Family mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims share no sin­gle, uni­form response to the death penal­ty, but two recent pub­li­ca­tions illus­trate that a grow­ing num­ber of these fam­i­lies are now advo­cat­ing against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. In From Death Into Life, a fea­ture arti­cle in the January 8, 2018 print edi­tion of the Jesuit mag­a­zine America, Lisa Murtha pro­files the sto­ries of how sev­er­al promi­nent vic­tim-advo­cates against the death penal­ty came to hold those views. And in a recent­ly released com­pi­la­tion of essays, Not in Our Name, nine fam­i­ly mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims share their sto­ries of cop­ing, griev­ing, and rec­on­cil­i­a­tion in the face of los­ing a loved one to mur­der, and tell how their expe­ri­ences trans­formed their views about cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. While each has endured the extreme pain of los­ing a loved one to mur­der, they all are staunch­ly opposed to what they say is more vio­lence in the form of a state-sanc­tioned exe­cu­tion and a death penal­ty,” said Ron Steiner, leader of Oregonians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, which released the essays in November. The death penal­ty is often char­ac­ter­ized as pro­vid­ing jus­tice and clo­sure for fam­i­ly mem­bers of the vic­tims. But, Murtha writes, for many, the death penal­ty pro­vides nei­ther the clo­sure nor the heal­ing that legal and polit­i­cal sys­tems often­times promise. Instead, a grow­ing num­ber of vic­tims’ fam­i­lies are say­ing it inhibits that heal­ing.” Murtha reports on the dif­fer­ent rea­sons offered by five dif­fer­ent vic­tims’ fam­i­lies who spoke out against the death penal­ty in 2016. One learned how pro­found­ly the mur­der­er had changed in prison, anoth­er just want­ed the appeals to stop and anoth­er dis­cov­ered that the men orig­i­nal­ly con­vict­ed of the crime were actu­al­ly inno­cent,” she writes. Murtha also recounts the emo­tion­al jour­neys of Bob Curley, Marietta Jaeger Lane, and Bill Pelke, who are now vocal oppo­nents of the death penal­ty. After his 10-year-old son Jeffrey was mur­dered, Curley launched a years-long cru­sade to rein­state cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Massachusetts, believ­ing the death penal­ty might pre­vent some­thing like this from hap­pen­ing [again].” He came to oppose the death penal­ty after see­ing that the man he believed was less cul­pa­ble for the death of his son received a harsh­er sen­tence and became con­vinced that the sys­tem is just not fair” and could not be trust­ed to reach the right result in cap­i­tal cas­es. Lane, a life­long prac­tic­ing Catholic, said she ini­tial­ly want­ed to kill the man who abduct­ed and mur­dered her 7‑year old daugh­ter, but she said, I sur­ren­dered [and] did the only thing I could do, which was [give] God per­mis­sion to change my heart.” Pelke’s 78-year-old grand­moth­er was robbed and mur­dered by group of teenage girls, and 15-year-old Paula Cooper was sen­tenced to death. Pelke was con­vinced his grand­moth­er would have had love and com­pas­sion for Paula Cooper and her fam­i­ly and that she want­ed me to have that same sort of love and com­pas­sion. I learned the most impor­tant les­son of my life .… I didn’t have to see some­body else die in order to bring heal­ing from Nana’s death.”

A University of Minnesota study found that just 2.5% of vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers report­ed achiev­ing clo­sure as a result of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, while 20.1% said the exe­cu­tion did not help them heal. Another study, pub­lished in the Marquette Law Review, found that fam­i­ly mem­bers in homi­cide pro­ceed­ings in which the death penal­ty was unavail­able were phys­i­cal­ly, psy­cho­log­i­cal­ly, and behav­ioral­ly more healthy and expressed greater sat­is­fac­tion with the legal sys­tem than fam­i­ly mem­bers in death-penalty cases.

(Lisa Murtha, These fam­i­lies lost loved ones to vio­lence. Now they are fight­ing the death penal­ty., America Magazine, December 28, 2017; Family of mur­der vic­tims write in oppo­si­tion to death penal­ty, Catholic Sentinel, January 9, 2018.) See Victim Resources.

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