Orlando Sentinel

Branson-led business group seeking to end death penalty

- By Alexandra Olson

NEW YORK — Virgin Group Chairman Richard Branson feels the time has come to galvanize business leaders in a movement to eradicate the death penalty, a cause he has ardently supported for years.

A group of 18 business leaders led by the British billionair­e launched a campaign last week that they hope will quickly build, signing a declaratio­n that called on all government­s to end executions. Branson said he hoped to get “hundreds, if not thousands” more business leaders on board over the next six months.

“I’m contacting a lot of business leaders that I’ve met over the years. I think a lot of us believe it to be inhumane, to be barbaric, to be flawed,” Branson said in a video interview with The Associated Press before announcing the campaign at the virtual South by Southwest festival.

He appeared with Sabrina Butler-Smith, the first woman in the U.S. to be exonerated from death row. Butler was 18 when she was convicted of killing her baby in 1990. In 1995, she was exonerated in a retrial after a medical examiner testified that the boy died of a kidney ailment, and neighbors corroborat­ed Butler-Smith’s account that injuries to the child were from her attempts to resuscitat­e him.

Telecom billionair­e Mo Ibrahim, the co-founders of Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream, Thrive CEO Arianna Huffington and Jared Smith, co-founder of software vendor Qualtrics, were among the 18 initial signatorie­s.

Business leaders and companies have been more willing to wade into social issues in recent years, pushed in part by a new generation of consumers and employees who want to see their values reflected where they work and spend their money. The shift reached new heights last year after the worldwide Black Lives Matters protests sparked by the police killing of George Floyd. Corporatio­ns pledged billions of dollars toward racial equity initiative­s and accelerate­d their internal diversity goals.

The business leaders, who said they were speaking in a personal capacity, called the death penalty emblematic of the systemic racial injustice companies claim to be trying to fight.

“Business leaders need to do more than just say Black Lives Matter. They need to walk the talk and be instrument­al in tearing down all the symbols of structural racism in our society,” Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, co-founders of Ben & Jerry’s, said in a prepared statement.

According to a report by the Washington-based Death Penalty Informatio­n Center, Black people remain overrepres­ented on U.S. death row, and Black people who kill white people are far more likely to be sentenced to death than white people who kill Black people.

Although support for the death penalty has waned in recent years, the Trump administra­tion carried out an unpreceden­ted run of 13 executions in six months last year, ending a 17-year hiatus on federal executions. President Joe Biden has not said whether he will halt federal executions, though he is against the death penalty and has said he will work to end its use.

Celia Ouellette, CEO of The Responsibl­e Business Initiative for Justice that is coordinati­ng the campaign, said the hurried executions last year added “real urgency” to the issue that helped draw in business leaders. She said the signatorie­s would be participat­ing in various events with anti-death penalty activists groups in the next months.

“This is the first time that we’ve seen business leaders joining forces to call for an end to the death penalty globally,” Ouellette said.

 ?? AXELLE/BAUER-GRIFFIN/FILMMAGIC 2018 ?? Virgin Group Chairman Richard Branson is looking to get “hundreds, if not thousands” of business leaders to join in his new campaign.
AXELLE/BAUER-GRIFFIN/FILMMAGIC 2018 Virgin Group Chairman Richard Branson is looking to get “hundreds, if not thousands” of business leaders to join in his new campaign.

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