Saturday, February 01, 2025
39.0°F

Governor meets condemned killer's family

Matt Gouras | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 6 months AGO
by Matt Gouras
| July 14, 2012 6:10 AM

HELENA — Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer on Friday told the family of a Canadian on death row that he is undecided on the inmate’s request for executive clemency, at times expressing sympathy for his plight and at other times noting the desire of the victims’ families for retribution.

The governor had a long, frank discussion with relatives of convicted murderer Ronald A. Smith. Schweitzer told them that his options include doing nothing with the clemency request, which seeks life in prison without the possibility of parole instead of the death penalty.

Schweitzer sympathized with the plight of Smith, who is scheduled to be executed in the 1982 killings of two Browning cousins in Flathead County.

Smith marched Thomas Running Rabbit Jr., 20, and Harvey Mad Man Jr., 23, into the woods off U.S. 2 near Marias Pass and shot each in the back of the head with a sawed-off .22-caliber rifle.

The killings were part of a crime spree that stretched from Browning to California.

The governor said it is not fair for Smith to be executed after an accomplice was paroled, and indicated he believes that Smith may be a different man.

But the governor said he has spoken with the victims’ families, Blackfeet tribal members, who have told him they need Smith’s death for closure. The governor said he remains uncertain whether Smith’s death would improve the situation, and said he is not sure the traditional form of justice for the Blackfeet would include the death penalty.

“In their system of justice, when people did something very bad, they were banished,” Schweitzer said.

A tribal council member has said that many in the tribe believe that if the governor gives clemency to Smith, that means the governor values American Indian lives less.

Schweitzer told Smith’s family from Alberta that he is aware of that criticism, but argued it does not have merit because he believes he has done more than past governors to include Montana’s largest minority group in his administration. Still, the governor is weighing the desires of those on the reservation.

“They cannot rest until there is retribution and Ron’s life is taken. They told us that,” Schweitzer said.

Blackfeet tribal members and family of the victims told the Montana Parole Board earlier this year that the execution has been postponed for too long and say it is time for Smith to pay for his crimes.

The board is recommending that Schweitzer dismiss the clemency request, writing in their report that “justice is best served” by continuing with the execution. The governor makes the final call.

Smith’s sister, Rita Duncan, told the governor much of the same that she and others told the parole board: Smith is a changed man who deserves to live the rest of his life behind bars. Speaking in a barely audible whisper, Duncan at times broke down in tears, as she described the impact Smith has helping the rest of his family through letters and phone calls.

Also at the meeting were Smith’s dad, Nelson Smith, his daughter Carmen Blackburn and her two children.

The governor told them all options remain on the table. He does not have a timetable for making a decision, but noted the best-case scenario for Smith is life behind bars.

“His sentence, one way or another, is death: slow or long,” Schweitzer said.

Schweitzer also expressed anger at Smith, who originally sought the death penalty at trial before changing his mind, for putting the state of Montana in the position of aiding a suicide he once wanted.

The governor noted that the victims and others also wonder whether Smith’s apparent turnabout is real.

“Are we sure that monster is gone? Is this just a mask?” Schweitzer said.

The governor said many who write or call his office argue Smith needs to be killed.

“I keep coming back to this question of what is fair. I don’t know what is fair,” the governor said during the hourlong meeting.

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Canadian killer says he's changed
Daily Inter-Lake | Updated 12 years, 11 months ago
Board says no clemency for double killer
Daily Inter-Lake | Updated 12 years, 8 months ago
Clemency for Smith? No way
Daily Inter-Lake | Updated 12 years, 11 months ago

ARTICLES BY MATT GOURAS

House Budget
March 22, 2013 10:20 a.m.

House Budget

Republican Rep. Roy Hollandsworth, right, looks over budget numbers on Tuesday, March 6, 2013, in Helena, Mont., as House Appropriations Committee chairman Duane Ankney introduces the state's main spending bill. (AP Photo/Matt Gouras)

Regional Justice Dept.
May 20, 2013 7:52 a.m.

Regional Justice Dept.

U.S. Attorney for Montana Michael Cotter, left, listens to Deputy Assistant Attorney General Roy Austin discuss an agreement on the University of Montana's handling of sexual assault cases on Thursday, May 9, 2013 in Missoula, Mont. Federal officials reached a deal with the university after a yearlong investigation Into mishandled sexual assault reports that will require the school to revise its policies and adequately respond. (AP Photo/Matt Gouras)

Crime moves, road kill among new laws
October 1, 2013 11:51 a.m.

Crime moves, road kill among new laws

HELENA — A list of new laws taking effect this week includes a way to test drivers who might be under the influence of marijuana and new permits to allow Montanans to salvage road kill.