On May 9, 2024, Pope Francis announced the Jubilee Year 2025 in a ceremony at St. Peter’s Basilica. The theme for this Jubilee year: Pilgrims of Hope.
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A district judge who presided over Melissa Lucio’s capital murder case, recommended to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals that her conviction be overturned.
Read the remarkable winning poems today, written by three young advocates.
Nearly 84% of all exonerations last year (127.153) were persons of color. Nearly 61% (93/153) were Black.
In the Fall of 2021, Pope Francis announced the historic Synod on Synodality — a journey for the global Church which is rooted in listening and dialogue. Immediately, it was clear that this model was integrally connected to the practices and principles of restorative justice.
Louisiana has not executed any individual since 2010. Under the leadership of newly-elected Governor Jeff Landry, that might change.
Anthony Ray Hinton, author of The Sun Does Shine: How I Found Life, Freedom, and Justice, spent 30 years on death row in Alabama for a crime he did not commit.
Calling all poets ages 18-30. Submit your poem about the injustice of the death penalty by March 25 for a chance to win $1,000.
Kenny was restrained to a gurney with an industrial-grade respirator mask strapped to his face. The valve on the respirator was closed, and pure nitrogen gas was forced into the mask. Without oxygen, Kenny suffocated to death.
On January 25, Alabama plans to execute Kenneth “Kenny” Eugene Smith using the untested execution method of nitrogen hypoxia. Kenny is a human being, not an experiment. It’s confounding the lengths to which Alabama is going to take his life.
The United Nations shared in a press release that a group of experts who volunteer their skills to advise the UN Human Rights Council on specific issues across the world were "alarmed" at the possibility that Alabama might use the untested method of nitrogen hypoxia to execute Kenneth (Kenny) Eugene Smith on January 25.
The Death Penalty Information Center's annual report shows an increase in American opposition to the death penalty, and only a handful of state's which continue to conduct executions.
Nitrogen asphyxiation, or death by nitrogen hypoxia, is a process in which an individual is fitted with a mask and forced to breathe pure nitrogen gas.
This series of events, which took place at universities in states that are highly significant to the death penalty abolition movement, brought CMN staff to Loyola University in New Orleans, Louisiana; the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio, Texas; and Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Commutations may be unlikely now after the Board of Pardons and Committee on Parole voted to deny hearings for five of these clemency applicants on Friday, October 13.
Scroll through highlights from the 2023 National Catholic Conference on Restorative Justice in Minneapolis, MN.
There's no better time than Respect Life Month (October) to lift up the Catholic Church's anti-death penalty teachings. Get started with these resources from CMN!
October 10 is “World Day Against the Death Penalty,” a day where people across the globe will gather to oppose capital punishment.
Join CMN in kicking off Respect Life Month with nine days of prayer for the abolition of capital punishment.
In June 2023, 56 of the 57 individuals on Louisiana's death row filed applications for clemency en masse.
Take a look at some of the many successes and achievements CMN accomplished with your help in this past year.
This photo series takes a look into the 4-day training in restorative circles.
Beginning in Fall 2023, CMN will host a series of speaking events at Catholic colleges in states with active death penalty status that are of great importance to the death penalty abolition movement.
Registration is now open! Join us October 5-7, 2023 in Minneapolis, MN.
Catholic Mobilizing Network was honored to receive the “Legacy of the Martyrs Award” from Ignatian Solidarity Network (ISN) at their annual award event, Ignite: A Celebration of Justice, in New York City on May 10, 2023.
Shield laws such as this one hide the life-threatening system of capital punishment behind a veil of secrecy.
CMN continues to monitor this evolving case of Richard Glossip, who has maintained his innocence for the 25 years he has spent on death row.
Governor Ron DeSantis signed into law a bill, SB 450, which removes jury unanimity requirements in the sentencing phase of capital trials.
