Just days before inmate Freddie Owens is set to die by lethal injection in South Carolina, the friend whose testimony helped send Owens to prison is saying he lied to save himself from the death chamber.

Owens is set to die at 6 p.m. Friday at a Columbia prison for the killing of a Greenville convenience store clerk in 1997.

But Owens’ lawyers on Wednesday filed a sworn statement from his co-defendant Steven Golden late Wednesday to try to stop South Carolina from carrying out its first execution in more than a decade.

Prosecutors reiterated that several other witnesses testified that Owens told them he pulled the trigger. And the state Supreme Court refused to stop Owens’ execution last week after Golden, in a sworn statement, said that he had a secret deal with prosecutors that he never told the jury about.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 month ago

    We have to do something about people who can’t be in society.

    Many people can be rehabilitated but some cannot. For them, our options are killing them or imprisoning them permanently.

    I’m not sure, of those two options, which is a greater violation of rights.

    I do think that permanent imprisonment immediately becomes less of a rights violation if the prisoner is given the option to commit suicide in a painless way.

    But if they’re forcibly kept alive, or forced to do something horrific like banging their head into concrete to escape their life, I think it’s very possible that’s a greater injustice than simply ending them.

    • angrystego@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 month ago

      Well, you could work with them like in Scandinavian countries. Prison doesn’t have to be torture, right? People don’t have to suffer there and do horrific things to kill themselves to escape the suffering.