Catholic anti-death penalty group hosts discussion featuring death row exonerees

 

Panelists (from left) Rev. Dr. Jack Sullivan Jr., Debra Milke, and Randal Padgett at an Oct. 23, 2023, Catholic Mobilizing Network event at Xavier University’s Bellarmine Chapel in Cincinnati. / Credit: Catholic Mobilizing Network

CNA Staff, Oct 24, 2023 / 17:30 pm (CNA).

A Catholic organization hosted a panel discussion Monday night featuring two death row exonerees and the brother of a murder victim who all spoke about their belief that the U.S. death penalty is fallible, perpetuates a cycle of violence in society, and should be ended.

Catholic Mobilizing Network, a national group that demonstrates against the death penalty, hosted the Oct. 23 event at Xavier University’s Bellarmine Chapel in Cincinnati in partnership with several other anti-death penalty organizations. Nearly 200 innocent people have been exonerated and freed from death row across the United States since executions resumed in 1976, the group says.

The panelists who were death row exonerees were Randal Padgett and Debra Milke, both of whom spoke passionately about how hard it has been to suffer through their wrongful convictions at the hand of the government and how they would like to see the justice system change and move away from capital punishment.

Panelists speak at an Oct. 23, 2023, Catholic-organized anti-death penalty event at Xavier University’s Bellarmine Chapel in Cincinnati. Credit: Catholic Mobilizing Network
Panelists speak at an Oct. 23, 2023, Catholic-organized anti-death penalty event at Xavier University’s Bellarmine Chapel in Cincinnati. Credit: Catholic Mobilizing Network

The discussion took place within the context of lawmakers in the state of Ohio considering two bipartisan bills to abolish the death penalty, House Bill 259 and Senate Bill 101. The Ohio Catholic Conference, which advocates for policy on behalf of Ohio’s Catholic bishops, has urged Catholics to support the bills, noting the Church’s teaching on the importance of “upholding the inherent dignity and sacredness of every human life from conception to natural death.”

Padgett, an Alabama native, said he was “raised right” and never expected to get in trouble with the law. But in the early 1990s, when he was 40, his wife was murdered and sexually assaulted while Padgett was not at home, but Padgett was immediately pegged as a suspect. Despite evidence in his favor, he was convicted and sentenced to death in 1992.

Padgett appealed and won his case after it came to light that the state had withheld exculpatory evidence, but despite winning his appeal on the first step, it still took nearly six years before he was freed. Padgett has said that he credits his strong religious faith with sustaining him through his ordeal.

“God tells me I gotta forgive, or I won’t be forgiven,” he said during the panel discussion.

Milke, a single mother from Arizona, was falsely accused of the murder of her 4-year-old son. She was convicted of the crime, she says, after a detective fabricated a confession. She was sentenced to death, spending 22 years on death row. She was released in 2013 and exonerated in 2015.

Milke said her father worked for the state prison system and that he believed the police’s word over hers, withholding any support from his daughter during her ordeal. While her father was on his deathbed, Milke was able to write him a letter explaining that she forgave him for abandoning her to her fate, she said. Meanwhile, Milke’s mother drained her retirement fund to help her with her legal fees, she added.

Even if a convicted criminal is ultimately put to death, families of the victims are left with pain and anger, she noted. In addition, Milke said, she was herself a victim of a horrible crime — the murder of her son — and had the additional suffering placed on her of having to fight the wrongful murder charge.

“I still don’t have my son, and I’m still suffering his loss every single day,” she said, holding back tears.

The panel also featured Jack Sullivan Jr., a Protestant minister with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and executive director of the Ohio Council of Churches, a statewide coalition of 18 denominations. Sullivan’s sister, Jennifer, was killed in the 1990s in a shooting, a murder which to this day remains unsolved.

Sullivan, who also sits on the advisory council of the Catholic Mobilizing Network, told CNA ahead of the event that he has been protesting the death penalty by holding peaceful prayer vigils on the night of executions since the 1980s with the message: “Don’t kill in our name.”

He said that experiencing his sister’s death — and seeing her body in the morgue — helped him to understand that he and his family “don’t want to put another family through the pain that we experienced” of having to bury a family member, even if that person is a murderer.

