[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----TEXAS, N.C., ALA., IND., KY., NEV., CALIF., USA

Rick Halperin rhalperi at smu.edu
Wed Jul 3 08:45:08 CDT 2019






July 3



TEXAS:

Death penalty dropped for man charged in murder of Breanna Wood



Prosecutors say they will no longer be seeking the death penalty against the 
main suspect in the death of 21 year old Breanna Wood, though there is no clear 
indication as to why.

Wood's body was found in a box wrapped in plastic in an abandoned building off 
FM 666 near Robstown in January of 2017,

28 year old Joseph Tejeda is facing capital murder charges for the fatal 
shooting of Wood. He is also accused of hiding her body after telling police 
officers he was offer $500 dollars to commit the crime. He is 1 of 6 other 
defendants facing charges in the murder. Tejeda is set to go to trial in 
September.

(source: KIII TV news)








NORTH CAROLINA:

Flurry of motions delays sentencing phase in Dixon capital murder case



A motion for Judge Greg Horne to recuse himself for the Nathaniel Dixon case 
has been denied and so has a request for a mistrial in the death penalty case.

Last week, a jury found Dixon guilty of shooting and killing his pregnant 
girlfriend, Candace Pickens, and severely injuring her 3-year-old son in May 
2016.

Defense attorneys for the convicted murderer filed a motion that Horne recuse 
himself, saying the judge had mishandled communications involving a juror. 
Another judge, who temporarily took over proceedings, denied the request and 
said Horne was the best judge for the job, given that he had presided over the 
trial.

Horne then denied motions made by defense attorney Vicki Jayne, who repeatedly 
argued for a mistrial. Her argument focused on a juror who inadvertently saw a 
WLOS story on about a witness who had been killed after testifying in the Dixon 
trial.

Horne questioned the juror, who had notified a bailiff after he saw the story 
about Dixon’s former girlfriend Tiyquasha Simeul.

In open court Tuesday, Jayne said she’d received information that investigators 
don't believe her client, Dixon, had any role in the killing, though she did 
not say where she got the information.

She said at the time the juror saw the report, he only had the initial story to 
go on. Jayne said the juror expressed concern over the killing to a bailiff and 
she thought it could have influenced him in deliberations.

The bailiff then took the stand and testified he had communicated the 
information to Horne. In court Monday, Horne apologized and said he didn’t have 
any recollection of the bailiff communicating the information, but said he 
didn’t find it warranted a mistrial.

Defense attorney Michael Casterline has been following the case and isn’t 
surprised by the defense’s flurry of motions given the fact the case was 
charged as a capital case.

“No one’s been put to death in a number of years in the state of North 
Carolina,” Casterline said. “But, it’s still is the law, and, in theory, it 
could happen. Obviously, a juror being aware of potentially prejudicial 
information could affect how they feel about that case. So, I think they’re 
probably doing what they need to do.”

Jayne also asked the judge to take the death penalty option off the table, 
since the jury’s guilty verdict dictates an automatic life sentence for Dixon.

Legal motions delayed the start of the sentencing phase, which is now scheduled 
to start at 9:30 a.m. Monday, July 22.

“I think in a criminal trial it could cut either way,” Casterline said. “It 
could be beneficial to the defense in some ways, because it creates distance 
from when they heard the evidence, or it could hurt them, as well."

In filing the multiple motions and repeatedly arguing for a mistrial, the 
defense team made no apologies.

“I am fighting for my client's life,” Jayne said to the judge.

(source: WLOS news)








ALABAMA----female may face death penalty

Woman accused of killing 7-year-old Alabama boy pulled from burning home



A south Alabama woman has been charged with capital murder in the death of her 
boyfriend’s 7-year-old son, whose body was pulled from the family’s burning 
mobile home Sunday morning.

Jacqueline “Pat” Stewart, 45, of McIntosh, is being held in the Washington 
County Jail in connection with the death of Case Trae Ketchum. Stewart, who was 
initially held on a 48-hour investigative hold, was arrested on the murder 
charge Monday, according to NBC 15 in Mobile.

Case died of blunt force trauma, according to court documents obtained by the 
news station. The documents state he was killed on or about the morning of the 
fire.

