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The Houston Chronicle has more on this sorry turn of events: In e-mail to House colleagues Monday, Miles wrote: "I was greeted with these images as I walked through the halls of the (Capitol) Extension this morning with my two children, ages five and eight. Texas Moratorium Network president Scott Cobb told the Austin American-Statesman newspaper that Miles had no right to censor the artworks - and that the lawmaker should have at least gone through the proper channels to lodge a complaint. The works in question are a painting of a hanged man, and an illustration of a man in an electric chair featuring the ironic inscription, "Doing God’s Work." The State Preservation Board, which regulates art shows in the Capital building, requires that exhibitions call attention to public issues, and have the sponsorship of a member of the legislature - in this case, Miles’ fellow Democrat Harold Dutton, who has declined to take a stand defending the censored works. Miles refuses to return the works, claiming that the images are inappropriate for children. Houston’s Democratic representative Borris Miles personally removed two artworks from an exhibition organized at the Texas capital building by the anti-death-penalty group the Texas Moratorium Network. Via comes news that two works from that exhibition that were later selected to be shown at the Texas state capital building were subsequently removed by an upset state representative: Texas executes more people than any other state, and state legislators don’t like being criticized for it, either. Houston's M 2 gallery hosted an exhibition entitled "Justice For All" back in February that featured art by inmates on death row and other artists dealing with the death penalty.