By BOB MAKIN
STAFF WRITER
November 28, 2007
Home News Tribune

TRENTON — More than 550 New Jersey reli­gious lead­ers — includ­ing 135 from Middlesex, Somerset, Union and Hunterdon coun­ties — are call­ing on state law­mak­ers to abol­ish the death penalty.

The reli­gious lead­ers from vary­ing faiths made their pleas in two let­ters deliv­ered Tuesday to all 120 leg­is­la­tors and Gov. Jon S. Corzine. They say the death penal­ty fails the state legal­ly, moral­ly and economically.

One let­ter, signed by more than 500 lead­ers from var­i­ous faiths, was deliv­ered and orga­nized by New Jerseyans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. The oth­er was signed by the state’s five Roman Catholic bish­ops, three aux­il­iary bish­ops and two Byzantine Catholic bish­ops and deliv­ered by the New Jersey Catholic Conference.

We write to you with the sound moral back­ing of offi­cial posi­tions tak­en by the lead­er­ship bod­ies of our var­i­ous denom­i­na­tions and faiths,” the larg­er peti­tion said. We wish to be clear, how­ev­er, that our con­cerns are sec­u­lar and prag­mat­ic, just as much as they are root­ed in our reli­gious tra­di­tions. The death penal­ty is not in the best inter­ests of our state, our jus­tice sys­tem, or the safe­ty of our people.”

The exon­er­a­tion of more than 200 death-row inmates through­out the coun­try led many to sign the larg­er peti­tion, includ­ing Rabbi Arnie Gluck of Temple Beth-El, Hillsborough; the Rev. Charles Cicerale, admin­is­tra­tor of St. James Parish, Woodbridge, and many of the Sisters of Mercy in Watchung.

God help us if we ever were to exe­cute an inno­cent per­son,” Gluck said Tuesday. That requires moral cer­tain­ty and judi­cial pro­pri­ety the likes of which our soci­ety is inca­pable of admin­is­ter­ing giv­en all the real­i­ties of our lives and our world. And there have been so many exam­ples in the last decade alone where it has been proven peo­ple on death row have been exon­er­at­ed. It leaves one in gap­ing hor­ror at the like­li­hood that numer­ous inno­cent peo­ple have been exe­cut­ed in our society.”

Sister Theresina Flannery, one of the many Sisters of Mercy who signed the Alternatives let­ter, added, Often the greater per­cent­age on death row are minor­i­ty peo­ple or the poor and une­d­u­cat­ed who don’t have cor­rect coun­sel to present their case.”

Cicerale said his posi­tion is influ­enced by say­ing Mass month­ly at East Jersey State Prison in Rahway.

While there are no death-row inmates there, pris­on­ers often speak of injus­tice, he said.

There’s always more to the rea­son why they’re behind the wall than the court would acknowl­edge,” Cicerale said. I just know and have heard of the sto­ries of injus­tice, espe­cial­ly when it involves the poten­tial exter­mi­na­tion of their life.”

Clergy mem­bers said that the death penal­ty does not serve as a deter­rent, includ­ing the Rev. Susan Veronica Rak of the Unitarian Society in East Brunswick.

I don’t know that it brings the clo­sure that peo­ple think that they are look­ing for. It seems to be more revenged-based than reha­bil­i­ta­tion- and rec­on­cil­i­a­tion-based,” Rak said.

Sister Eileen Smith, anoth­er Sister of Mercy, added, I feel very bad­ly for those who suf­fer the loss of a loved one, but I don’t believe tak­ing the life of anoth­er in any way solves anything.”

The Most Rev. Paul G. Bootkoski, the bish­op of Metuchen, co-signed the sep­a­rate bish­ops’ state­ment, which read:

Because the state of New Jersey has oth­er means to redress the injus­tice caused by crime and to effec­tive­ly pre­vent crime by ren­der­ing the one who has com­mit­ted the offense inca­pable of doing harm and because we rec­og­nize the dig­ni­ty of all human life, we con­tin­ue oppose the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment vig­or­ous­ly. Life in prison with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole is an alter­na­tive to the death penalty.”

The cler­gy’s pleas come as leg­is­la­tors pre­pare to vote in com­ing weeks on replac­ing the death penal­ty with life in prison with­out parole. If it did, New Jersey would become the first state to abol­ish the death penal­ty since it was rein­stat­ed in 1976 by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Legislators will begin to dis­cuss the issue on Monday based on the rec­om­men­da­tions released in January by the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission. The bipar­ti­san com­mis­sion also sug­gest­ed that sav­ings from repeal­ing the death penal­ty be used to assist homi­cide sur­vivors in New Jersey, which also was rec­om­mend­ed by the sign­ers of the let­ter deliv­ered by New Jerseyans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty.

For a com­plete list of par­tic­i­pat­ing cler­gy, log on to thnt​.com.

The Associated Press con­tributed to this story.