A Death Row Inmate Asked For Carlo Acutis Before His Execution-mdue - Chainityai

A Death Row Inmate Asked For Carlo Acutis Before His Execution-mdue

Father Thomas McKenzie had spent 23 years walking into Indiana State Penitentiary before sunrise. The routine was always the same: credentials, metal detector, locked door, second locked door, then the long corridor where condemned men waited for dates printed on state paper.

He was 59, Protestant, Princeton-trained, and too experienced to be sentimental about death row conversions. He had witnessed 47 executions. Some men prayed with sincerity. Some tried to bargain with God. Others died hard, cursing every face behind the glass.

Marcus Williams had always seemed certain to be one of the hard ones. At 34, he had spent 12 years on death row for the 2012 murders of Robert Chen, Amy Chen, and 8-year-old Daniel Morrison.

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The robbery had taken $340 and cigarettes. The reports called the shootings execution-style. The surveillance footage showed Marcus stepping over bodies, laughing as if the people on the floor had become objects.

Father McKenzie kept copies of the case summary, the death warrant, and the psychological evaluation in a locked file drawer. He did not keep them because he enjoyed horror. He kept them because mercy must begin with truth.

For 10 years, Marcus had treated every visit like a joke. He called the chaplain “Padre,” never Father McKenzie, and always with that razor-thin sarcasm meant to make faith look foolish.

On April 8th, 2024, with his execution set for May 6th, Marcus finally said something different. The cell block smelled of disinfectant and warm metal, and the scratched plexiglass between them caught the fluorescent light.

“I’m afraid there’s nothing,” Marcus admitted. “No heaven, no hell, no judgment, no peace. And if there is something, I’m afraid of seeing their faces.”

That sentence changed the room. Father McKenzie did not rush toward it. Prison had taught him that a crack in stone is not yet a doorway.

Three days later, a cream-colored envelope arrived from Rome. It came from Sister Gabriella Toriani, a Franciscan nun serving in prison ministry at Regina Coeli Prison.

Inside were five handwritten pages, printed photographs, and a prayer card. The subject was Carlo Acutis, a 15-year-old who loved computers, video games, sneakers, and the Eucharist.

Father McKenzie was cautious. Catholic intercession was not part of his theology, and death row had made him allergic to easy miracles. Yet the photograph unsettled him.

Carlo looked ordinary. Not distant. Not unreachable. A boy in casual clothes with a smile that seemed to belong to the living more than the dead.

On April 14th, Father McKenzie brought the photograph to cell 47. Marcus gave it a glance, then asked one question that stripped the air out of the corridor.

“He died young?” Marcus asked. “Like the people I killed?”

Father McKenzie explained the leukemia, the speed of it, the reports of Carlo’s peace near death. Marcus walked to the back wall and stood there for several minutes.

When he turned around, his voice no longer carried the old sneer. “Padre, can you tell me more about him?”

For the next two weeks, every visit became about Carlo. Marcus asked about the website Carlo built, the Eucharistic miracles he cataloged, the jeans and sneakers, the daily Mass, the friendships, the suffering.

He wanted to know whether Carlo had been strange or normal. Father McKenzie told him Carlo had been both startlingly ordinary and spiritually fierce.

“Even in people like me?” Marcus asked when Father McKenzie said Carlo believed no one was beyond God’s mercy.

“Even in people like you,” the chaplain answered.

Mercy has a way of looking weakest right before it becomes undeniable.

On April 28th, 8 days before his scheduled execution, Marcus made the request that seemed impossible. He asked to see Carlo’s tomb in Assisi.

Not a last meal. Not a final visitor. Not a public statement. A tomb in Italy.

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