ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lindy Lou Isonhood - Wife, mother, grandmother, friend
Lindy Lou Isonhood served as Juror No. 2 on a capital murder trial in 1994 -- an experience that changed her life.

Why you should listen

As Lindy Lou Isonhood writes: "I was born in Yazoo City, Mississippi, in December 1951 and was raised by my grandmother, a widow with nine children. She was my salvation. From her nurturing I acquired my integrity, independence and strength. She impacted the lives of all around her. I was employed for over half my life: as a federal police officer in the 1970s, then I went on to be the first female letter carrier with the US Postal Service in Jackson for seven years, followed by 18 years in the MS Army National Guard. I ended my working career as an office manager after 13 years with an architectural firm.

"A strong Christian, I am married to a retired colonel who is a very staunch conservative, like me. I'm the mother of two children, a son and a daughter, and three grandchildren -- all girls! The hearts of my life! There is nothing extraordinary about me. I have never achieved fame or any outstanding records or recognition. Never received a college degree although I have many accumulated hours. But my life reached a turning point when I served as a juror in the sentencing phase of a capital murder trial in 1994. This experience changed me from the inside out."

More profile about the speaker
Lindy Lou Isonhood | Speaker | TED.com
TEDWomen 2018

Lindy Lou Isonhood: A juror's reflections on the death penalty

Filmed:
1,627,727 views

Lindy Lou Isonhood grew up in a town where the death penalty was a fact of life, part of the unspoken culture. But after she served as a juror in a capital murder trial -- and voted "yes" to sentencing a guilty man to death -- something inside her changed. In this engaging and personal talk, Isonhood reflects on the question she's been asking herself in the 25 years since the trial: Am I a murderer?
- Wife, mother, grandmother, friend
Lindy Lou Isonhood served as Juror No. 2 on a capital murder trial in 1994 -- an experience that changed her life. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
It was a Thursday,
0
1166
2356
00:15
June the 23rd, 1994.
1
3546
3868
00:23
(Sighs)
2
11086
1159
00:24
"Collect your belongings.
You are free to go.
3
12269
2848
00:28
When escorted outside,
go directly to your car.
4
16808
4101
00:32
Do not talk to reporters."
5
20933
2784
00:36
My head is spinning,
6
24983
1544
00:38
my heart is racing,
7
26551
1479
00:40
I can't get a breath.
8
28054
1646
00:43
I just want out of there.
9
31108
1786
00:47
When I get to my car,
10
35589
1908
00:49
I throw everything on the back,
11
37521
1948
00:52
and I just collapse
into the driver's seat.
12
40450
2305
00:55
"I can't do this.
13
43637
1707
00:57
I can't go home to my family
14
45368
3658
01:02
that I haven't seen in a week
15
50231
3049
01:06
and pretend to be happy."
16
54455
1775
01:10
Not even their love and support
17
58764
3449
01:14
could help me at this particular time.
18
62237
2750
01:19
We had just sentenced a man to death.
19
67592
3133
01:26
Now what?
20
74210
1294
01:28
Just go home and wash dishes?
21
76909
2346
01:32
You see, in Mississippi,
22
80772
3466
01:37
the death penalty is like a part
of our unspoken culture.
23
85423
3811
01:43
The basic logic is, if you murder someone,
24
91821
3627
01:47
then you're going to receive
the death penalty.
25
95472
2691
01:51
So when the jury selection
process took place,
26
99744
4978
01:57
they asked me,
27
105623
1519
02:01
"Could you,
28
109646
1835
02:03
if the evidence presented
justified the death penalty,
29
111505
5499
02:09
could you deliver,
30
117028
2334
02:11
rationally and without reservations,
31
119386
2500
02:13
a penalty of death?"
32
121910
1598
02:17
My answer was an astounding "yes,"
33
125545
3171
02:21
and I was selected as Juror Number 2.
34
129676
2603
02:26
The trial started.
35
134410
1526
02:28
From the evidence being presented
36
136559
2324
02:32
and from the pictures of the victim,
37
140106
2820
02:34
my first response was,
"Yes, this man is a monster,
38
142950
4959
02:39
and he deserves the death penalty."
39
147933
2455
02:44
For days, I sat and looked at his hands,
40
152082
4644
02:48
the ones that yielded the knife,
41
156750
2782
02:53
and against his pasty white skin,
42
161883
3841
02:58
his eyes ...
43
166589
1439
03:00
Well, he spent endless days in his cell,
44
168820
3356
03:04
no sunlight,
45
172200
1582
03:05
so his eyes were as black