Firefighters with the McIntosh Volunteer Fire Department responded to the 
family’s home around 5:20 a.m. Sunday, where they found the house in flames. 
According to department officials, they were able to enter the trailer and pull 
the boy out.

Case was already dead when they pulled his body from the fire.

According to AL.com, Stewart was outside the home by the time firefighters 
arrived. Case’s father, Jesse Ketchum, and another child were out of town when 
Case died, NBC 15 reported.

Police officials in the tiny town of McIntosh sought the help of the larger 
Washington County Sheriff’s Office in investigating the boy’s death, the news 
station said. Stewart was initially released from custody but was called back 
in for questioning Monday.

She left the building in handcuffs, the station reported.

Washington County Sheriff Richard Stringer declined to offer more details of 
the evidence against Stewart but told NBC 15 more information would likely be 
released in the coming days. A gag order has been put in place to keep those 
involved in the case from otherwise speaking with the media about the case.

Stewart is being held without bond in the county jail. If convicted of capital 
murder, she will be eligible for the death penalty.

(source: WSB TV news)








INDIANA:

Death penalty dropped in Jeffersonville murder, cannibalism case



The death penalty has been taken off the table for a man accused of murdering 
his girlfriend and eating her body parts.

Joseph Oberhansley is charged with mutilating and murdering Tammy Jo Blanton, 
46, on September 11, 2014, in her Jeffersonville home.

Attorneys for Oberhansley said they reached an agreement with prosecutors in 
which Oberhansley will withdraw his insanity plea in exchange and not present 
any mental health evidence in his defense. In exchange, the state will seek a 
life sentence without parole.

The motion was agreed to on June 28.

(source: WAVE news)








KENTUCKY:

Kentucky judge declares state's death penalty protocol unconstitutional



A Kentucky judge has struck down the state's death penalty protocol as 
unconstitutional because it does not explicitly prohibit the execution of 
prisoners with intellectual disabilities.

Ruling on a motion brought by a dozen inmates on death row, Franklin Circuit 
Judge Phillip Shepherd ruled Tuesday that the regulation is invalid because it 
doesn't automatically suspend an execution when the state corrections 
department’s internal review shows a condemned person has an intellectual 
disability.

Granting a motion filed by the Department of Public Advocacy, Shepherd said the 
state's rules are flawed because they would allow a prisoner with intellectual 
disabilities to be executed if he or she declines further appeals.

The U.S. Supreme Court “categorically prohibits the execution of intellectually 
disabled persons,” Shepherd noted.

Assistant Public Advocate David Barron said all executions in Kentucky already 
had been stayed because of questions about the state's means of lethal 
injection, as well as other issues. Tuesday's ruling continues that stay, he 
said.

Barron called the opinion "a sound ruling that recognizes what we have been 
arguing for years."

He said the corrections department has “doggedly persisted” in refusing to 
recognize the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling 17 years ago by taking “reasonable 
steps to ensure that an intellectually disabled person is not executed.”

The Kentucky attorney general’s office, which defended the regulations, is 
reviewing the ruling, spokesman Kenneth Mansfield said.

3 inmates, Thomas Bowling, Brian Keith Moore and Ralph Baze, filed challenges 
to the execution regulations in 2006. Bowling died of cancer in 2015.

The Kentucky Supreme Court has said that “imposing this harshest of punishments 
upon an intellectually disabled person violates his or her inherent dignity as 
a human being.”

(source: Courier Journal)



NEVADA:

Nevada judge overturns death sentence in 1994 good Samaritan murder case



A federal judge recently overturned the death penalty sentence for Avram Nika, 
convicted in 1994 of killing a man who had stopped to help Nika with his car.

Last month, U.S. District Judge James Mahan upheld the guilty verdict against 
Nika, 49, for murdering Fallon resident Edward Smith. But Mahan ruled that 
Nika's defense didn't present a full picture of his circumstances that might've 
swayed a jury against voting for the death penalty.

The Nevada Attorney General’s Office has 60 days to file a response. They can 
either impose a non-capital sentence or grant him a new penalty-phase trial, 
which means jury selection would need to start within 180 days. Nika’s public 
defenders declined to comment on the case.

