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Texas loses high court case over prayer during executions

The case centers around John Henry Ramirez. He is on death row for killing a Corpus Christi convenience store worker during a 2004 robbery.

WASHINGTON, D.C., USA — The Supreme Court on Thursday sided with a Texas death row inmate seeking to have his pastor be allowed to pray out loud and touch him during his execution.

The high court's decision won't keep John Henry Ramirez from being executed. But the justices in an 8-1 decision rejected Texas' defense of its policy of allowing an inmate's spiritual adviser to be present in the death chamber but without speaking or touching the inmate.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in a majority opinion that Texas “appears to have long allowed prison chaplains to pray with inmates in the execution chamber, deciding to prohibit such prayer only in the last several years.” He also rejected concerns that allowing Ramirez to be touched could interfere with the IV lines that carry the drugs used to carry out the execution. “Texas could allow touch on a part of the body away from IV lines, such as a prisoner’s lower leg,” he wrote.

Justice Clarence Thomas was the lone justice to dissent, writing that Ramirez has engaged in repeated litigation tactics to delay his execution and that his current lawsuit “is but the latest iteration in an 18-year pattern of evasion.”

Executions in Texas, the nation’s busiest death penalty state, had been delayed while the court considered the case.

Ramirez’s lawyers sued after Texas said it would not allow his minister to pray audibly and touch him as he is being given a lethal injection. Lower courts had sided with Texas, but the Supreme Court halted his Sept. 8 execution to hear his case.

Ramirez was found guilty of stabbing Corpus Christi convenience store clerk Pablo Castro 29 times during a robbery that happened while Castro was taking out the trash where he worked.

Ramirez got away with only the $1.25 Castro has in his pocket. 

Two women were with Ramirez that night. Angela Rodriguez is currently serving a 99-year prison sentence for murder and Christina Chaves is serving 25 years for aggravated robbery. 

Ramirez was on the run for four years before being caught. He was able to twice delay his execution, once due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Fall of 2020. This was the third delay.

A request by Ramirez to have Pastor Dana Moore of Corpus Christi's Second Baptist Church lay his hands on him while he dies was previously denied.

RELATED: Texas man gets execution delay over pastor’s touch request

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