Young Catholics ages 18-30 are invited to submit a poem on the injustice of the death penalty for a chance to win. Poems must be entered by May 1, 2023.
Lacking access to lethal injection drugs, Idaho turns to new methods of execution.
What is “justice” when one human life has been irreversibly taken by another?
Attorney General Gentner Drummond has slowed Oklahoma's reckless and hurried pace of one execution per month.
The Vatican announced last week that Pope Francis has personally invited heads of state to grant clemency to prisoners this Christmas season.
The 2022 annual report by Death Penalty Information Center outlines both the grave realities of the death penalty in the U.S. and hopeful progress for its abolition.
Outgoing Gov. Brown commuted the sentences of the 17 individuals who remained on the state's death row to life without the possibility of parole.
The bi-annual UN resolution for a global death penalty moratorium is up for a vote, and advocates are urging the U.S. to vote "yes."
After two failed execution attempts, Gov. Kay Ivey calls for a review of Alabama execution protocol.
In his first formal address in Bahrain, the Holy Father condemned its use of the death penalty, which has increased significantly in the past decade.
An uncommonly aggressive execution schedule in November places six lives at risk. Read more to learn how you can take action.
A report released by the Death Penalty Information Center places Oklahoma's death penalty in historical context.
On World Day Against the Death Penalty, more than 200 people joined CMN to celebrate three anti-death penalty champions at the Apostolic Nunciature in Washington, DC.
Scroll through highlights from CMN's celebration on World Day Against the Death Penalty at the Vatican Embassy in Washington, DC.
CMN invites Catholics to join in a Novena to End the Death Penalty from October 1–9, to pray for all of those who are affected by capital punishment.
On Friday, September 16, Catholic Mobilizing Network (CMN) kicked-off the brand new Restorative Justice (RJ) Ministry Community of Practice.
Pope Francis calls for global abolition of the death penalty in his historic prayer intention for the month of September.
Congratulations to all this year's winners!
A recent court decision has opened the door for Oklahoma to move forward with executions at a shocking pace.
The Catholic Church administered 80 boarding schools that forcibly removed Native children from their families and stripped them of their tribal affiliations and identities.
“We give thanks to God that Melissa will not be executed this week and that she will soon have the opportunity for a new trial to prove her innocence."
South Carolina plans to resume executions for the first time in over 10 years, and firing squad may be the method of execution.
Next month, Arizona intends to resume executions for the first time since 2014, and their newly refurbished gas chamber could be used as the method of execution.
CMN is grateful to all those who stand at the foot of the cross, bearing witness to Christ's execution and the state-sanctioned killings in our time.
Gov. Andy Beshear signs into law legislation that exempts people with severe mental illness from receiving the death penalty.
Texas plans to execute Melissa Lucio on April 27, 2022 — even though she may well be innocent.
The Justice & Mercy Poetry Contest invites young Catholics to submit an original poem about the death penalty for a chance to win.
February 23, 2022 | With Lent just around the corner, we put together a few opportunities for you to help end the death penalty and promote restorative justice.
The U.S. is at a crossroads when it comes to the federal death penalty. But Catholics can make national decision makers aware that abolition is still a priority for people of faith.
Feb. 17, 2022 | A Utah House committee failed to pass death penalty abolition bill HB 147 Monday in a vote of 6-5. The vote came after hours of testimony from advocates and opponents of the legislation.
A new podcast from Catholic Mobilizing Network called Encounters With Dignity is helping grow Catholics’ understanding of restorative justice and encouraging listeners to engage with restorative practices.
Jan. 28, 2022 | Bishop Oscar Solis of Salt Lake City affirmed abolition legislation in Utah, calling it "a critical step to building a deeper culture of life across our state.”
Catholic Floridians should urge their lawmakers to support S.B. 770 and H.B. 1251, which would help prevent people with serious mental illness from receiving the death penalty.
It affirms significant advancements toward death penalty abolition in 2021, alongside a few concerning instances of backslides into executions.