as his hair and his mustache.
46
173806
3887
03:10
He was very intimidating,
47
178609
2784
03:14
and there was absolutely
no doubt in his guilt.
48
182424
4359
03:21
But regardless of his guilt,
49
189037
1816
03:23
as the days passed,
50
191440
2196
03:26
I began to see this monster
51
194435
3185
03:30
as a human being.
52
198684
1866
03:34
Something inside of me was changing
that I just didn't understand.
53
202014
4311
03:39
I was beginning to question myself
54
207106
2454
03:41
as to whether or not I wanted
to give this man the death penalty.
55
209584
4295
03:47
Jury deliberations began,
56
215713
2180
03:50
and the judge gave us jury instructions
57
218556
4278
03:56
and it was to be used as a tool
58
224397
2757
03:59
in how to reach a verdict.
59
227178
2719
04:02
Well, using this tool
only led to one decision,
60
230869
4661
04:07
and that was the death penalty.
61
235554
1879
04:10
I felt backed into a corner.
62
238506
2079
04:13
My head and my heart
were in conflict with each other,
63
241176
3424
04:16
and the thought of the death penalty
64
244624
2135
04:18
made me sick.
65
246783
1496
04:23
However, following
the judge's instructions,
66
251369
4779
04:28
being a law-abiding person,
67
256172
2402
04:31
I gave up.
68
259972
1296
04:34
I gave up and voted along
with the other 11 jurors.
69
262390
4288
04:40
And there it was:
70
268608
1400
04:42
our broken judicial system at work.
71
270754
4194
04:50
So here I am in my car,
72
278021
2365
04:52
and I'm wondering:
73
280410
1607
04:54
How is my life ever going to be the same?
74
282041
4106
04:59
My life was kids, work,
church, ball games --
75
287049
5448
05:04
just your average, normal, everyday life.
76
292521
3446
05:08
Now everything felt trivial.
77
296998
2444
05:11
I was going down this rabbit hole.
78
299466
2257
05:14
The anger, the anxiety,
79
302978
3372
05:18
the guilt, the depression ...
80
306374
2834
05:21
it just clung to me.
81
309232
1635
05:23
I knew that my life had to resume,
82
311989
3748
05:29
so I sought counseling.
83
317038
1642
05:31
The counselor diagnosed me with PTSD
84
319252
3287
05:35
and told me that the best way
to overcome the PTSD
85
323217
4608
05:40
was to talk about the trauma.
86
328541
1829
05:43
However, if I talked or tried
to talk about the trauma
87
331559
5393
05:48
outside her office,
88
336976
1424
05:50
I was shut down.
89
338424
1837
05:52
No one wanted to hear about it.
90
340285
2286
05:55
He was just a murderer. Get over it.
91
343030
3515
05:59
It was then that I decided
to become a silent survivor.
92
347513
5131
06:06
Twelve years later, 2006,
93
354263
2945
06:09
I learned that Bobby Wilcher
had dropped all of his appeals,
94
357953
5076
06:15
and his execution date was approaching.
95
363053
3606
06:19
That was like a punch in the stomach.
96
367291
2182
06:22
All of those buried feelings
just started coming back.
97
370143
3491
06:27
To try and find peace,
I called Bobby's attorney, and I said,
98
375943
4857
06:32
"Can I see Bobby before he's executed?"
99
380824
2487
06:36
Driving to the penitentiary
on the day of his execution,
100
384470
4791
06:41
in my mind,
101
389285
1544
06:42
Bobby was going to be manic.
102
390853
2362
06:45
But, surprisingly, he was very calm.
103
393975
4356
06:50
And for two hours, he and I sat there
and talked about life,
104
398967
5172
06:56
and I got to ask him to forgive me
for my hand in his death.
105
404753
6442
07:04
His words to me were:
106
412212
1868
07:06
"You don't have to apologize.
107
414748
2224
07:08
You didn't put me here.
108
416996
1930
07:10
I did this myself.
109
418950
2265
07:14
But if it'll make you feel better,
110
422032
1829
07:15
I forgive you."
111
423885
1579
07:19
On my way home,
112
427097
1778
07:20
I stopped by a restaurant
and bought a margarita.
113
428899
3986
07:24
(Laughter)
114
432909
3687
07:29
I don't think I could
get one big enough --
115
437107
2097
07:31
(Laughter)
116
439228
1195
07:32
to try and calm down.
117
440447
2001
07:35
My phone rang.
118
443411
1875
07:38
It was Bobby's attorney.
119
446244
1746
07:41
Within two minutes of his execution,
120
449180
3002
07:44
they had given him a stay.
121
452206
2094
07:48
This stay gave me time
122
456456
3175
07:52
to reach out to Bobby.
123
460377
1704
07:55
And as crazy as it may sound,
124
463319
2141
07:57
we became friends.
125
465484
1902
08:00
Three months later,
126
468936
1984
08:02
he was executed
by the State of Mississippi.
127
470944
2842
08:07
I'm here to tell you my story,
128
475415
4589
08:13
because it was precisely 22 years later
