It’s customary in most modern societies to not hold people responsible for crimes they have not yet committed. It’s not a trade-off and nobody knows if Jitka Vesel would have been spared if the death penalty had not been abolished. To know so would require omniscience.
Also, there is absolutely no way for human beings to determine if a person is guilty “beyond any doubt.” How do you suggest juries determine this? There is always doubt because human beings are, once again, not omniscient. “Beyond any doubt” implies God-like knowledge. We don’t have that. And that is why the only perfect judge is God.
Church teaching, as reflected in the CCC, states that the death penalty is appropriate when the innocent cannot be protected in any other way. We have the means to keep the innocent protected and this is what we should be doing. We should also be working to eliminate the inequities apparent in trials (racism, poverty, unethical behavior by judges, attorneys, the press, and others).
RESPONSIBILITY FOR CRIMES NOT YET COMMITTED: No, I am advocating tailoring the punishment for the crime that
has been committed to achieve both just punishment and societal protection.
JITKA VESEL’S DEATH: We
can** know that Vesel’s life would have been spared if there had been a death penalty in Illinois; her killer said so (see below.)
“BEYOND ANY DOUBT” DOES NOT REQUIRE GOD-LIKE KNOWLEDGE: Is there really any doubt that Timothy McVeigh blew up the federal building in Oklahoma? Is there any possible doubt about the guilt of the two men just sentenced to death for raping and incinerating Dr. Petit’s wife and daughters? The death penalty should not be imposed if that level of certainty is not present.
CATHOLIC TEACHING: Still allows the death penalty when it is the only way to protect the innocent. The argument is about whether the “innocent” must be restricted to future victims of the criminal for whom the death sentence is contemplated, or whether people like Jikta Vesel and future rape and abduction victims may be considered in the moral formula.
HERE IS WHAT DREW MY ATTENTION TO THE VESEL MURDER: Opponents of capital punishment deny its potential for prevention. Sister Helen Prejean spoke at a March, 2011 luncheon sponsored by the Center for Restorative Justice Works at St. Angela Marici Parish in Brea, California. She is known for her book, “Dead Man Walking,” that recounts her spiritual guidance of Elmo Patrick Sonnier before his execution.
Eight people from the Diocese of San Bernardino staff attended the event, and the diocesan newspaper enthusiastically covered the meeting. It reported that “Sr. Prejean spoke excitedly about the recent repeal of the death penalty in Illinois and urged California Catholics to push for the same in their state.” [California Senator Lori Hancock has introduced such a bill.]
Less than a month later, Jitka Vesel was murdered in Illinois. DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin revealed that, “The defendant did indicate that he researched whether Illinois had a death penalty and the defendant was aware that the death penalty had recently been abolished, so he knew then that he could go through with this plan.”
Sonnier makes an especially bad poster child for abolition activists. After raping a teenage girl, Sonnier and his brother killed her and her boyfriend because Sonnier did not want to go back to prison. He risked his life for that extra chance of avoiding apprehension. He represents the segment of criminals for whom the death penalty is not a deterrent. But the killer of Jitka Vesel represents the segment for whom the death penalty is a deciding factor. Is it not obvious that, without the death penalty, more rape victims and abducted children would be killed to improve the perpetrators’ chances of avoiding arrest?
It is a fundamental truth of human nature that we use less of things as the price increases; the economists call this “marginal demand.” True, not everyone buys a car that uses less gas, and not every murderer lays down his weapon for fear of the costly penalty of death. But, when one does, a life is saved.
The abolitionists have one good argument – the remote possibility that an innocent person could be sentenced to death because he was found guilty “beyond a reasonable doubt.” This problem could be resolved by changing the death penalty standard to “beyond any doubt.” Some murderers would then escape execution, but the lifesaving deterrence of the death penalty would be retained, and the fear of its unjust application removed.
In the end, it really
is a trade-off. Whose life should pay for a vicious murder, the murderer’s, or that of an innocent victim like Vesel, who would have been spared if the death penalty had not been abolished?**