“We don’t believe that killing to show that killing is wrong is morally right,” he explained. “And we also believe in the potential for human transformation as enacted by God in people’s lives.”

“Executions are really more along the lines of vengeance and retaliation and retribution than they are justice … they don’t bring about any sense of healing or wholeness to murder victim families,” Sullivan said.

The death penalty, he said, “creates a cycle of violence that never seems to end.”

“If anybody has any reason to support the death penalty, it would be us,” he continued, referring to the families of murder victims.

“And yet here we are as people who have been impacted forever by the murder of our loved ones…saying together, ‘We don’t believe in revenge, we don’t believe in retaliation. We believe in accountability, but not through lethal means,’” Sullivan said.

He said he also has studied and believes the arguments that the death penalty is unequally applied in the U.S., with people of minority races and the poor suffering the most from its effects.

“We want to make sure that the right people are arrested and tried and convicted, not the most convenient,” he added.

Sullivan said despite not being a Catholic himself, he knows that many Protestants who oppose the death penalty were gratified by the change that Pope Francis made to the Catechism of the Catholic Church in 2018 in which he described the death penalty as “inadmissible” and an “attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person.”

“When Pope Francis said the death penalty was inadmissible, many of us Protestants, we cheered, and we applauded Pope Francis for coming out with that understanding,” Sullivan said.

“In a sense, he became our pope when he made that declaration.”

Sullivan also said he has been privileged to work together with many Catholic laypeople, priests, religious sisters, and others who work for an end to the death penalty.

“I see them and I salute them, and it’s a pleasure and honor to work alongside [them],” he said.


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1 Comment

  1. In a message dated 10/23/2023 12:27:07 PM CDT, sharpjfa@aol.com writes:

    Xavier U: Anti-Death Penalty Disaster – Deceptions or Astounding Willful Ignorance? Tell us.

    To: James and Delrose Eigel, Eigel Center, Xavier U
    Xavier U’s Dept. of Theology, Pre-Law Program, Pre-Law Society, the Psi/Chi Psychology club
    and the Criminal Justice Society
    Ignite Peace
    St. Xavier High School, Cincinnati
    1N5
    Governor Mike DeWine, staff and cabiinet 
    Lt. Governor John Husted
    Attorney General Dave Yost
    Ohio House and Senate 
    Ohio Legislative Support Commission
    Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association
    Ohio Association of Police Chiefs
    Buckeye State Sheriffs’ Association
    All Archdiocese/Diocese of Ohio  
    Ohio Right to Life
    Editors & Reporters. Media in Ohio
    bcc: many more, at bottom

    CC: Angela Gray-Girton Director, Eigel Center for Community-Engaged Learning
    Sheena Steckl Faculty Director, Eigel Center for Community-Engaged Learning

    Emma Kramer Operations Coordinator Alumni
    Bcc: All Eigel Center Mini-Grant Recipients, 2019-2022
    All Deans and Dept. Chairs, Xavier U

    Subject: Eigel Center/Xavier U: Anti-Death Penalty Disaster – Deceptions or Astounding Willful Ignorance? Tell us.

    RE: Innocent on Death Row: Reflections on the Death Penalty, Presented by Eigel Center, Monday, October 23, 7:00PM, in Bellarmine Chapel, Xavier U

    From:  Dudley Sharp, independent researcher, death penalty expert, former opponent, 832-439-2113, CV at bottom 

    Dear Mr. & Mrs Eigel:

    It appears the Eigel Center did no fact checking, vetting nor use critical thinking regarding the Featured Speakers, below, nor did they with their description, here: Is it a standard, a pattern or an anomaly?

    Eigel Center: “Nearly 200 innocent people have been exonerated from death row in the U.S. since 1976.”

    Untrue: Fully rebutted here:

    The Death Row “Exonerated”/”Innocent” Frauds 
     71-83% Error Rate in Death Row “Innocent” Claims, 
    Well Known Since 1998
    https://prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2021/04/the-exoneratedinnocent-frauds.html 

    The Featured Speakers of Eigel Center (EC):

    1) “Debra Milke, death row exoneree”

    Milke has never been exonerated and cannot be. Why would she hide and destroy evidence? Guess.