Restorative practices have much to offer the Synod on Synodality’s two-year process of listening and dialogue.
Just hours before Julius Jones was set to be executed Thursday, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt commuted his death sentence to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Join CMN this November and December for a free webinar series unpacking practical components of restorative justice approaches in ministry.
Oklahoma took the life of John Marion Grant Thursday in what turned out to be a problematic execution that left Mr. Grant convulsing repeatedly and vomiting before his death.
From diocesan and parish-wide initiatives to individual actions by people the pews, here are a few ways that Catholics advocated against the death penalty this Respect Life Month.
Among other pressing issues, many Catholics hope the pontiff and Catholic president will discuss the U.S. death penalty — specifically, the importance of President Biden commuting the sentences of all those on the federal death row.
Faith communities across Ohio prepare for Death Penalty Abolition Week for Ohio Faith Communities, observed October 8-17, 2021.
On Sept. 20, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals announced it had scheduled seven dates of execution between Oct. 28, 2021 and Mar. 10, 2022, including a Nov. 18 execution date for Julius Jones, who has a strong innocence claim.
Many Catholic educators are eager to discuss the Church's teachings on the death penalty and restorative justice in their classrooms, but aren't sure where or how to begin.
On the annual feast of Saint Maximilian Kolbe, patron saint of prisoners, families, and the pro-life movement, Catholic Mobilizing Network announces its new Saint Maximilian Kolbe Giving Society which recognizes those committed supporters who have invested in CMN's ministry for three or more consecutive years.
Take a look back at how CMN mobilized Catholics to oppose a executions and advance restorative approaches to justice.
CMN's free toolkit — available in digital, hard copy, and printable PDF formats — offers practical guidance on how to implement restorative justice within the unique context of Catholic ministry.
“An execution moratorium, though a discernible first step, is not enough on its own... More needs to be done.”
June 24, 2021 | The South Carolina Supreme Court issued two stays of execution earlier this month amid legal concerns regarding the state’s plan to execute two men during the month of June using a 109-year-old electric chair.
A series of arguably mixed signals from the federal government have highlighted the need for clear and consistent advocacy against the federal death penalty
May 19, 2021 | South Carolina governor Henry McMaster recently signed into law a bill requiring individuals on the state's death row to choose between executions by electric chair or firing squad if lethal injection drugs are not available.
May 19, 2021 | Resistance from Senate leadership to advance the bill further paired with a lack of support from Nevada's Catholic governor, Steve Sisolak, ultimately thwarted the state's 2021 abolition attempt.
The Texas House voted in May to end a controversial death penalty law, one month after the state's prisons lifted a two-year ban on clergy and spiritual advisors in the death chamber.
On Apr. 26, the Tennessee House and Senate voted overwhelmingly in favor of legislation to prevent the execution of people with intellectual disability.
"True justice requires more than accountability alone. True justice seeks to center the needs of victims, make amends, and transform broken systems. And from this perspective, there is still much work to be done."
From April 18-24, 2021 CMN joins in recognizing National Crime Victims’ Rights Week and urging victim-centered responses to harm, crime, and violence.
April 15, 2021 | The Montana Senate voted down a bill that would have revised the state's lethal injection protocol to enable a restart in executions.
Apr. 13, 2021 | For the first time ever, in a 26-16 vote, the Nevada State Assembly passed a retroactive death penalty abolition bill. The bill will now be considered by the state Senate.
As the Arizona Attorney General seeks execution dates for the first time since the botched execution of Joseph Wood in 2014, corrections professionals, religious leaders, and a murder victim’s sister are calling on the state not to restart executions.
President Joe Biden is the first sitting U.S. president to publicly oppose capital punishment — a sharp contrast against his predecessor, President Trump, whose administration carried out on an unprecedented execution spree over his last six months in office.
March 24, 2021 | Virginia is the the 23rd U.S. state to abolish capital punishment and the first southern state to ever do so.
