Moore, 59, awaits clemency from the governor as his children plead for his life to be spared

South Carolina is on track to execute a man on death row on Friday, despite growing concerns about the validity of his sentence and objections from the judge who originally condemned him to death.

Richard Moore, 59, is due to be killed by lethal injection at 6pm unless the state’s Republican governor, Henry McMaster, grants clemency. Moore’s children have pleaded for his life to be spared, and his resentencing efforts are now supported by the former corrections department director, two trial jurors, the judge who presided over the case and a former state supreme court justice.

The case has drawn scrutiny over racial bias and the unusual nature of his death sentence, and is part of a spate of rapid executions the state is pursuing.

  • @[email protected]
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    232 months ago

    And on top of that.

    If you must have the death penalty (and really I’d challenge that but for the sake of argument let’s say they must).

    Then injections are one of the worst ways you can do it. Hanging and beheading are much more humane ways to end someone’s life.

    • TheTechnician27
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, but injections look much more precise and clinical rather than like brutally murdering someone, so they keep up an appearance of humaneness to the public. So it’s clearly still the preferable choice.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      You can fuck up those too, including intentionally. If the hanging drop is too short, they’re strangled slowly instead of killed by the snap. If your beheading blade is dull or aimed poorly, it will probably not kill in one blow.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        I didn’t say they were perfect. They just seem less bad. At things stand, lethal injections simply do no go well as a standard.