F
fre803
Guest
May a Catholic serve on a capital jury? Does anyone have any thoughts on this?
It is argued that the answer is yes because the jury merely finds facts; at most, the jury makes a sentencing recommendation, and not always that much; it is the judge who sentences.
Let’s make two assumptions: That the threshold of CCC ¶ 2267 for legitimate recourse to the death penalty cannot be met in the United States,* and for the time being, assume for sake of argument that we were having this conversation before Sumner v. Shuman eliminated death as a mandatory minimum sentence.
Now imagine that you work as a nurse in a hospital that requires, as a prerequisite to a doctor carrying out an abortion, that a nurse certify that the patient is, in fact, pregnant. A doctor decides to abort; you are asked to perform the certification requirement. No one would argue that the nurse performs the abortion, but by “finding a fact” critical to the execution of the abortion, she is a but-for cause of the abortion, an essential cog in what Justice Blackmun called the “machinery of death.” Is that not material cooperation (see, e.g., ascensionhealth.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=82%3Aprinciples-of-formal-and-material-cooperation&Itemid=171) in abortion? And if so, how might we distinguish the seemingly-identical posture of the juror in a mandatory death penalty case?
Now, of course, the mandatory death penalty was an oddity before *Sumner *and was by it extinguished. Trial judges necessarily retain the power to choose a lower sentence. Nevertheless, that sentence is still absolutely conditioned on the threshold finding of fact by the jury (that’s the teaching of *Apprendi *and its progeny—a judge cannot, to take the example of Ring v. Arizona, “upgrade” an otherwise death-ineligible defendant to death based on a sentencing factor that hasn’t been found by the jury). If the judge imposes the death penalty, does her intervening discretion of suffice to break the chain of moral responsibility, or does the juror, by finding the fact necessary to the determination to impose that sentence, afford mediate material cooperation in the death penalty?
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It is argued that the answer is yes because the jury merely finds facts; at most, the jury makes a sentencing recommendation, and not always that much; it is the judge who sentences.
Let’s make two assumptions: That the threshold of CCC ¶ 2267 for legitimate recourse to the death penalty cannot be met in the United States,* and for the time being, assume for sake of argument that we were having this conversation before Sumner v. Shuman eliminated death as a mandatory minimum sentence.
Now imagine that you work as a nurse in a hospital that requires, as a prerequisite to a doctor carrying out an abortion, that a nurse certify that the patient is, in fact, pregnant. A doctor decides to abort; you are asked to perform the certification requirement. No one would argue that the nurse performs the abortion, but by “finding a fact” critical to the execution of the abortion, she is a but-for cause of the abortion, an essential cog in what Justice Blackmun called the “machinery of death.” Is that not material cooperation (see, e.g., ascensionhealth.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=82%3Aprinciples-of-formal-and-material-cooperation&Itemid=171) in abortion? And if so, how might we distinguish the seemingly-identical posture of the juror in a mandatory death penalty case?
Now, of course, the mandatory death penalty was an oddity before *Sumner *and was by it extinguished. Trial judges necessarily retain the power to choose a lower sentence. Nevertheless, that sentence is still absolutely conditioned on the threshold finding of fact by the jury (that’s the teaching of *Apprendi *and its progeny—a judge cannot, to take the example of Ring v. Arizona, “upgrade” an otherwise death-ineligible defendant to death based on a sentencing factor that hasn’t been found by the jury). If the judge imposes the death penalty, does her intervening discretion of suffice to break the chain of moral responsibility, or does the juror, by finding the fact necessary to the determination to impose that sentence, afford mediate material cooperation in the death penalty?
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- The contrary suggestion that a Catholic is Witherspoon-qualified unless she “believes [that] the death penalty is never appropriate under any circumstances … which is neither the position of the Catechism of the Catholic Church,” Gerard Uelmen,* Catholic Jurors and the Death Penalty*, 44 J. Cath. L. Studies 355, 361-62 (2005), seems parochial insofar as it conflates “under any circumstances” with “under any reasonably-foreseeable circumstances in the United States.”