On Feb. 18, 2021 the Death Penalty Information Center released a special report analyzing 185 death penalty cases that resulted in exonerations of people wrongfully convicted. The report concludes that the majority of wrongful convictions are not accidental, and resulted in the addition of 11 names to DPIC’s Innocence List
Both federal and state legislators are rushing to file repeal bills and the drumbeat to advance abolition efforts is growing louder in the wake of a federal execution spree. Here's what you need to know.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Executing the severely mentally ill would be banned under legislation pending in the Ohio Senate during this year’s lame duck session.
Join CMN for a series of Virtual Prayer Vigils in response to upcoming federal executions.
Following a 17-year hiatus from federal executions, the Trump administration initiated an unprecedented spate of executions in 2020, resulting in a greater total number of executions than all U.S. states combined.
The outcome of the presidential election suggests that the recent spree of federal executions will soon — thankfully — come to an end.
On October 27, 29, and 31, more than 700 impacted persons, restorative justice advocates, and Catholic ministry leaders from across the country gathered online for CMN's all-virtual Catholic conference on restorative justice.
Every year on October 10th, the global abolition community commemorates the World Day Against the Death Penalty and raises awareness on behalf of those facing execution worldwide. Each year highlights a certain theme: this year’s focus is on the unequal legal representation provided to those charged with capital crimes.
In “Fratelli Tutti,” the latest papal encyclical released by Pope Francis on the topic of "fraternity and social friendship," the Holy Father unequivocally reaffirms the inadmissibility of capital punishment in the eyes of the Catholic Church.
In the work to end capital punishment, it is critical to remember that racial bias is more than a contributing factor to the death penalty’s wrongness — it is the fundamental reason the modern U.S. death penalty system exists and operates in the manner it does today.
“With this award for Mr. Barr, the ‘National Catholic Prayer Breakfast’ has become a twisted halftime show between executions.”
Take a look at what CMN accomplished during its 10th anniversary year.
Archbishop Paul Coakley of Oklahoma City, the chairman of the USCCB's Committee for Domestic Justice and Human Development, expresses his sadness over the decision to resume scheduling executions at the federal level in the United States.
Hear how Pope Francis and U.S. Bishops responded to the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, and learn how we, as people of faith, are called to do the same.
As Catholics, we are called to respect the dignity of all human life—regardless of the harm one has suffered or caused. That means we cannot simply stand by when experiencing COVID-19 behind bars could mean a de facto death sentence.
Get the latest death penalty and criminal justice updates from April 2020, including developments in federal death penalty litigation, a Supreme Court ruling eliminating non-unanimous jury verdicts, and the impacts of COVID-19 on death penalty proceedings.
It is expected the Colorado will abolish the death penalty in 2020, a long-awaited milestone for the state which has had a governor-imposed ban on executions since 2013.
The new year started off strong with a number of death penalty bills introduced into state legislatures across the country. Below you’ll find highlights of the legislation Catholic Mobilizing Network is watching closely.
Take a brief glimpse into our favorite moments of #IFTJ2019:
"On a chilly morning in Chicago, a dynamic group of Catholic leaders gathered at Precious Blood Ministry of Reconciliation (PBMR) for a deeply enriching four-day Circlekeeper Training..."
Scroll through this collection of photos from CMN's 10th Anniversary Celebration held on October 10th, 2019 at the Vatican Embassy in Washington, DC.
Through a mentorship program and Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA), the Archdiocese of Dubuque is tackling issues of recidivism and addiction, and fostering strong community ties in the process.
On Thursday, July 25th, the Department of Justice announced it will resume executions at the federal level for the first time in nearly 20 years.
(Washington, D.C.) Catholic Mobilizing Network (CMN), the national Catholic organization working to end the death penalty and promote restorative justice, strongly condemns Thursday’s announcement by the Department of Justice to resume the practice of capital punishment at the federal level.
