The mere scheduling of an execution imposes no obligation or restriction on the religious advisor whom the condemned prisoner has selected to attend.CNA reports on the decision.
Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Clergy Cannot Get Inmates' Executions Delayed Because of COVID Fears
In Hartkemeyer v. Barr, (SD IN, July 14, 2020), an Indiana federal district court refused to delay the execution of prisoners in two separate cases where the prisoners' ministers of record argued that scheduling the execution during the COVID-19 epidemic violates the clergy's rights under RFRA. Each of the clergymen had a sincerely held religious belief that they needed to attend to the spiritual needs of the prisoner facing execution. The court rejected the argument, saying n part:
Labels:
COVID-19,
Prison Chaplains,
RFRA