death penalty news

December 30, 2004


USA:

- book review -

Dead men walking away from justice - Sister Helen Prejean tries again to 
stop the death penalty in America

By Steve Weinberg

When an obscure nun from Louisiana named Helen Prejean wrote the 
bestselling book "Dead Man Walking" 12 years ago, she was amazed that her 
words could spawn a passionate debate about the death penalty. A year 
later, the movie version led to an Academy Award for Susan Sarandon as 
Sister Helen and sparked an expansion of the debate. Now comes a sequel of 
sorts.

Prejean's editor said during a recent meeting, "With the publication of 
'Dead Man Walking,' we opened the national conversation about the death 
penalty. With 'The Death of Innocents,' we're going to catalyze public 
discourse that will end the death penalty."

Maybe. But it probably will not turn out to be that simple. The core of her 
new book rests on two state-sponsored executions, one in Louisiana, one in 
Virginia. Prejean came to know the men convicted of murder, Dobie Gillis 
Williams and Joseph Roger O'Dell, when each requested her as an official 
spiritual adviser. She became convinced that each man was innocent, making 
their executions unimaginably horrible for her.

In the abstract, Prejean's polemic is filled with logic: If there is any 
possibility that governments have executed or will execute innocent 
defendants, then the death penalty must be abolished because it's irreversible.

Moving beyond the abstract, journalists like myself who have written 
extensively about wrongful convictions understand that innocent defendants 
have been executed - before DNA testing could prove prosecutors wrong; 
before we grasped the frequency of mistaken eyewitness testimony, false 
confessions, and the lies of jailhouse snitches cutting secret deals with 
district attorneys.

Unfortunately, though, Prejean's reportage is less compelling than her 
logic. Her presentation of the Williams and O'Dell cases show questionable 
conduct by police, prosecutors, and judges, to be sure. But, after reading 
each account, I am uncertain about the innocence of either dead defendant. 
That uncertainty, should it exist in the minds of other readers, will make 
it difficult to generate new opposition to the death penalty.

For the sake of debate, let us assume for a few paragraphs that Prejean's 
instincts are wrong, that Williams and O'Dell were guilty of murder. In 
that case, did they deserve to be killed by the state?

This is where the polemic becomes as much faith-based and law-based as 
fact-based. Prejean ranges wide, discussing the teachings of her own 
Catholicism as well as other organized religions, the intent of the US 
Constitution's drafters, the defensibility of dozens of Supreme Court 
decisions, the personal moral codes of court justices such as Antonin 
Scalia (her preeminent whipping boy) and Harry Blackmun (her judicial 
exemplar).

Are state-sponsored executions always morally wrong, even when a guilty 
defendant has committed a heinous murder, sometimes combined with sexual 
degradation before or after the homicide? Yes, Prejean says. For her, no 
sound reasoning, on any level of abstraction, can support the death penalty.

Her new book is almost certain to promote reflection rather than harden 
positions because Prejean commands respect. She left a comfortable 
upbringing to join the Sisters of St. Joseph of Medaille. Next, she left a 
comfortable position within her religious order to live in squalor, 
assisting poverty-ridden, nearly hopeless urban residents left in the 
backwash of politicians' empty promises. She answered affirmatively when 
asked to counsel the condemned, despite knowing she would be haunted by 
nightmares the remainder of her life. Risking calumny, she also began 
counseling the families of murder victims, despite the hatred some family 
members directed at her for befriending murderers.

Unlike most participants in the death penalty debate, Prejean has mingled 
with every type of person involved, including the prison wardens and the 
guards who actually extinguish lives under color of law. Because of her 
actions and the impassioned yet thoughtful words arising from those 
actions, she continues to deserve an audience.

Steve Weinberg is a freelance investigative journalist who writes 
frequently about the criminal justice system.

The Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions
Sister Helen Prejean
Random House310 pp.

(source: Christian Science Monitor)

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