When Gail Riceās brother was murdered in 1997, she had no idea her journey would lead her to become an advocate against the death penalty. This past March, Rice witnessed the abolishment of the death penalty in Illinois.
On Nov. 12, 1997, Riceās brother Bruce VanderJagt, a police officer, was shot during a botched burglary attempt in Denver. The gunman then took VanderJagtās service revolver and killed himself.
Gail Rice holds a photo of her brother, Bruce VanderJagt, who was murdered in 1997.
At the time of VanderJagtās murder, Rice had already spent 18 years working with criminals, tutoring them weekly in Chicagoās Cook County Jail and ministering to them with Prison Fellowship Ministries. She had long been interested in corrections and passionate about adult literacy.
āMy experience in correctional institutions initially made me oppose the death penalty,ā said Rice, ābecause I saw a very different standard of justice for the rich and for the poor, and I believed the death penalty would always be applied unfairly to the poor and minorities.ā
After VanderJagtās death, Rice became involved with support groups, one being Murder Victimsā Families for Reconciliation. She became an outspoken voice, on behalf of murder victims, against the death penalty, speaking in Illinoisā state capitol to a commission on the death penalty.
āI donāt experience any contradiction at all in being involved in both [prison ministry and death penalty abolishment advocacy],ā Rice said. āIt has to do with the idea that weāre all loved by God and valued by God and created in the image of God.ā
Rice, a member of , Oak Forest, Ill., continues to speak on restorative justice and advocate against the death penalty. She acknowledges, however, that the death penalty does divide families. Her stance has created distance between her and VanderJagtās widow and daughter.
About the Author
Melissa Holtrop