cover image DON'T KILL IN OUR NAMES: Families of Murder Victims Speak Out Against the Death Penalty

DON'T KILL IN OUR NAMES: Families of Murder Victims Speak Out Against the Death Penalty

Rachel King, . . Rutgers Univ., $27 (304pp) ISBN 978-0813531823

King, a lawyer with the ACLU and an anti–death-penalty activist, tells the haunting stories of families touched by murder. Instead of seeking the death penalty for the convicts, these family members forcefully and poignantly oppose it: they "reject the concept of retribution and believe that no one is beyond redemption," says King. The gruesome murders vary widely, but a number of threads link the survivors. In each case, he or she tries to understand the forces that might lead a person to commit murder. And in just about every case, grisly details emerge about the murderer's background—such as abandonment and abuse. Instead of focusing on their rage, the survivors strive to feel compassion for the murderers—and their families—and to communicate this compassion to them. Many of the survivors evoke God as a reason for their opposition to the death penalty. Says Marietta Jaeger, about her rapport with the man who savagely murdered her seven-year-old daughter: "I believe that God was loving him through me... desperately needed the love and compassion I felt for him." Says Ron Carlson, whose sister was axed to death, "I don't think the Son of God would destroy his own father's creation." Particularly disturbing are stories that involve the sentencing to death of retarded convicts and juveniles, as well as one man who was ultimately proven innocent. The testimony of families of murder victims is key to anti–death penalty campaigners, and these moving accounts might touch readers who are wavering on the issue. 18 b&w illus. Agent, Carol Mann. (Feb.)