    From Milke’s father: She “was never meant to be a mother and if given the opportunity to have more children, she would probably continue to murder again.” (1)

    From Milke’s sister: “(Milke) would lock (her son) Christopher outside their home naked if he messed up his pant . . .once taped a pacifier to his mouth to keep him from splitting it out . . .  (Milke) would throw Christopher across the room as discipline and deprive him of medicine because she was angry that he would get sick .. .  ‘would admittedly and purposely give day-care providers wrong residential and telephone information in hopes that she would be able to stay away from the child for greater periods of time.” (1)

    Then this:

    Judge threatens to dismiss Debra Milke’s wrongful conviction suit over claims she destroyed and hid evidence, Robert Anglen,  Arizona Republic, Sept. 18,2020
    https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona-investigations/2020/09/18/federal-judge-threatens-dismissal-debra-milkes-wrongful-conviction-suit-against-phoenix/5827767002/ 

    Debra Milke’s wrongful conviction lawsuit against Phoenix dismissed by federal judge, Robert Anglen, Arizona Republic, updated Nov 1, 2020 https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/phoenix/2020/10/31/debra-milke-wrongful-conviction-lawsuit-against-phoenix-dismissed-federal-judge/6096393002/

    2) “Randal Padgett, death row exoneree”

    I was not able find any official, government source that Padgett had been exonerated or that he was compensated based upon his being convicted as a factually innocent person. I have not finished my review. I suspect EC did none.

    Please refer to “The Death Row “Exonerated”/”Innocent” Frauds”, to see how common frauds are and how you can uncover them and how to confirm factual innocence.

    3) Featured Speaker Rev. Dr. Jack Sullivan, Jr., Board Chair for Journey of Hope – From Violence to Healing, and brother of a murder victim

    As Rev. Sullivan is aware, I have rebutted all of his anti-death penalty claims, repeatedly, with no rebuttal from him, and have challenged him to debate twice (9/23/2019, 6/22/2021), with no reply from him. Emails upon request.

    It is clear why that is the case.

    My rebuttal of all his points as well as to the vast majority of anti-death penalty claims. can be found, here:

    Research, w/sources, w/fact checking/vetting & critical thinking, as required of everyone.  

    The Death Penalty: Justice & Saving More Innocents
    https://prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-death-penalty-justice-saving-more.html
    and
    Students, Academics & Journalists: Death Penalty Research
    https://prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2022/01/students-death-penalty-research.html
    ================
    FN

    1) Sorry, I’m shedding no tears for Debra Milke Laurie Roberts, Arizona Republic, March 24, 2015
    https://www.azcentral.com/story/laurieroberts/2015/03/24/debra-milke-speaks/70379868/ 
     ======
    600+ pro death penalty quotes from murder victim’s families &
    3300+ from some of the greatest thinkers in history
    http://prodpquotes.info/ 
    ====== 
    Victim Services
    https://prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2023/03/victim-services.html  

    Victims’ Voices
    https://www.marsyslaw.us/victims_voices 
    ======
    Partial CV
    https://prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2021/08/partial-cv-dudley-sharp-independent.html 

    BCC: Many more
    Ohio’s SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE,
    House Criminal Justice Committee, 
    SENATE COMMUNITY REVITALIZATION COMMITTEE, 
    House Finance Subcommittee on Public Safety,  
    Joint Correctional Institution Inspection Committee
    Ohio Right to Life
    Ohio Crime Victim Justice Center
    Parents of Murdered Children  (Central & Northwest Ohio & Greater Cincinnati Chapters
    Associated Press Society of Ohio
    Press Club of Cleveland
    Ohioans to Stop Executions, Board of Directors & Rev. Dr. Jack Sullivan Jr.
    Cincinnati NAACP
    Law faculty, Law emeritus and visiting faculty, U of Akron, School of Law
    Other Colleges and Universities
    Ohio Justice and Policy Center 
    Swing State Strategies
    YWCA Cincinnati

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