129
481163
5062
08:18
that I even wanted to open up
enough to talk about it,
130
486249
3674
08:23
when a friend encouraged me.
131
491148
2028
08:26
"Hey, perhaps you need to talk
to the other jurors.
132
494109
4115
08:30
You've been through the same experience."
133
498248
2376
08:33
Uncertain of what I was after,
134
501859
2664
08:36
I did need to talk to them.
135
504547
1808
08:39
So I set out on my quest,
136
507198
2074
08:42
and I actually found most of them.
137
510587
1938
08:45
The first juror I met
138
513117
1757
08:47
thought that Bobby got what he deserved.
139
515659
2098
08:50
Another juror --
140
518610
1420
08:53
well, they just kind of regretted
that it took so long
141
521339
3713
08:57
to carry the sentence out.
142
525076
1697
08:59
Then one juror, and I don't know
what was wrong with him,
143
527371
2744
09:02
but he didn't remember
anything about the trial.
144
530139
2363
09:04
(Laughter)
145
532526
1899
09:06
Well,
146
534449
1222
09:08
I'm thinking in my mind,
147
536902
1700
09:10
"Jeez, is this the response
I'm gonna get from everybody else?"
148
538626
4117
09:15
Well, thank God for Allen.
149
543898
3218
09:19
Allen was a gentle soul.
150
547598
2237
09:22
And when I talked to him,
he was genuinely upset
151
550956
3703
09:26
about our decision.
152
554683
1883
09:29
And he told me about the day
that the devastation
153
557121
4794
09:33
really set in on him and hit him.
154
561939
3225
09:37
He was listening to the radio,
155
565927
2244
09:40
and the radio had a list of names
of men to be executed
156
568195
5367
09:45
at Parchman Penitentiary.
157
573586
1864
09:49
He heard Bobby's name,
158
577370
2057
09:51
and he then truly realized
what he had done.
159
579451
3626
09:55
And he said, "You know, I had
a responsibility in that man's death."
160
583101
4678
10:01
Now here it is, 20-something years later,
161
589325
2615
10:03
and Allen is still dealing
with that issue.
162
591964
3468
10:08
And he's never told anyone about it,
not even his wife.
163
596134
3788
10:14
He also told me
164
602065
1414
10:15
that if the State of Mississippi
wanted to keep the death penalty,
165
603503
3146
10:18
then hey, they needed to provide
counseling for the jurors.
166
606673
5107
10:24
Then the next juror I met was Jane.
167
612941
2969
10:27
Jane is now totally
against the death penalty,
168
615934
2732
10:31
And there was Bill.
169
619273
1366
10:33
Bill said he had this
crushing depression for weeks,
170
621394
5259
10:38
and when he went back to work,
171
626677
2083
10:40
his colleagues would say
things to him like,
172
628784
3307
10:44
"Hey, did you fry him?"
173
632115
1784
10:45
To them, it was just a joke.
174
633923
1771
10:48
Then there was Jon.
175
636885
1792
10:50
Jon said his decision weighed on him,
176
638701
4379
10:55
and it burdened him daily.
177
643104
1946
10:58
The final juror that I spoke to was Ken.
178
646558
3061
11:01
Ken was the foreman of the jury.
179
649643
2273
11:05
When we sat down to talk,
180
653078
1669
11:08
it was apparent that he was deeply
saddened by what we were required to do.
181
656485
6266
11:15
He relived the day
that he left the courthouse
182
663490
4400
11:19
and he drove home
183
667914
1830
11:21
and he went to put his key
in his door and unlock it,
184
669768
3086
11:24
and he said he literally broke down.
185
672878
3390
11:30
He said he knew that Bobby was guilty,
186
678237
3152
11:33
but the decision he made,
187
681413
2095
11:35
he did not know
if it was the right decision.
188
683532
3913
11:40
And he said that he played it
over and over in his head.
189
688098
3222
11:43
Did we do the right thing?
190
691989
1739
11:46
Did we do the right thing?
191
694777
1748
11:49
Did we do the right thing?
192
697554
3022
11:55
(Sighs)
193
703966
1166
11:58
All those years,
194
706395
1569
12:00
and I finally realized that I was not
the only disillusioned juror.
195
708738
5289
12:06
And we talked about sharing our experience
196
714778
4832
12:11
with potential jurors
197
719634
2409
12:15
to give them some insight
into what to expect,
198
723392
3548
12:20
and to tell them do not be complacent;
199
728006
3094
12:23
to know what you believe;
200
731703
2908
12:26
to know where you stand and be prepared,
201
734635
3860
12:31
because you don't want
to walk in one morning as a juror
202
739318
6136
12:37
and leave at the end of the trial
feeling like a murderer.
203
745478
3673
12:42
Now, through this storm in my life,
I did find some inspiration,
204
750595
3993
12:46
and it came in the form
of my granddaughters.