Learn more about New Hampshire's progress on death penalty repeal, and get the latest on death penalty legislation in states throughout the U.S.
Jesus is alive! The Word became flesh, dwelt among us, was executed, and rose on the third day. Let’s Gather. Let’s Build. Let’s Rise.
On this first day of the Triduum, we recognize God’s unfailing gift of undeserved, unconditional, and unifying love for us. This love has the power to embolden every human heart and calls us to do the same. Let us ask for the grace to respond to God’s call to love one another accordingly.
"Jesus was very clear, God wants life. Jesus rode into Jerusalem to give us life here and now!"
On Wednesday, March 13, 2019, California Governor Gavin Newsom made a historic step forward in the death penalty abolition movement by declaring a moratorium on all California executions.
Drawing Inspiration from the "Hidden Life" of St. Joseph
By: Mario Marazziti
Gavin Newsom, the new governor of California, with a gesture of political courage, has put a stop, perhaps definitively, to executions in the Golden State. On March 13, 2019, signing an official moratorium, he declared the "miserable failure" of a justice that still includes death.
California governor Gavin Newsom announced he will declare a moratorium on the death penalty, making the state one of four in the U.S. currently under governor-imposed execution bans.
2019 got off to a rapid start at CMN. Within a month of the new year, we had pulled together an incredibly successful film screening, our first-ever Restorative Justice Circles Intensive, two dynamic workshops at the annual Catholic Social Ministry Gathering in Washington, DC.
Here's a closer look at everything CMN's been up to this winter.
As stated in the Catechism, we who are members of the Body of Christ are called to "work with determination" for an end to capital punishment. It's an bold and empowering commissioning—but where do we begin? What does "working with determination" look like in practical terms?
From governors races to ballot measures, Americans harnessed the power of their voices and their votes in the 2018 Midterms to work toward a more restorative criminal justice system. Here are just a few of the recent victories that point to an end to the death penalty, which is indeed on the horizon.
For many people, the first moment they hear about restorative justice is a formative one. So formative, that Kate and Deacon Andy Grosmaire recall exactly when and how it occurred.
On this special evening, at the Saint John Paul II National Shrine in Washington DC, Kate and Deacon Andy shared how their Catholic faith led them to restorative justice.
On October 11th, just one day after the 2018 World Day Against the Death Penalty, Catholic Mobilizing Network rejoiced at the announcement that Washington's State Supreme Court declared the death penalty unconstitutional. Will this spur action in other states that still have the death penalty?
Catholic Mobilizing Network is gearing up for Respect Life Month! Every October, CMN works with our brothers and sisters in the pews as they raise awareness in their communities about the death penalty as a critical pro-life issue.
Restorative justice invites us to cultivate moral imagination, to watch vigilantly for creative ways to heal pain caused by violence and build spaces for transformative encounter to take place. Fr. Paul Morrissey shares how he did this in an unlikely corner of Philadelphia. His reflection on events of the past reminds us of our nation's ongoing struggles for racial justice today.
With his historic revision to the Catechism, Pope Francis gave us a new platform from which to advocate for an end to the death penalty. Now the only question is: how do we use it?
Imagine the criminal justice system as a mountain with restorative justice as the vision at the top. Much is need to move toward that summit, but we cannot get there without abolishing the death penalty.
Catholic Mobilizing Network (CMN), the national Catholic organization working to end the death penalty and promote restorative justice, celebrates today’s revision of the Catechism of the Catholic Church to say that, in all cases, the death penalty is “inadmissible” (Revised Catechism of the Catholic Church 2267).
It never fails that over the past twenty-five years since its beginning, Starvin’ for Justice falls on some of the hottest days of the summer. This year was no exception. Despite the unrelenting sun and little shade, activists from across the country withstood the heat outside the Supreme Court to gather petition signatures, hand out pamphlets, and hold banners all in the name of ending the death penalty. Catholic Mobilizing Network was proud to be there with them.
