Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights released a report enti­tled Creating More Victims: How Executions Hurt the Families Left Behind”(2006). Families of the exe­cut­ed are vic­tims, too, accord­ing to the new report, which draws upon the sto­ries of three dozen fam­i­ly mem­bers of inmates exe­cut­ed in the United States and demon­strates that their expe­ri­ences and trau­mat­ic symp­toms resem­ble those of many oth­ers who have suf­fered a vio­lent loss. I don’t think peo­ple under­stand what exe­cu­tions do to the fam­i­lies of the per­son being exe­cut­ed,” says Billie Jean Mayberry, one of the fam­i­ly mem­bers fea­tured in the report. Mayberry’s broth­er, Robert Coe, was exe­cut­ed in Tennessee in 2000. To us, our broth­er was mur­dered right in front of our eyes. It changed all of our lives.” Creating More Victims” includes rec­om­men­da­tions for men­tal health pro­fes­sion­als, edu­ca­tors, and child wel­fare advo­cates. MVFHR also plans to deliv­er the report to the United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights and request that that office under­take fur­ther study of the impact of exe­cu­tions on surviving families.

For more infor­ma­tion, see NEW RESOURCES: Victims’ Group to Release Report on Families of the Executed.