AKIRA
Tank
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I'm putting this documentary here and not in the Films or Video forums because this place gets the most traffic and I want the most amount of people to see this documentary.
I know the mods will probably move it anyway but I'll go ahead and post it.
This documentary nearly brought me to tears. I cannot imagine going through that. I don't know if the laws in Mississippi are the same now as they were back then but I just can't believe how the higher ups in the judicial system (and corrupt cops) can sleep at night.
I know the mods will probably move it anyway but I'll go ahead and post it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GggQrGAsl0c&feature=player_embeddedFourteen Days in May is a documentary directed by Paul Hamann. The program recounts the final days before the execution of Edward Earl Johnson, an American prisoner convicted of rape and murder. Johnson protested his innocence and claimed that his confession had been made under duress. He was executed in Mississippi’s gas chamber on May 20, 1987.
The documentary crew, given access to the prison warden, guards and chaplain and to Johnson and his family, filmed the last days of Johnson’s life in detail. The documentary argues against the death penalty and maintains that capital punishment is disproportionately applied to African-Americans convicted of crimes against whites. The program features attorney Clive Stafford Smith, a noted advocate against capital punishment.
Fourteen Days in May won a British Film Institute Grierson Award and a top prize at the Festival dei Populi. It has been shown in many countries but has only appeared in an abbreviated form in the United States, on HBO. Hamann disowned this shortened version.
It was in direct response to this documentary that the Lifelines organization was set up, to organize pen pals for death row prisoners.
This documentary nearly brought me to tears. I cannot imagine going through that. I don't know if the laws in Mississippi are the same now as they were back then but I just can't believe how the higher ups in the judicial system (and corrupt cops) can sleep at night.