A look back

Authorities arrested Nika after a Southern Pacific brakeman found Smith’s body 
next to a barbed-wire fence 20 miles east of Reno.

His pants were hanging from the fence, and his wallet was left untouched next 
to his body. He had been beaten on the head and then shot point-blank in the 
forehead.

Nika had dragged the body toward the fence and then left in Smith’s 1983 BMW, 
according to court documents.

Several witnesses testified they saw Nika standing next to his brown Chrysler 
along I-80 the night before Smith’s body was discovered.

Nika had left his wife and his home in Aptos, Calif., to visit his sick mother. 
He planned to travel to Chicago and then fly to Romania.

After driving 5 hours to Reno, his car broke down. Witnesses described seeing 
Nika’s car with the hood up. They also described seeing Nika lying underneath 
the front of the vehicle, apparently checking the engine.

Several people stopped to offer him a ride, but Nika refused their help. 
Instead, he asked them to send a tow truck.

Smith lived in Fallon but worked part-time at a Burger King in Reno. His wife, 
Tracy Smith, testified he had made plans to watch a movie with his family the 
night he was killed.

(source: Reno Gazette Journal)








CALIFORNIA----female may face dath penalty

Mother charged in 12-year-old son's drowning death; 2nd son in coma



Prosecutors could seek the death penalty against a California mother accused of 
drowning her son and trying to drown her younger son.

On Tuesday afternoon, District Attorney Tim Ward filed a 4-count complaint 
against Sherri Telnas, 45, of Strathmore. The charges shed light on the 
"horrific" scene in rural Tulare County.

Telnas faces 1 count of murder with the special circumstance of lying in wait, 
1 count of attempted murder causing great bodily injury, 1 count of gassing, 
and 1 count of battery on a peace officer.

Telnas' 12-year-old son, Jackson Telnas, died after being submerged in water, 
according to deputies.

Telnas' younger son Jacob Ray Telnas, 7, remains in a coma at Valley Children's 
Hospital. He's listed in critical condition.

The charge that Telnas was lying in wait before allegedly killing her son means 
she is eligible for the death penalty. However, California Gov. Gavin Newsom 
recently signed a memorandum ending the death penalty. That could limit 
prosecutors to seeking life in prison without parole.

The deadly incident was reported around 5:25 a.m. Saturday at a home in 
Strathmore.

A caller told 911 dispatchers that a woman, later identified as Telnas, was 
acting "strangely" and had taken her boys to a field across the street from 
their home.

While deputies were on their way to the area, they were told the boys were 
found in a full irrigation canal near a cornfield. The children weren't 
breathing, according to deputies.

The boys were rushed to the nearest hospital in Porterville. Jackson died there 
and Jacob was transferred to Valley Children's in Madera. In the complaint, 
prosecutors claim Telnas caused the child to go into a coma due to a brain 
injury.

When deputies arrived, they spotted Telnas trying to run away. While trying to 
arrest Telnas, deputies say she fought back.

It's unclear what happened during the struggle, but gassing is described as 
throwing human excrement or bodily fluids at a peace officer.

"Unfortunately, we can't get into the facts at this time," said Stuart 
Anderson, spokesman for the district attorney.

Telnas is linked, according to The Missoulian newspaper, to a near-drowning of 
Jackson in Montana in 2008.

Telnas was 34 at the time. Tulare County sheriff's detectives are working on 
gathering information on that crime.

Telnas was sentenced in 2009 to 10 years under the custody of Montana’s human 
services department for trying to drown her then 10-month-old son, according to 
public records. She was released in 2016.

She was later granted custody of her son, who had been in the care of his 
father.

Telnas was arraigned Tuesday at Tulare County Pretrial Facility. Currently, she 
is being held without bail.

(source: USA Today)

******************

Suspected gang member charged in slaying of USC student Victor McElhaney



A suspected gang member has been charged in the killing of a USC student during 
an attempted robbery in March, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s 
office announced Tuesday.

Ivan Hernandez, 23, is charged with 1 count of murder, according to court 
records. The charge includes a special circumstance allegation that the crime 
occurred during the commission of a robbery and while Hernandez was an active 
participant in a street gang, the Ghetto Boyz, authorities said. The charge 
makes him subject to the death penalty.

