Execution prayer vigil held in North Port

Kayle Barrington Bates was executed by the State of Florida at 6 p.m., Aug. 19, 2025.   He has been on Florida’s death row, off and on since 1983.

To mark this solemn occasion, a prayer vigil was held at San Pedro Parish in North Port.

Bates was sentenced to death for the 1982 murder of Janet Renee White in Bay County. He appealed and was moved on and off death row for 42 years, until Gov. Ron DeSantis signed his death warrant. Bates was the 10th execution in Florida and 29th in the U.S. so far this year. With Bates’ execution, the state extends its dubious record of the most executions in the state in a single year since the death penalty returned in 1976. The previous high for executions in Florida had been 8 in 2014 and 1984.

During the vigil, which joined Floridians around the state, the faithful gathered to pray for Janet Renee White, for her family, for all who have been harmed by Mr. Bates’ actions, for him, for those directly or indirectly involved in the execution, for everyone affected by violent crime, and for an end to the use of the death penalty.

On behalf of the Florida Conference of Catholic Bishops, Michael Sheedy, Executive Director, sent a letter to Gov. Ron DeSantis seeking a stay of the execution and commuting the sentence to life without parole. In the letter, Sheedy wrote that the Florida Bishops mourned the tragic death of Ms. White and the terrible suffering of her husband, Randy, and loved ones. “Nevertheless, even as we pray for the repose of Ms. White’s soul and for her husband’s consolation, we urge you to spare Mr. Bates’s life,” wrote Sheedy. “Every human life, given by God, is sacred.”

The Catholic Church teaches that the death penalty attacks the inviolability of the human person. Life-long incarceration without the possibility of parole is a severe yet more humane punishment that ensures societal safety, allows the guilty the possibility of redemption, and offers finality to court processes. Given our modern penal system, executions are unnecessary.

The Florida Bishops asked all Floridians to join in praying a novena for an end to the use of Florida’s death penalty. The novena was from Aug. 6-14, concluding on the Memorial of St. Maximilian Kolbe, who was executed in an Auschwitz prison camp in 1941.

Bishop Frank J. Dewane said the Florida Bishops will continue to ask the governor to stop signing death warrants. Prayer is powerful!

The Bishop also used his Aug. 29, 2025, Relevant Radio podcast “Witnessing Faith with Bishop Dewane,” to talk about the death penalty.

“At the heart of Catholic teaching on the death penalty is the truth that human life is sacred because from its beginning it involves the creative action of God, and every person’s life has dignity and worth, ‘no matter the harm one has suffered or caused,’” Bishop Dewane said.

Krisanne Vaillancourt Murphy, Executive Director of the Catholic Mobilizing Network in Washington, D.C., said the actions of Gov. DeSantis are fueling a nationwide uptick in capital punishment. Nationally, we have already seen more executions this year than in any year in the past decade, and it is only August.

Vaillancourt Murphy shared that during a visit to the Vatican she was able to meet Pope Francis and encourage him to ask then-President Joseph Biden to pardon all federal death row inmates. The Holy Father made a public appeal and Biden did grant the pardons before leaving office in January 2025.

During the radio show, Bob Hiniker, Coordinator of Prison Outreach in the Diocese of Venice, and Father Luis Pacheco, Pastor of St. Paul Parish in Arcadia, spoke about the alternative to the death penalty – life in prison, and prison ministry in general.

Father Pacheco and Hiniker visit prisons regularly and spoke about how prison outreach seeks to bring the Gospel to those who are incarcerated, their families, their victims and those who work in the justice system. Prison outreach offers Bible study, religious education and assistance with receiving the sacraments such as Baptism, First Holy Communion and Confirmation.

If you are interested in volunteering for prison ministry, please contact Bob Hiniker at 863-558-0407 or hinbob5@hotmail.com. Volunteers will first participate in an orientation program before entering the facility and will shadow experienced volunteers until they feel comfortable.

“Witnessing Faith with Bishop Dewane” can be heard on Relevant Radio on 1410 AM and 106.7 FM in Fort Myers and 1660 AM and 93.3 FM in Naples at 8:30 a.m. on the last Friday of every month (Aug. 29), or anytime at www.dioceseofvenice.org/ourbishop.

 

 

At San Pedro Parish in North Port, Deacon Richard Frohmiller led the prayer vigil and said they were there not to debate the guilt or innocence of Bates, but to pray for his soul, and the souls of all who have been put to death by the State on our “behalf.”

 

“We are taught to respect the dignity of every person and we pray that we are never silent about the deliberate taking of a life,” Deacon Frohmiller said.

 

The prayer service included hymns and a reading from the Gospel of Matthew 5:38-48, when Jesus said, “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, offer no resistance to one who is evil.” Jesus teaches that we should step beyond we perceive as our right and to respond with love. While the Old Testament includes some passages about taking the life of one who kills, the Old Testament and the teaching of Christ in the New Testament call us to protect life, practice mercy, and reject vengeance.

 

The North Port group also prayed the Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary and offered intercessions seeking a change to the laws which allow capital punishment in Florida and elsewhere. The prayer service poignantly paused at 6 p.m. (the time of the execution) to pray in silence.

 

Since the reinstatement of the death penalty in Florida in 1976, 116 people have been put to death, including Bates. Death warrants have already been signed for two more. Curtis Windom, 59, is set to become the 11th person executed in Florida on Aug. 28. He was convicted of killing three people in the Orlando area in 1992.

 

David Pittman, 63, will be the 12th person executed in Florida if his death sentence is carried out as scheduled on Sept. 17. He was found guilty of fatally stabbing his estranged wife’s sister and parents at their Polk County home before setting it on fire in 1990.

 

Deacon Frohmiller said he will hold a prayer vigil for each scheduled execution, no matter how often they occur. “It is frustrating that this is happening, but we are called to pray, and will continue to do so until executions end in Florida.” The vigils at San Pedro Parish Chapel, 14380 Tamiami Trail, North Port, begin at 5:30 p.m. and last less than an hour. All are welcome and encouraged to attend.