A group of for­mer Georgia pris­on­ers is call­ing for clemen­cy for Kelly Gissendaner, who is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on September 29. The women say Gissendaner gave them hope and helped them turn their lives around. Nikki Roberts said she spoke to Gissendaner through a heat­ing vent after Roberts had been placed in lock­down” for try­ing to slit her wrists. Gissendaner told her, Don’t wish death on your­self. You sound like you’ve got some sense.” Gissendaner encour­aged Roberts to take tach­ing cours­es and study the­ol­o­gy. Roberts joined a choir and became a prayer leader. She was paroled last year and now teach­es adult lit­er­a­cy. Killing Kelly is essen­tial­ly killing hope. Kelly is the poster child for redemp­tion,” Roberts said. Another woman, Nicole Legere, said Gissendaner helped her and many oth­ers. I saw the change in (oth­er inmates) who talked to her. There needs to be peo­ple like her, some­one to be a men­tor. She’s a lot of hope. And there’s not much hope in there.” Gissendaner was con­vict­ed for her role in facil­i­tat­ing the mur­der of her hus­band, based upon the tes­ti­mo­ny of the actu­al killer, who received a deal in which he will become eli­gi­ble for parole. If Gissendaner is exe­cut­ed, she will be the first woman exe­cut­ed in Georgia since 1945 and the only per­son who did not direct­ly com­mit the killing to be exe­cut­ed in Georgia since the state reestab­lished the death penal­ty in the 1970s.

(M. Davis, Former inmates ral­ly to save mur­der­ess from death,” Atlanta Journal-Constitution, September 21, 2015.) See New Voices and Women.

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