By ALISON LEIGH COWAN October 28, 2007
New York Times

CHESHIRE, Conn., Oct. 25 — The United Methodist Church here is the kind of polit­i­cal­ly active place where parish­ioners take to the pul­pit to dis­cuss pover­ty in El Salvador and refugees liv­ing in Meriden. But few issues engage its pas­sions as much as the death penalty.

The last three pas­tors were oppo­nents of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Church-spon­sored adult edu­ca­tion class­es pro­mote the idea of restora­tive jus­tice,” advo­cat­ing reha­bil­i­ta­tion over pun­ish­ment. Two years ago, con­gre­gants attend­ed mid­night vig­ils out­side the prison where Connecticut exe­cut­ed a pris­on­er for the first time in 45 years.

So it might have been expect­ed that United Methodist con­gre­gants would speak out force­ful­ly when a bru­tal triple mur­der here in July led to tough new poli­cies against vio­lent crim­i­nals across the state and a pledge from pros­e­cu­tors to seek cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment against the defendants.

But the con­gre­ga­tion has been large­ly qui­et, not out of indif­fer­ence, but anguish: the vic­tims were pop­u­lar and active mem­bers of the church — Jennifer Hawke-Petit, 48, and her two daugh­ters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11. On July 23, two men broke into the family’s home. Mrs. Hawke-Petit was stran­gled and her daugh­ters died in a fire that the police say was set by the intruders.

The killings have not just stunned the con­gre­ga­tion, they have spurred qui­et debate about how it should respond to the crime and whether it should pub­licly oppose the pun­ish­ment that may fol­low. It has also caused a few to reassess how they feel about the punishment.

At the heart of the debate are ques­tions about how Mrs. Hawke-Petit’s hus­band, William, who sur­vived the attack, feels about the death penal­ty. The indi­ca­tions are con­flict­ing. Sensitive to his grief, many of the church’s most ardent cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment oppo­nents have been hes­i­tant to speak against the cap­i­tal charges brought against two parolees charged with the killings, Joshua Komisarjevsky and Steven Hayes.

I’m tread­ing light­ly out of respect for the Petit fam­i­ly,” said the church’s pas­tor, the Rev. Stephen E. Volpe, a death penal­ty oppo­nent. I do not feel we, in this church, ought to make this tragedy the ral­ly­ing cry for any­thing at this point.”

At the same time, there is a wide­spread belief that Mrs. Hawke-Petit was opposed to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Having her killers put to death would be the last thing she would want, many say.

It’d be so dis­hon­or­ing to her life to do any­thing vio­lent in her name,” said Carolyn Hardin Engelhardt, a church mem­ber who is the direc­tor of the min­istry resource cen­ter at Yale Divinity School Library. That’s not the kind of per­son she was.”

At least two church mem­bers say they think that Mrs. Hawke-Petit endorsed an anti-death-penal­ty doc­u­ment known as a Declaration of Life. The dec­la­ra­tion states a person’s oppo­si­tion to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and asks that pros­e­cu­tors, in the event of the person’s own death in a cap­i­tal crime, do not seek the death penal­ty. The doc­u­ments have been signed by thou­sands of peo­ple, includ­ing Mario M. Cuomo, the for­mer gov­er­nor of New York, and Martin Sheen, the actor.

She was a nurse and she would not cause harm to any­one,” said Lucy Earley, a con­gre­gant who nota­rized at least a dozen dec­la­ra­tions dur­ing an appeal at the church and said she thought Mrs. Hawke-Petit’s was among them.

Declarations of Life are often kept with a person’s will or oth­er impor­tant papers; some­times they are filed with reg­istries. But it could not be inde­pen­dent­ly deter­mined whether Mrs. Hawke-Petit had signed one. Although the family’s home was heav­i­ly dam­aged in the fire and no inde­pen­dent copies have sur­faced, death penal­ty oppo­nents both inside and out­side the church have kept try­ing to find one. A clear indi­ca­tion that Mrs. Hawke-Petit reject­ed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment could help them mobi­lize, they say, not only in the Cheshire case but also on behalf of the nine peo­ple on Connecticut’s death row in Somers.

The oppo­nents also say that a signed dec­la­ra­tion by Mrs. Hawke-Petit oppos­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment could help counter the pub­lic out­rage to the killings — out­rage that has pres­sured state offi­cials to sus­pend parole for violent criminals.

Still, if proof of Mrs. Hawke-Petit’s sen­ti­ments did sur­face, it would have lit­tle stand­ing in court, lawyers and prosecutors say.

Our job is to enforce the law no mat­ter who the vic­tim is or what the victim’s reli­gious beliefs are,” said John A. Connelly, a vet­er­an pros­e­cu­tor in Waterbury who is not involved in the Cheshire case. If you start­ed impos­ing the death penal­ty based on what the victim’s fam­i­ly felt, it would tru­ly become arbi­trary and capricious.”

Michael Dearington, the state’s attor­ney who is pros­e­cut­ing the sus­pects in the Petit killings, said he did not know whether Mrs. Hawke-Petit had signed a Declaration of Life. Asked if he knew Dr. Petit’s views on the death penal­ty, he replied, I have a no com­ment on that.”