Hernandez, who also faces a count of attempted robbery, is accused of shooting 
and killing Victor McElhaney, 21, about a mile from campus on March 10.

Investigators said at the time that McElhaney and a group of his friends had 
walked from a nearby home to a strip-mall liquor store at Maple Avenue and 
Adams Boulevard at about 12:30 a.m. A group of 3 or 4 men approached the 
students in the parking lot and demanded cash and other valuables, police said.

Detectives believe that McElhaney was shot when he objected to the robbery 
attempt. He was hospitalized in critical condition and died a couple of hours 
later.

McElhaney was a student of USC’s Thornton School of Music and the son of 
Oakland Councilwoman Lynette Gibson McElhaney. His death stunned the community.

Faculty remembered the jazz studies major as an extraordinarily talented 
drummer who was an active member of USC’s Center for Black Cultural and Student 
Affairs. He’d attended Cal State East Bay and worked as an instructor at 
Oakland Public Conservatory of Music before transferring to USC in the fall of 
2017.

A $75,000 reward had been offered — $50,000 by the Los Angeles City Council and 
$25,000 by the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors — for information leading to 
the arrest of those responsible for McElhaney's death. It wasn’t immediately 
clear whether police were continuing to search for other suspects in connection 
with the crime.

Hernandez, of South Los Angeles, was arrested Friday and is being held on 
$2-million bail, according to police records. He was initially expected to be 
arraigned Tuesday, but the court date was postponed until Aug. 7.

(source: Los Angeles Times)








USA:

At 
https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/publications/criminaljustice/2019/capital_
punishment_2019.pdf [www.americanbar.org], you can find my 87-page chapter on 
recent capital punishment developments.

The chapter is part of a publication of the American Bar Association’s Section 
of Criminal Justice:

The State of Criminal Justice 2019.  The complete book will soon be available 
for purchase at:

https://www.americanbar.org/products

This year’s chapter is updated through mid-April 2019, plus the May 30 
abolition of NH’s death penalty and my forecast of the outcome of Flowers 
(decided June 21 by the Supreme Court).

(source: Ron Tabak)

***********************

Activists Hold Annual Fast Outside Supreme Court to Protest Death Penalty



George White says he never thought much about capital punishment until he was 
wrongfully convicted, sentenced to life-in-prison and narrowly escaped death 
row.

“An innocent man or woman can be convicted of something they didn’t do in this 
country. That happened to me,” said White.

“34 years ago at my place of business, my wife and I were shot multiple times 
by an armed robber and left for dead. 16 months later I was indicted, arrested 
and charged with the murder but for the grace of God and the fact that I had an 
all-White jury, that’s why I didn’t get the death penalty. I looked too much 
like they did. And that’s wrong. That’s wrong,” he added.

The majority of prisoners sentenced to death are in fact guilty of gruesome 
crimes but the evidence that proved White’s innocence was eventually uncovered. 
He now advocates for the elimination of the death penalty at an annual 
demonstration where activists like him spend several days fasting outside of 
the Supreme Court.

“I think people like myself who have lost loved ones to murder, who are opposed 
to the cycle of violence continuing even through the death penalty, it’s 
important for us to tell our stories, said Rev. Jack Sullivan Jr., Executive 
Director of the Ohio Council of Churches. Sullivan’s sister, Jennifer Ann 
McCoy, was murdered 22 years ago. The perpetrator has still not been caught.

“We’re here to say, don’t kill in our names. Don’t execute in our names,” he 
added.

Earlier this year the Supreme Court bumped the case of convicted murderer Larry 
Lamont White back to the lower court in Kentucky. They want the court to look 
again at his claim of an intellectual disability as a reason to spare his life. 
Though support for capital punishment is far lower than it was just 2 decades 
ago, most Americans still favor it including many in the law enforcement 
community like the Fraternal Order of Police.

“People can continue to disagree with us but they can’t dismiss the 
experience,” said White.

According to the Pew Research Center, 54% of Americans favor the death penalty 
for people convicted of murder.

There are currently 29 prisoners in Kentucky on death row.

The last person to be executed in the Commonwealth was Marco Allen Chapman in 
2008.

