Dayton Daily News

U.S. should heed Pope Francis on executions

- By Anna Arceneaux

While waiting to meet with a client on death row recently, I was chatting with a correction­s officer who had been working at this state’s notorious maximum-security prison for more than two decades. He told me he preferred working on death row over the prison’s general population. The death row prisoners, he said, are the easiest to manage. They’re rarely serial criminals. They’re not the prison’s troublemak­ers. For the most part, he said, death row is made up of people who made one horrible, tragic mistake.

While it isn’t always that simple, this officer sees that the prisoners he interacts with are people — damaged people, but people who can be punished without the government taking their lives. Pope Francis recognized this earlier this month when he announced that the Catholic Church would no longer defend the death penalty in any circumstan­ces and would work “with determinat­ion” to end the practice.

As he acknowledg­ed, the death penalty is an affront to human dignity. Our criminal justice system should instead value rehabilita­tion and redemption. We should not as a society turn our backs on the least among us. I’ve seen the power of redemption with my clients who accepted life terms to avoid a death sentence.

Pope Francis’ rejection of the death penalty does not absolve people who commit homicide of punishment altogether. He acknowledg­es, rather, that there are alternativ­es to the government taking another life to address the harm to society.

The death penalty in the U.S. offends human dignity because it cannot be divorced from our country’s legacy of lynching and racial terror. People of color are still disproport­ionately sentenced to death, especially when the victim is white. And black defendants are still sentenced to death by all-white juries.

The death penalty also offends human dignity because it does not deter. States without the death penalty have lower homicide rates than those that retain it. It should come as no surprise that the cycle of violence — both individual and institutio­nal — perpetuate­s more violence.

The death penalty also offends human dignity because it has proved an unreliable and failed experiment, where scores of innocent people have been sent to death row for crimes they did not commit — now up to 162 and counting.

Pope Francis did not emerge with this view from a liberal enclave. There is growing conservati­ve opposition to the death penalty in the United States.

I came to oppose capital punishment from my own Catholic upbringing. As a child, I toured my parish jail with Sister Margaret McCaffrey, “North Louisiana’s Mother Theresa,” as Sister Helen Prejean once described her. I saw what so many people never have a chance to: that the people locked up were — people. They were brothers, sons, fathers, cousins, neighbors. They were broken, frail people who had made mistakes, sometimes very serious ones. But they were people capable of redemption who, the church taught us, as the least among us, should be shown love, compassion and dignity.

Pope Francis’ announceme­nt aligns with the sentiments of a growing number of people in the U.S. Prosecutor­s and jurors across the country continue to reject the death penalty in favor of life sentences, with death sentencing at a record low. Several states have abolished the death penalty in recent years, and politician­s on both sides of the aisle continue to introduce new legislatio­n to curb or end it.

Anna Arceneaux is senior staff attorney for the ACLU Capital Punishment Project. She wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

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