Most Rev. Thomas Wenski writes the OpEd, "Is this killing necessary?" He is the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Miami.
Gov. Rick Scott has signed his first death warrant. While originally scheduled for Aug. 2nd, a stay granted by the Florida Supreme Court to review the lethal injection protocol will postpone the execution of Manuel Valle until September 1st. Thanks to the Supreme Court’s intervention, Gov. Scott has the opportunity to reconsider his decision — and, I along with the other bishops of Florida, urge him to do so.
Manuel Valle was found guilty of shedding innocent blood — that of a police officer, Luis Peña. He also attempted to shoot another officer, Gary Spell. These crimes are heinous — but, they were committed more than 30 years ago. After 30 years, is it necessary for the State of Florida to kill this man? Does society really make a coherent statement against killing by killing?
The argument has been made that the application of the death penalty represents the legitimate self defense of society from an unjust aggressor, i.e. the murderer. And, historically, the church has conceded the point that the government can rightly apply capital punishment when absolutely necessary, i.e. when otherwise impossible to defend society. There is, in church teaching, no moral equivalence between the execution of the guilty after due process of law and the willful destruction of innocent life that happens with abortion or euthanasia.
However, as Pope John Paul II has pointed out in Evangelium Vitae (no. 56): given the organization of today’s penal system and the option of imposing life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, such an “absolute necessity” is “practically nonexistent”.
And:
Willful murder is a heinous crime; it cries to God for justice. Yet, God did not require Cain’s life for having spilt Abel’s blood. While God certainly punished history’s first murderer, he nevertheless put a mark on him to protect Cain from those wishing to kill him to avenge Abel’s murder (Gn 4:15). Like Cain, the condemned prisoner on death row — for all the evil of his crimes — remains a person. Human dignity — that of the convicted as well as our own — is best served by not resorting to this extreme and unnecessary punishment. Modern society has the means to protect itself without the death penalty.
The commutation to life imprisonment would serve the common good of all by helping break our society’s spiral of violence. The “eye for an eye” mentality will just end up making us all blind.
Related posts are in the OpEd and the religion indexes. Earlier coverage of Valle's lethal injection litigation is also linked.
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