(source: spectrumnews1.com)

***************************

The Law and Jesus: How Christ’s Fulfillment Of The Law Should Lead Us To Reject 
The Death Penalty



Jesus came to fulfill the law. “Think not that I have come to abolish the law 
and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfil them. For 
truly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, 
will pass from the law until all is accomplished” (Matt. 5:17-18 RSV). What he 
taught, what he expected from his disciples, flowed out of the law and the 
prophets.

Nonetheless, some might object to this, showing texts in which he appears to 
contradict the dictates of the law, such as when he said:

“You have heard that it was said, `An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ 
But I say to you, Do not resist one who is evil. But if any one strikes you on 
the right cheek, turn to him the other also; and if any one would sue you and 
take your coat, let him have your cloak as well; and if any one forces you to 
go 1 mile, go with him 2 miles. Give to him who begs from you, and do not 
refuse him who would borrow from you (Matt. 5:38-42 RSV).

When interpreting Scripture, be it the words of the Torah or the words of 
Jesus, we must look beyond the words themselves. We must discern the intended 
meaning of those words. That is, we must not be fixated on the words 
themselves. When Jesus said he fulfilled the law and the prophets, he meant 
that he fulfilled their purpose. He said what he thought would help his 
followers fulfill the goal of the law and the prophets. When he seems to 
disagree with the law and prophets, the disagreement is only in externals, in 
the letter and not the spirit of the law. To fulfill that spirit, sometimes he 
would tell his disciples something new, that is, to go beyond what Moses 
allowed, as is seen in the above passage. But we must not think he does so 
without precedent: in the book of Proverbs, we can see Jesus’ words were 
foreshadowed: “Do not say, ‘I will do to him as he has done to me; I will pay 
the man back for what he has done’” (Prov. 24:29 RSV).

St. Augustine, understanding this, suggested that when we look at Jesus’ words 
in relation to what was established in the Torah, we can see a continuum of 
teaching. Moses points us in the right direction, while Jesus offers us the 
second point of reference by which we can properly establish the conclusion we 
should seek via triangulation. Instead of seeing Moses as establishing a law of 
retributive justice, he set the stage by which vengeance would be overcome by 
forgiveness, and Jesus himself highlighted that point through his 
interpretation of the law:

And therefore he who pays back just as much as he has received already forgives 
something: for the party who injures does not deserve merely as much punishment 
as the man who was injured by him has innocently suffered. And accordingly this 
incomplete, by no means severe, but [rather] merciful justice, is carried to 
perfection by Him who came to fulfil the law, not to destroy it. Hence there 
are still 2 intervening steps which He has left to be understood, while He has 
chosen rather to speak of the very highest development of mercy. For there is 
still what one may do who does not come fully up to that magnitude of the 
precept which belongs to the kingdom of heaven; acting in such a way that he 
does not pay back as much, but less; as, for instance, 1 blow instead of 2, or 
that he cuts off an ear for an eye that has been plucked out. He who, rising 
above this, pays back nothing at all, approaches the Lord’s precept, but yet he 
does not reach it.[1] Once this point is understood, then it is easy to see how 
Jesus’ proclamation served as the fulfillment of the law because he took away 
from us all notions of vengeance. The law, following the words of St. Paul, 
helped educate humanity. Before the law, humanity did not have a proper sense 
of how to react to injustice; those who felt like they had been harmed by 
someone else could respond by inflicting a greater injury in return. This would 
easily result in a never-ending cycle of vengeance, as those who seek revenge 
would inflict greater and greater evils upon each other. With the law, the 
cycle of vengeance was put to an end, putting a limit to the kind of response 
which can be given. But then, because we are told forgo disproportionate 
retribution, we are also being trained to forgive, to overcome the anger and 
resentment which promotes such vengeance. Thus, we are meant to learn the value 
of forgiveness and grace so that we can move beyond desiring reciprocal harm 
done to those who injure us; instead, we should seek a restoration of what was 
lost. The and prophets, as well as Jesus, teach us mercy instead of strict 
retributive justice, which is exactly what we need in relation to our sins. By 
overcoming hostility and the desire for vengeance, we imitate the mercy of God, 
serving as a witness of what is possible at the eschatological judgment: “The 
Lord wants the hope of our faith, which stretches towards eternity, to be 
proven by our own deeds so that the tolerance of overlooking an injury may 
serve as a witness to the future judgment.”[2]

The call to mercy, the call to forgiveness, flows from the law because it 
points to the disposition God wanted for us when dealing with injury. “Be 
merciful, even as your Father is merciful” (Lk. 6:36 RSV). It is mercy, not 
vengeance, which we must seek. We are to leave the judgment up to God:

Repay no one evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of 
all. If possible, so far as it depends upon you, live peaceably with all. 
Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God; for it is 
written, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord” (Rom. 12: 17-19 RSV).

