Murder victims’ family members hold a wide range of views about what justice means. For some, the death penalty holds the promise of closure, while for others, it is a source of continued trauma and uncertainty. In two recent cases, victims’ family members have publicly expressed their opposition to the death penalty, citing their religious views and need to forgive.
Will Berry was just 11 years old when Geoffrey West shot and killed his mother, Margaret Parrish Berry, during a gas station robbery in 1997. Mr. West was sentenced to death in 1999, and Alabama is scheduled to execute him on September 25, 2025. In a recent op-ed, Mr. Berry said that he opposes the execution. “That won’t bring my mother back; it will only add to the pain I have lived with since the night she was shot,” Mr. Berry wrote. “I believe there is a better way.”
“The criminal justice system is not built with victims’ needs, wishes, and well-being in mind. I know that as well as anybody, because what is being done in my name is not what I need or want.”
As Mr. Berry explains, his opposition to the execution stems from his deep Christian faith. “I believe in the teachings of Jesus and in His words on the Mount, ‘For if you forgive other people when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you,’” he explains, quoting Matthew 6:14 – 15. His mother’s death cast a shadow over his life, but Mr. Berry believes executing Mr. West would be wrong, noting that by executing Mr. West, “the state of Alabama is playing God. I don’t want anyone to exact revenge in my name, nor in my mother’s.”
What Mr. Berry says he wants most from Alabama is to meet with Mr. West face-to-face. He wants to tell Mr. West he forgives him, and he “want[s] to ask questions, both about what happened that night and about who he is as a man.” Mr. West has agreed to meet with Mr. Berry, telling Tread that he would “like to ask for [Mr. Berry’s] forgiveness” and “to tell him the truth”; however, Alabama officials have refused to allow them to meet. The state has denied Mr. Berry’s request because of his status as the victim’s son. He only learned about Mr. West’s scheduled execution when his wife read an article on social media — no one from the state attorney general’s office, nor the governor’s office, had contacted him.
Alabama officials will allow Mr. Berry to witness Mr. West’s execution at Holman Prison in Atmore, Alabama, but they will not permit them to have a conversation. “When I go to Holman, I want to speak with Mr. West heart to heart. I want to tell him I forgive him, that my mother forgives him, and that God loves him.” Mr. Berry believes his mother would support his position, noting she loved unconditionally and taught him to do the same. “The State shouldn’t take a man’s life. I know my mother and what she would want. She wouldn’t want this.” Mr. Berry sees life without parole as sufficient punishment and hopes for “an ending to this story where Mr. West and I find comfort in each other and in the healing power of forgiveness.”
Mr. Berry has called on Alabama Governor Kay Ivey to prevent Mr. West’s execution, and to allow for the healing conversations that both he and Mr. West desire. “I hope that Gov. Ivey will see her way to granting me this measure of comfort, and I pray that she will find it in herself to spare Mr. West’s life,” Mr. Berry wrote.
Like Mr. Berry, Erika Kirk, wife of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed on September 10, 2025, has relied on her religious faith to guide her through her grieving. In a speech given during a recent memorial service, Ms. Kirk talked about the person arrested for killing her husband, Tyler Robinson: “Our Savior said, ‘Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.’ That man. That young man. I forgive him. I forgive him because it was what Christ did in his. What Charlie would do. The answer to hate is not hate. The answer we know from the Gospel is love and always love.” Ms. Kirk added that many people have asked her if she wants to see Mr. Robinson sentenced to death, but she responded, “I do not want that man’s blood on my ledger.”
Megan Ziegler, Erika Kirk speaks at funeral: Watch and read full transcript, Fox News, September 21, 2025; Lee Hedgepeth, ‘Justice Denied’ and the Crimson Tide, Tread by Lee Hedgepeth, September 19, 2025; Will Berry, I don’t want Alabama to execute my mother’s killer. I don’t want revenge in my name., Alabama Reflector, September 11, 2025.