Latest federal execution spearheaded by Catholic judiciary officials
In now-typical fashion, the U.S. government worked late into the night yesterday to vacate a stay of execution for Orlando Cordia Hall, a Black man convicted by an all-White jury in 1996.
He was thereafter executed, at 11:47 p.m.
Orlando Cordia Hall Executed for 1994 Kidnapping and Murder of 16-Year-Old Girlhttps://t.co/UHN1ZKuQx6
— Justice Department (@TheJusticeDept) November 20, 2020
The Supreme Court is responsible for vacating such stays, and last night's proceedings included several Catholics justices voting, at least functionally, in favor of the execution.
These included Chief Justice John Roberts, as well as Associate Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Samuel Alito, Brett Kavanaugh, and the Black Catholic Clarence Thomas.
This is despite Pope Francis updating the Catholic Catechism in 2018 to refer to the death penalty as "inadmissible".
The three more liberal Supreme Court Justices, all appointed by Democrat presidents, voted in favor of the stay. One of them, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, is also a Catholic.
Tried and convicted in Texas for a 1994 kidnapping, rape, and murder, Hall was sentenced to death following an allegedly unconstitutional striking of Black candidates from the jury pool.
Hall joined several other victims of the recent reinstatement and full use of capital punishment by Attorney General Barr and the U.S. Justice Department, following a 16-year hiatus.
Barr himself is a Catholic as well.
Hall supporters from around the country have reacted in sorrow to the news of his execution, with many protesting that the death penalty is counter-productive, un-Christian, and functionally racist. These include notable anti-execution activists Sister Helen Prejean and Protestant activist Shane Claiborne.
Executions do not deter crime. In fact, violent crime rates are higher on average in death penalty states than in non-death penalty states. Some criminologists even attribute a marked *increase* in violent crime after an execution to the bad example set when the government kills.
— Sister Helen Prejean (@helenprejean) November 19, 2020
Orlando Hall has been executed. Prayers go out tonight to all who loved him, & to the family of Lisa Rene.
— Shane Claiborne (@ShaneClaiborne) November 20, 2020
The death penalty does not heal the wounds of violence. It only creates new wounds.
Let us renew our commitment to end the scourge of the death penalty, once & for all.
President-elect Joe Biden, also a practicing Catholic, has pledged to help suspend the practice during his administration, scheduled to begin next year.
The Justice Department plans to carry out two more executions between now and Biden's inauguration, including another African-American, Brandon Bernard, and Lisa Montgomery—the only woman on death row.
Courts get things wrong. In the U.S., our Supreme Court upheld slavery, Jim Crow, forced sterilization, anti-miscegenation laws, forced internment, and more. These decisions were eventually overturned and repudiated. One day, the same will happen with the death penalty.
— Sister Helen Prejean (@helenprejean) November 20, 2020