This message, this call to mercy, is found throughout the New Testament, and we 
are told, if we follow through with it, we will receive a blessing from God:

“Finally, all of you, have unity of spirit, sympathy, love of the brethren, a 
tender heart and a humble mind. Do not return evil for evil or reviling for 
reviling; but on the contrary bless, for to this you have been called, that you 
may obtain a blessing” (1Prtr. 3:8-9 RSV).

The Gospel message of mercy, of overcoming the retributive justice of an “eye 
for an eye,” therefore flows from the original intent of God by the pedagogy of 
the Mosaic Law. The letter of the law, when examined closely, would be 
impossible to follow, making it nonsense, as Vladimir Solovyov indicated:

The intrinsic, nonsensical nature of the doctrine of retribution or “vengeful 
justice” is brilliantly highlighted by the fact that besides only a few 
apparent cases, it has no relation at all to existing criminal laws; that is, 
it cannot be applied in reality. If juridical practice conformed to this 
doctrine, then a thief’s punishment would have to be that he is robbed. 
Although this may in general be possible, it is always unworthy and sometimes 
also impracticable – to wit: in those frequent cases when theft is committed by 
an individual in need. But in other crimes it is not even possible to devise a 
method of equal retribution. By what equal action is it possible to get even 
with a counterfeit, a false witness, a seducer of minors, a bigamist, or a 
person who moves land markers after a survey? [3] The law was useful because it 
helped set the stage by which sin could become limited; but the problem with 
retribution is that those who give it out will find that they have not 
reestablished justice but rather caused more injury to others, others who will 
then respond in kind. Instead of encouraging a cycle of retributive violence, 
the intent to stop such violence is fulfilled only by letting go of any 
retaliation: “By removing reciprocation, our Lord is cutting off the 
commencement of sins. In the Law there is retribution; in the Gospel, grace; in 
the Law faults are corrected; in the Gospel the beginnings of sins are 
removed.”[4]

Understanding this point, we begin to see that we are expected to grow up, to 
mature in our understanding and application of mercy and grace. Humanity is 
expected to learn the lesson of the law, and its interpretation by Jesus, so 
that we get beyond the “eye for an eye” mentality, a mentality which Solovyov 
explained relates to the perspective found of infants:

The criminal law theory of absolute guilt and equal retribution, with all its 
refinements, grew from the soil of the most infantile notions and is only an 
alteration of the primeval, uncivilized view. An understanding of the absolute 
or total guilt of the individual criminal, while it did not stand out in its 
subjective features was, however, present in this view. When the barbarians of 
the Middle Ages tried and punished animals, they obviously considered them to 
be entirely guilty, ascribing to them a few, malicious will: similarly, now, 
when an infant bruises himself against a wooden bench, he considers it 
completely responsible for his bruise and tries to impose upon it equal 
retribution.[5]

Jesus, far from denying the value of the law, recognized the value of the law, 
understanding how it helped shape humanity for the greater truth of mercy. Once 
we realize this, we can even understand how the law of Moses, in its literal 
form, was good for the time and place in which it was established, discerning 
that we must follow through and realize its point, no longer restrained by the 
mere letter of the law. When the Christian faith examines the point of the law, 
and says something which seems to contradict the letter of the law, we must be 
attuned to the point of the law and see if what is being promoted properly 
fulfills that point. For example, when we are told that the death penalty 
itself violates the highly developed moral character of the Christian faith, 
pointing to the letter of the law of Moses and using it to counter the spirit 
is disingenuous, even as it would be for those who would quote Moses against 
Jesus to support a continuation of the retributive justice found in the Torah. 
For as what Moses established put forth a limit to the cycle of violence by 
limiting the response due to an injury, so the way executions were allowed by 
the law limited the power of the state to execute criminals. The purpose was to 
train us, to teach us to think beyond the use of death, and this can be seen in 
the way God set up sanctuary cities in Israel to prevent absolutizing the death 
penalty itself.