Knowledgeable about foundational restorative practices, DePaul University in Chicago and Georgetown University in Washington, DC developed programs that create transformational encounter amongst incarcerated individuals, traditional students and faculty.
Restorative justice is so drastically different from America's adversarial and retributive approach to justice that it can be difficult to envision another way. It was this dilemma that inspired CMN to develop our small group educational modules. Hear about the impact it had in three pilot groups.
CMN is encouraged as the use and support of the death penalty continues to dwindle. Despite positive trends, there remains an insidious underlying current of attempts to strengthen the death penalty's relevance. This backsliding is a somber reminder of our need to maintain and spread the Church's Pro-Life teaching.
Legislative efforts to end the use of the death penalty in key states have proved active and energized during the first half of 2018.
A Catholic movement for restorative justice is underway.
CMN's Associate Director of Community Engagement, Emma Tacke, reflects on two powerful documentary screenings she attended this month, "Both of these films effectively use the vehicle of personal stories to narrate the moral questions and high-stake consequences the death penalty forces us to consider."
The Louisiana Interchurch Conference released its stance on the death penalty, calling this act of state sanctioned violence "The most draconian of all punishments which violates the dignity and sanctity of human life and diminishes us all."
Joe Cotton, the Director of Pastoral Care and Outreach for the Archdiocese of Seattle, explains how restorative practices are being used throughout the King County juvenile justice system to transform the healing process for all who have been impacted by crime.
2018 is off to a promising start for efforts to end the use of the death penalty! Numerous state houses are considering legislation to either repeal or limit the use of the death penalty, and several others are gearing up for active legislative sessions.
CMN's Director of Restorative Justice reflects on her call to issues of criminal justice and how Catholic Mobilizing Network is seeking to enliven Catholics to become a part of this national conversation on restorative justice. We believe that responses to harm and crime must honor each person’s God-given dignity and offer opportunities for restoration, whenever possible.
For the first time, CMN has received written correspondence from someone on death row. Clinton Lee Young, whose October 2017 execution was stayed thanks to the efforts of so many CMN supporters and people of goodwill, recently sent CMN a letter thanking us and all people of faith for raising our voices on his behalf, "I am grateful for all those who are Catholic or from other faiths that spoke out for me."
Catholic Mobilizing Network is pleased to have been invited to be the creative voice for Education for Justice's 2018 Lenten Reflections.
As 2017 comes to an end and we get ready to begin a new year, here is a quick recap of all that happened with the death penalty this last year.
Check out the articles below and learn how Florida celebrated this year's annual Cities for Life rally November 30th and spoke out against the death penalty!
Yes, we are all pilgrims on the journey. Any good that we can do for another comes back to us a hundredfold. Jesus is in prison as well as outside the barbed wire fence. Can we answer Jesus’s invitation to visit him inside?
Last month I had the honor of spending several days in Houston, Texas with Journey of Hope for a leg of their annual speaking tour. I was able to attend several of the formal speaking presentations at various schools and parishes and had the chance to share living quarters and break bread with this dynamic and eclectic group of people.
Just over a year ago our Sisters were murdered in Durant, Mississippi. Rodney Earl Sanders, a man who had been temporarily living across the street from the two, was arrested and charged with their brutal deaths. No motive has been given to date. Sister Margaret M. Held, a School Sister of St. Francis, and Sister Paula J. Merrill, a Sister of Charity of Nazareth, were members of our religious communities. They believed in the sacredness of life. In the wake of our unspeakable loss, and in light of the five executions scheduled this month, it has become even more important that we renew our call to end the death penalty.
Restorative justice calls us to not only consider how we are personally connected with crime and criminal justice but also with one another. Through encounter, transformation, and amends we may be transformed and honor the human dignity inherent in each one of us.
