our hearts have bled enough."

On February 27, 1985, the White family experienced first-hand the insanity and horror of murder.  George and his wife Charlene were shot repeatedly by an armed robber at his place of business in Enterprise, Alabama.  George held Charlene in his arms as her life slipped away.  Their children, Tom and Christie, were only 12 and 5 at the time. The nightmare had just begun.  Sixteen months later, George was charged with murdering his wife.  Following a capital murder trial that was later described as  "a mockery and a sham", George was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.  His conviction was overturned in 1989 and he was released from prison, but George remained in legal limbo until 1992,  when proof of his innocence was finally brought forward.  Following a brief hearing the trial court ordered the charge against him forevermore dismissed. The nightmare had lasted more than seven years...had the State of Alabama had its way, George White would be a dead man today.

Understanding fully how easy it is to become advocates for revenge, the White family, however, rejects  the death penalty as a solution and as way of healing the wounds of their loss.  George is a cofounder of the Journey of Hope...from violence to healing and  is a member and past board member of  Murder Victims Families for Reconciliation (MVFR)  A full time speaker and lecturer, he now lives in Arkansas City, Kansas.

Reprinted with permission from Not In Our Name: Murder Victims Families Speak Out Against the Death Penalty, a publication of Murder Victims Families For Reconciliation, Barbara Hood & Rachel King, Editors; MVFR

 
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