TEXAS----impending execution set for August 26, 2004

6 p.m. CST

Friends:

I am asking that you all write clemency request letters for James
Allridge, who is scheduled for execution June 30 in Huntsville, Texas.
I'm asking you additionally to forward this request to all of your contacts.

The state of Texas is scheduled to execute James Allridge III, a black
man, August 26 for the 1985 murder of Brian Clendennen during a robbery
in Tarrant County.

James Allridge is an example of something that is rarely talked about in
death-penalty debates: rehabilitation. Rehabilitation is granted no
place in the system. Men and women can grow up, become educated, develop
job skills, get off drugs or alcohol, or find religion, and still there
is no mercy. They, too, will be strapped to a gurney and injected full
of poison.

In prison, Mr. Allridge has become an accomplished artist and poet.
Those who have seen his art say that it is vibrant, moving, and full of
life... considering that it was produced in a place where death is
eminent and steel bars a constant reminder.

Mr. Allridge writes that "I concede that there is nothing with which I,
or anyone else, could ever do to replace the life that was taken.
However, my art allows me to contribute to the entire picture - the
whole of humanity. My art allows me to give back something purposeful,
productive, constructive, and meaningful. By giving back a small part of
me with each piece of art I create, I am giving back to society."

Mr. Allridge's case is reminiscent of that of Karla Faye Tucker's. She
was also a woman who had been able to use prison as a source of positive
change. In her clemency appeal to Governor George W Bush she said: "I do
want to live and be able to continue being a part of the solution now to
the problems we have in our world...I am helping save lives now instead
of taking lives and hurting others."

In an interview, Mr. Allridge quotes author Anne Rice who wrote, "there
is no such thing as a soul who loves nothing." Mr. Allridge serves as a
symbol of the human spirit in death row. The death row population is so
easily dehumanized, so easily are their names taken away and replaced by
the label of "killer," "monster," and "murderer." Because they are seen
as the other, it is easier for many to rationalize their death.

However, as Mr. Allridge wrote in 2000, "We all have purpose and worth.
We all have our own unique voice in the choir of humanity. Even a mute
can sing."

Mr. Allridge is scheduled to receive a lethal injection at 6 p.m. CST.
Please keep him, his family, and the family of Brian Clendennen in your
thoughts.

Please take a moment and contact Gov. Perry, urging him to stop the
execution of James Allridge, III.

Please take a moment and send a message to Gov. Rick Perry, urging him
to stop this execution and commute it to life in prison.  Please also
write a letter to the Board of Pardons and Paroles and urge them to
recommend clemency to Gov. Perry.

Contact Information:

Honorable Rick Perry
Governor, State of Texas
Office of the Governor
P.O. Box 12428
Austin, Texas 78711-2428

Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles  (Dear Board Members)
Executive Clemency Section
P.O. Box 13401, Capitol Station
Austin, Texas 78711



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