During Respect Life Month this year, CMN will be presenting in parishes and at different events throughout Houston, Texas with speakers from our partners at Journey of Hope...From Violence to Healing, and the Texas Coalition Against the Death Penalty.
Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge has requested the Governor to set an execution date for Arkansas inmate Jack Gordon Greene. Despite Greene displaying clear signs of mental illness and documented brain damage, he has been on death row since 1993 for twenty-four years.
Louisiana currently has the highest imprisonment rate in the country. A series of upcoming legislation seeks to reduce sentencing lengths, support re-entry and re-invest funds to reduce recidivism.
"How does God call me to be in relationship with my family, my community, and society?" This is the question that we must continually ask ourselves. The life of Jesus and our Catholic faith offer beautiful examples and deep wisdom about justice, mercy, and reconciliation.
On June 24th, The Community of Sant'Egidio endorsed CMN's National Catholic Pledget to End the Death Penalty, launching it on the international stage.
The death penalty has been in the news a lot these past weeks! Here is a quick summary of some of the most recent state updates to keep you informed:
In April, legislation was introduced that would repeal the death penalty. Despite the bill passing in the Senate, it ultimately failed to gain enough support in the House and did not pass.
In May, Delaware elected officials began work to reinstate the death penalty. The proposed bill has made it through the House and now waits for Senate leadership to schedule the bill.
On May 25th Alabama Governor Kay Ivey signed into law a bill that shortens the state death penalty appeals process. Ironically named the "Fair Justice Act," many worry this bill will likely result in more injustice and further brokenness in Alabama's death penalty.
On June 6th the California Supreme Court began hearing arguments on the constitutionality of Proposition 66, the voter-passed initiative to speed up executions.
"Let's take this moment to affirm the God-given dignity of every person and the great need in this culture to seek true restoration. Please join me in signing The Pledge to End the Death Penalty today."
"Due to growing public opposition to the death penalty and especially in the aftermath of last month’s executions in Arkansas, CMN has launched this pledge to amplify the Church’s work to end the death penalty."
“Instruments of reconciliation” is a new national campaign to amplify active nonviolence in the U.S. Catholic Church.
On Monday, February 6, 2017, CMN, in partnership with Washington National Cathedral, Washington National Opera, and Equitas, hosted a powerful Religious Leaders Dialogue on the Death Penalty.
“After the darkness of Good Friday has come a great light”
Bishop Anthony B. Taylor wrote the following letter to Gov. Asa Hutchinson March 1, asking him to halt the executions of eight men scheduled for April.
Being pro-life means acknowledging that every life, whether it be of an unborn child or a person in prison, is worth defending.
CMN invites you to join us for a Religious Leaders Dialogue on the Death Penalty on Monday, February 6, 2017 at 7:00-8:30pm. This special event is in anticipation of the Washington National Opera’s premiere performance of Dead Man Walking Opera from February 25 – March 11, 2017.
For Immediate Release:
January 26, 2017
Contact: Alexandra Carroll
alexandra@catholicsmobilizing.org
"We call on you and all members of the incoming administration to prioritize human life and to promote policies that will enable life to flourish."
Although the effort to seek clemency for non-violent offenders is gaining traction in our country, the very notion of clemency is not new. In fact, the origins date back thousands of years, to both ancient Greek and Judeo law.
Catholic Mobilizing Network celebrates Dale Recinella, prison chaplain, scholar, and nationally recognized voice on Catholic opposition to the death penalty. The CMN team interviewed Dale, a regular contributor to CMN’s Mercy and the Dignity of Life podcast, to learn more about his work to build a culture of life in our country.
Sister Marion Defeis served as a chaplain for 23 years at Rikers Island Correctional Facility in New York before retiring in 2007.
By Dan Peitzmeyer, President, Death Penalty Alternatives for Arizona – June 15, 2014 – In 2012, Arizona executed six men, placing the state in a tie for second most executed individuals, behind Texas. Many in Arizona are seemingly unaware that our state is actively executing.