Gulf Pine Catholic

14 Gulf Pine Catholic • July 10, 2020 Catholic leaders denounce rejection of federal death penalty appeal People hold signs during a candlelight prayer vigil Dec. 8, 2019, held to oppose the Trump administration’s plan to reinstate the federal death penalty. CNS photo/David Maun g BY CAROL ZIMMERMANN Catholic News Service WASHINGTON (CNS) -- When the Supreme Court announced June 29 that it would not hear an appeal by federal death-row inmates challenging the method to be used in their upcom- ing executions, a longtime advo- cate against capital punishment said the court “abdicated its legal and moral responsibilities.” “This means that the federal government will likely execute four people” starting in July “using an untested lethal injection proto- col during a global pandemic without any real oversight from the Supreme Court,” tweeted Sister Helen Prejean, a Sister of St. Joseph of Medaille. The unsigned three-sentence order from the court said Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor would have heard the inmates’ appeal. The inmates had appealed a lower court order allowing the federal government to proceed with exe- cutions using a single-drug protocol. The federal execu- tions, which have not taken place since 2003, are set to resume in mid-July. When Attorney General William Barr announced last year that the federal government was reinstating the federal death penalty, he said the executions would use a single drug instead of a three-drug protocol carried out in most recent federal executions and by several states. This execution method was challenged by some of the federal death-row inmates. Last November, a federal judge said this protocol injection went against the Federal Death Penalty Act. In April, a federal appeals court lifted a lower court ruling that had prevented the execution of federal death-row inmates. Three of the executions are scheduled to take place in July and one is scheduled for August. The inmates -- Danny Lee, Wesley Ira Purkey, Dustin Lee Honken and Keith Dwayne Nelson -- have been convicted of murder. The day after the court announced it was not taking up the inmates’ appeal, Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, urged the Trump administration to “reverse course” on resuming these executions. “I implore Attorney General Barr and President Trump to abandon this path to preside over the first Ruth Friedman, an attorney for Lee, who is the first of the federal prisoners scheduled to be execut- ed, said in a June 29 statement that despite problems with the death penalty and “even as people across the country are demanding that leaders rethink crime, punishment and justice, the government is bar- reling ahead with its plans to carry out the first federal executions in 17 years.” “Given the unfairness built into the federal death-penalty system and the many unanswered ques- tions about both the cases of the men scheduled to die and the gov- ernment’s new execution protocol, there must be appropriate court review before the government can proceed with any execution,” she added. When Barr announced the end to the moratorium on executing federal inmates, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops spoke out against it as did Indiana’s Catholic bishops since most of the federal death-row inmates are impris- oned at the U.S. Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, which is where most of the federal executions are scheduled to take place. In the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, Deacon Steve Gretencord, who ministers to inmates on death row at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, told The Criterion, the archdiocesan newspaper, he was “surprised a little bit” by the Supreme Court’s denial of the cert petition. “I thought the courts would be rethink- ing the value -- or lack of value -- of executions in the criminal justice system. So I’m surprised in a very sad way.” In a June 18 statement on the upcoming execu tions, Indiana polis Archbishop Charles C. Thompson said: “The taking of life, no matter how ‘sanitary’ or ‘humane,’ is always an act of violence.” “While the church is certainly concerned with the soul of every person, including those on death row, I make this plea against the death penalty out of ultimate concern for the eternal soul of humanity,” he said. Natalie Hoefer in Indianapolis contributed to this story. federal executions in 17 years,” he wrote, adding that the bishops, echoing Pope Francis, Pope Benedict XVI and St. John Paul II, have been calling for an end to the death penalty for decades. Quoting a statement he issued with two other bish- ops last year, Archbishop Coakley said: “To oppose the death penalty is not to be ‘soft on crime.’ Rather, it is to be strong on the dignity of life.” The Catholic Mobilizing Network, a group that works for an end to the death penalty, tweeted: “The Catholic Church teaches that the death penalty is ‘inad- missible’ in all cases because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person,’” quoting the Catechism of the Catholic Church. The group also urged those in opposition to the resumption of federal executions to sign a joint state- ment to Barr and President Trump, bit.ly/3eJn0P1, that had more than 2,700 signatures as of June 29. Sister Prejean also tweeted that the Department of Justice has said it is “pursuing justice for victims’ families by pushing to execute Danny Lee. That could not be further from the truth. The victims’ family is begging the government to NOT execute Danny Lee. The DOJ’s statements are not truthful.” On June 24, the mother and grandmother of two of the three victims Lee was convicted of murdering, in 1999, wrote to Trump asking him not to execute Lee, saying it would only bring her family more pain. “We feel Mr. Lee’s execution would dishonor the memory of my daughter Nancy Ann and my grand- daughter Sarah Elizabeth,” she wrote. To include your parish and school events and activity information in “Diocesan Briefs”, email that information to: tdickson@biloxidiocese.org .

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