Los Angeles Times

The pope takes on executions

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Pope Francis threw the weight of the Catholic Church behind the death-penalty abolition movement Thursday, releasing a new church teaching that says “the death penalty is inadmissib­le because it is an attack on the inviolabil­ity and dignity of the person.”

That may come as a surprise to Catholics who thought the church already opposed executions. And it did in most instances, making an exception only if the death penalty was the only way to effectivel­y defend human lives against an unjust aggressor.

Among the reasons for the shift: Changes in detention practices now make prisons sufficient to protect the public from the homicidal. But the new teaching also notes that “there is an increasing awareness that the dignity of the person is not lost even after the commission of very serious crimes.”

The new teaching isn’t likely to shift the weight of the debate over the death penalty, but in making the adjustment the church (finally) gets it exactly right and follows personal observatio­ns Francis has made in the past.

The strongest argument here is that even those who have committed the most heinous of crimes remain human beings deserving of the dignity of life — a view that resonates with the secular world as well. But there’s a more justice-based reason to oppose the death penalty that has propelled us to bang a steady drum.

The capital punishment system in the U.S. has been rife with errors that have almost certainly led to the execution of innocent people. In fact, one study published in 2014 by the National Academy of Sciences estimated that at least 4% of people on death row are innocent. They — and the 162 death row inmates who have been exonerated since 1973 — are victims of a system that is too susceptibl­e to manipulati­on by the misdeeds of prosecutor­s, and the lies and errors of witnesses, to be relied on to divine absolute guilt. Which means capital punishment is not only immoral in concept, as Pope Francis points out, but also unreliable in practice.

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