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Lone Canadian on U.S. death row seeks clemency

Montana death row inmate Ronald A. Smith is escorted to the Powell County Courthouse for a hearing to seek clemency, Wednesday, May 2, 2012 KPAX

(CBS/AP) HELENA, Mont. - Lawyers for Ronald A. Smith, the only Canadian on death row in the United States, told the Montana Parole Board on Wednesday that Smith deserves clemency because he is a changed man who deserves to live.

Smith of Red Deer, Alberta, is asking board members for a recommendation that the governor commute his death sentence to life in prison without the possibility of parole. His lawyers want them to look beyond the horrific murders of two cousins in 1983.

The board said it expects to issue its findings in three weeks, although there is no time limit for a final decision from Gov. Brian Schweitzer who leaves office at year's end.

Smith was sentenced just seven months after he marched Harvey Mad Man, 23, and Thomas Running Rabbit, 20, into the woods just off U.S. 2 near Marias Pass and shot them both in the head with a .22-caliber rifle in an alcohol-and-drug-fueled episode.

Smith, 24 at the time of the killings, said at the time he wanted to know what it was like to kill.

Smith originally requested the death penalty, spurning a plea deal that would have spared his life. His co-defendant has since been paroled and is living in Canada, while Smith lives in the maximum-security portion of the Montana State Prison.

Helena attorney Ron Waterman said the board should grant clemency to show other inmates that good behavior matters.

"When you do, and if you do, you will send a message to those incarcerated that their conduct can improve their situation - that good conduct can lead to good results," said Waterman, who is also a lead attorney in a separate case challenging the state's lethal injection protocol. "If you articulate that voice, it will be heard and it will have an impact not just on Ron Smith, it will have an impact, I believe, on the entire prison population."

A prison doctor, Bowman Smelko, said that Smith has become a model prisoner who does not exhibit the anti-social behavior he did decades ago. Smelko said research has shown many death row inmates either commit suicide or go insane, while Smith beat the odds to improve himself and accepted responsibility for his actions.

Smith, now 54, argues in his commutation application that he's a far different person than the out-of-control youth that took the lives of two young Blackfeet Indian men. Smith has said he was heavily intoxicated that day and doesn't have a strong recollection

of the men he killed.

Smith has 17 witnesses, including himself, scheduled to testify on his behalf in a hearing that could run through Thursday. They include a representative of the Canadian government that opposes the death penalty for any of its citizens, family members who argue he has helped repair dysfunctional relationships, and prison workers who say Smith has become a valuable member of their community, and others.

The state has 23 witnesses, including many members of the victims' family and residents of the Blackfeet Tribe, who argue the original sentence should be upheld.

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