In following through with the point, comprehending that we are to limit (and 
not find excuses for) the execution of criminals, the fulfillment of the law is 
to remove all such executions, to see the wielding of death by anyone is 
morally detrimental to society as a whole. The spirit of the law brings grace 
and life; the letter of the law, when the point of the law is ignored, leads to 
death; it is not the fault of the law, but the fault of those who misunderstand 
the law and want to use a good for an evil end which must be rejected. We are 
called to develop a greater moral sensibility, and this is exactly what has 
happened. St. John Paul II correctly stated that behind the dictates of the law 
is the dignity of the human person and the “inviolability of human life”:

The commandment regarding the inviolability of human life reverberates at the 
heart of the “ten words” in the covenant of Sinai (cf. Ex 34:28). In the first 
place that commandment prohibits murder: “You shall not kill” (Ex 20:13); “do 
not slay the innocent and righteous” (Ex 23:7). But, as is brought out in 
Israel’s later legislation, it also prohibits all personal injury inflicted on 
another (cf. Ex 21:12-27). Of course we must recognize that in the Old 
Testament this sense of the value of life, though already quite marked, does 
not yet reach the refinement found in the Sermon on the Mount. This is apparent 
in some aspects of the current penal legislation, which provided for severe 
forms of corporal punishment and even the death penalty. But the overall 
message, which the New Testament will bring to perfection, is a forceful appeal 
for respect for the inviolability of physical life and the integrity of the 
person. It culminates in the positive commandment.[6]

The law trains us to respect life; the law trains us to think beyond simplistic 
vengeance. The law is fulfilled when human life is respected, when even those 
who we think deserve no mercy receive the mercy of life. Christianity, and the 
world at large, has taken a long time to understand this point, and yet that is 
to be expected: our understanding of the dictates of the moral law develops in 
history, not apart from it:

Every discrete effort of the person, every step of moral activity, is an 
approach to the absolute, a moment of the realization of the moral ideal. But 
only in the combined work of many, in the collective process of history, is an 
absolute morality objectified. With such a view the process of history is also 
the process of the creation of an absolute morality.[7]

The process by which the death penalty has been rejected by modern humanity as 
being immoral began with the law of Moses. The perfection of the law is peace, 
the peace which no longer seeks vengeance but rehabilitation of those who do 
wrong. For Christians presenting this in the world, in the development of our 
understanding of the implications of Christ’s teaching and what they truly mean 
for us, we begin to point out and explain what had been lacking in previous 
ages. God is love, and desires not the death of the sinner, but their 
salvation; in the eschatological judgment, God wills not death but 
rehabilitation. The call of the Christian is to live this out in history, to 
establish rehabilitative justice in history. The dismantling of the death 
penalty is a part of the process. There are many challenges which come out of 
this. It will not be easy, but who said doing good was going to be easy?

[1] St. Augustine, “Our Lords Sermon on the Mount” in NPNF1(6):25.

[2] St. Hilary of Poitiers, Commentary on Matthew. Trans. D.H. Williams 
(Washington, DC: CUA Press, 2012), 71.

[3] Vladimir Soloviev, “Criminal Law. Its Genesis. A Critique of The Theory of 
Retribution and Deterrence” in Politics, Law & Morality. Trans. Vladimir 
Wozniuk (New Haven: Yale, 2000), 166.

[4] St. Jerome, Commentary on Matthew. Trans. Thomas P. Scheck (Washington, DC: 
CUA Press, 2008), 84.

[5] Vladimir Soloviev, “Criminal Law. Its Genesis. A Critique of The Theory of 
Retribution and Deterrence,” 161.

[6] St. John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae. Vatican translation. ¶40.

[7] D.E. Zhukovskii, “On the Question of Moral Creativity” in Problems of 
Idealism: Essays in Russian Social Philosophy. Trans. Randall A. Poole (New 
Haven: Yale University Press, 2003), 434.

(source: Henry Karlson, patheos.com)


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