About the Event
This Respect Life Month, join Catholic Mobilizing Network Thursday, October 20th at 2:00 PM ET for a one-hour webinar featuring Sr. Helen Prejean, Ohio death row exoneree Kwame Ajamu, and Director of Prison Ministry for the Nashville Diocese Deacon James Booth. The panelists will share their perspective on the death penalty and discuss how capital punishment denies the gospel call to uphold and honor human dignity.
Webinar registrants will also learn the current status of the death penalty in the United States and timely resources and tools to further their education, advocacy, and prayer efforts to end the death penalty.
Event Details
Thursday, October 20, 2022
2:00–3:00 p.m. ET (11 a.m.–12 p.m. PT)
FREE webinar
This webinar will take place via Zoom conference. Zoom details will be sent to the email with which you register.
Speakers
Sister Helen Prejean, CSJ is a leading advocate for the abolition of the death penalty and the elimination of social and economic unfairness in the criminal legal system. She is the bestselling author of titles including Dead Man Walking: An Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty in the United States and River of Fire: My Spiritual Journey.
Kwame Ajamu was a teenager in Cleveland, Ohio, when he became a victim of wrongful conviction due to false eyewitness testimony and police misconduct, resulting in 28 years in prison for a crime he did not commit.
On December 9, 2014, Kwame Ajamu's conviction was vacated and the prosecution dismissed the charges against him. Kwame served 28 years in prison and was exonerated after 39 years. Kwame serves as Chairman of the Board of Witness to Innocence. He travels across the United States speaking against the death penalty.
Deacon James Booth, his wife Dr. L. Jane Easdown and daughter, Madeleine, are originally from Montreal, Quebec. In 2014, James was ordained Permanent Deacon in the Diocese of Nashville. He is currently a volunteer at state prisons in the Diocese area including Death Row at Riverbend Prison. He is Director of Prison Ministry for the Diocese of Nashville and until his retirement this past August was a Professor in the Political Science and Philosophy Departments at Vanderbilt University.