Not sur­pris­ing­ly, there has been much spec­u­la­tion with­in the church about whether William Petit, a physi­cian, sup­ports cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Though he has par­tic­i­pat­ed in trib­utes to his fam­i­ly and has attend­ed church in recent weeks, Dr. Petit has not grant­ed inter­views since the killings. He’s just not ready,” his moth­er, Barbara Petit, said recently.

A friend and mem­ber of United Methodist, Dr. Phil Brewer, said he came away from a recent meet­ing with Dr. Petit with the impres­sion that his friend was strong­ly in favor of exe­cut­ing these guys, once they were found guilty.”

Dr. Brewer said that Dr. Petit had no quar­rel with indi­vid­u­als from United Methodist speak­ing out against the death penal­ty. But he would not take it kind­ly if our con­gre­ga­tion as a whole took a posi­tion against the death penal­ty,” Dr. Brewer said.

It would be seen as an effort to force him into choos­ing between being part of the con­gre­ga­tion or want­i­ng to have the death penal­ty,” he added.

At a memo­r­i­al ser­vice in September for his fam­i­ly, Dr. Petit read from the Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi, which includ­ed the pas­sage, Where there is injury, pardon.”

Some mem­bers took that as a sign that he was grap­pling with his feel­ings about capital punishment.

What real­ly took my breath away when he cit­ed the Prayer of St. Francis and either lin­gered on the word par­don’ or got stuck on the word par­don,’ ” Dr. Brewer said. There was a long pause after he spoke the word, and to me, that sig­naled that this was on his mind.”

Dr. Brewer’s wife, Dr. Karen Brown, said, I think it’s what he wants to feel, but it’s hard to get there.”

The killings have prompt­ed the church to slow down in oth­er ways. Because of sen­si­tiv­i­ties about Dr. Petit’s feel­ings, church mem­bers called off plans to invite a promi­nent death penal­ty oppo­nent to address the con­gre­ga­tion. There was also talk of skip­ping the church’s annu­al col­lec­tion of goods for hol­i­day pack­ages for local prison inmates, though con­gre­gants decid­ed to under­take the dri­ve after all. The killings have even caused some con­gre­gants to recon­sid­er their personal views.

I think we’ve all rethought it because it’s pret­ty easy to believe some­thing when it’s far away and then when some­thing hap­pens and it’s a real sit­u­a­tion you have to exam­ine what you believe,” said Dr. Brown. She said she remained opposed to capital punishment.

The Rev. Diana Jani Druck, who led the Cheshire con­gre­ga­tion from 2001 to 2005, said the Petit case would be an inter­est­ing test for the con­gre­ga­tion and the state.

The case, she said, lacks some of the fac­tors that make some peo­ple object to the death penal­ty as patent­ly unfair, like race. (The sus­pects are white, as were the Petits.) Because both defen­dants were caught flee­ing the crime scene, there may be few­er ques­tions about mis­tak­en iden­ti­ty. And the grue­some nature of the crime, com­bined with the kin­ship many con­gre­gants felt for the Petits, may stir feel­ings of vengeance even in death penal­ty oppo­nents, she said.

She her­self acknowl­edged feel­ing real vio­lent anger” when first shown pho­tographs of the sus­pects. But on reflec­tion, she said, I just don’t see what pur­pose is served in putting them to death.”

United Methodists have a long tra­di­tion of embrac­ing those on the fringes of soci­ety, and con­cern over the death penal­ty has long found a home on the denomination’s social agen­da. Dissent is per­mit­ted, but those who agree with the pol­i­cy are encour­aged to work to end capital punishment.

Mrs. Hawke-Petit was raised in that tra­di­tion. Her father, the Rev. Richard Hawke, led six Methodist con­gre­ga­tions in west­ern Pennsylvania and was the dis­trict super­in­ten­dent in Pittsburgh before retir­ing in 1994. He is an oppo­nent of capital punishment.

Four years after Jennifer and William Petit mar­ried in 1985, they bought a house in Cheshire and began to attend the local Methodist church reg­u­lar­ly. Though William remained a Roman Catholic, he was a mem­ber in every­thing but name only,” said the Rev. George C. Engelhardt, who was the congregation’s pas­tor for 29 years before becom­ing super­in­ten­dent for sev­er­al church­es in the region.

Mrs. Hawke-Petit taught Sunday school. Michaela played the flute and sang in the church’s musi­cal pro­grams. Hayley learned how to wield a drill while doing home improve­ments for the dis­abled with the church’s sum­mer teen brigade.

All four Petits par­tic­i­pat­ed in the church’s annu­al Living Nativity pageant, pos­ing as human stat­ues in the park­ing lot for 20-minute shifts in sup­port of local char­i­ties. Mrs. Hawke-Petit often played Mary or a shep­herdess. The girls were angels and Dr. Petit often played a king.

These days, when Dr. Petit attends church, his daugh­ters’ friends sit by him and take turns plac­ing a hand on his shoulder.

Many con­gre­gants expect the congregation’s strong anti-death-penal­ty sen­ti­ments to become more pub­lic as the Petit case develops.

Eventually, it’s some­thing that has to be talked about,” said Carol Wilson, a death penal­ty oppo­nent who leads sev­er­al church com­mu­ni­ty projects. We’re just not there yet.”