205
754612
2656
12:50
My 14-year-old granddaughter, Maddie,
206
758669
2360
12:53
was writing an essay
on the death penalty for school,
207
761730
3417
12:57
and she was asking me questions.
208
765171
2023
12:59
Well, it dawned on me
that this child was being raised
209
767940
3256
13:03
in the same eye-for-an-eye culture
210
771220
4027
13:08
as I was,
211
776003
1565
13:09
or had been.
212
777592
1478
13:12
And so I explained my experience
to her this way:
213
780467
3627
13:16
that I had sentenced someone to death
214
784927
3974
13:21
as I served on a jury.
215
789761
2359
13:24
And I asked her,
216
792144
1417
13:26
"Did that make me a murderer?"
217
794479
1850
13:29
She couldn't answer.
218
797602
1412
13:31
I knew then that this topic
needed to be open for discussion.
219
799645
4742
13:36
And guess what happened?
220
804411
1498
13:38
I got invited to speak, just recently,
221
806574
3159
13:42
in an abolitionist community.
222
810358
2199
13:45
While I was there, I got a T-shirt.
223
813503
2810
13:48
It says, "Stop Executions."
224
816706
2681
13:52
Well, when I get home, my 16-year-old
granddaughter was there, Anna,
225
820031
4110
13:56
and she says, "Can I have that shirt?"
226
824746
2589
14:00
Well, I looked at her dad --
227
828065
1653
14:02
her dad is my son --
228
830557
1767
14:04
and I knew that he is still dealing
with this death penalty issue.
229
832829
4355
14:09
So I turned around
and I looked at her, and I said,
230
837812
2671
14:12
"Are you gonna wear this?"
231
840507
1695
14:14
So she turned and she looked
at her dad, and she said,
232
842726
3400
14:18
"Dad, I know how you feel,
233
846150
1286
14:19
but I don't believe in the death penalty."
234
847460
4013
14:24
My son looked at me,
235
852337
3111
14:27
shook his head, and said,
236
855472
2624
14:31
"Thanks, Mom."
237
859719
1652
14:34
And I knew it wasn't a nice "Thanks, Mom."
238
862124
3361
14:37
(Laughter)
239
865509
1150
14:39
So I learned that life
had taught me some lessons.
240
867964
4528
14:46
It taught me, if I had
not served on that jury,
241
874180
4549
14:51
that I would still be of the same mindset.
242
879596
3906
14:57
It also gave me confidence
243
885002
2616
14:59
to be able to see through
the eyes of my granddaughters,
244
887642
4213
15:03
that this younger generation,
they're capable and they're willing
245
891879
5127
15:09
to tackle these difficult social issues.
246
897030
4373
15:14
And because of my experience,
247
902201
2368
15:16
my granddaughters,
248
904593
1498
15:18
they're now more equipped
to stand on their own
249
906859
5047
15:23
and to think for themselves
250
911930
2443
15:26
than to rely on cultural beliefs.
251
914397
4700
15:32
So:
252
920134
1210
15:34
being from a conservative,
Christian family
253
922115
3543
15:38
from a very conservative state
in the United States,
254
926452
4383
15:44
I am here to tell you
255
932415
1483
15:45
that the death penalty has new opponents.
256
933922
5246
15:51
Thank you.
257
939542
1174
15:52
(Applause)
258
940740
4389

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Lindy Lou Isonhood - Wife, mother, grandmother, friend
Lindy Lou Isonhood served as Juror No. 2 on a capital murder trial in 1994 -- an experience that changed her life.

Why you should listen

As Lindy Lou Isonhood writes: "I was born in Yazoo City, Mississippi, in December 1951 and was raised by my grandmother, a widow with nine children. She was my salvation. From her nurturing I acquired my integrity, independence and strength. She impacted the lives of all around her. I was employed for over half my life: as a federal police officer in the 1970s, then I went on to be the first female letter carrier with the US Postal Service in Jackson for seven years, followed by 18 years in the MS Army National Guard. I ended my working career as an office manager after 13 years with an architectural firm.

"A strong Christian, I am married to a retired colonel who is a very staunch conservative, like me. I'm the mother of two children, a son and a daughter, and three grandchildren -- all girls! The hearts of my life! There is nothing extraordinary about me. I have never achieved fame or any outstanding records or recognition. Never received a college degree although I have many accumulated hours. But my life reached a turning point when I served as a juror in the sentencing phase of a capital murder trial in 1994. This experience changed me from the inside out."

More profile about the speaker
Lindy Lou Isonhood | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee