Ronald Smith: Death Row Canadian 'Bothered' By Lack Of Support From Ottawa

First Posted: 02/22/2012 2:31 pm EST Updated: 05/09/2013 7:35 pm EDT

DEER LODGE, Mont. - With the clock ticking down toward a decision on whether he lives or dies, the only Canadian on death row in the United States is expressing regret and sadness for the crimes he committed and the situation he finds himself in.

But Ronald Smith is also angry at the Canadian government for its "tepid" support of his clemency bid — support that came only after Federal Court forced Ottawa to act on Smith's behalf.

"It bothered me," Smith said in an interview with The Canadian Press at Montana State Prison — his home for the last 30 years.

"There was no need to make it a point that: 'We're being forced into this.' Come on, really? Am I that horrible a person that you have to be forced to act like a human being?

"I was a little grumpy about it."

Smith, originally from Red Deer, Alta., has been on death row since 1982. A drug-addicted drifter back then, Smith and an accomplice, both of them high on LSD and booze, marched Thomas Running Rabbit and Harvey Mad Man Jr. into the woods near East Glacier, Mont., and shot them in the head.

They were cold-blooded killings. Smith said he shot the men just to know how it felt to take a life and because he wanted to steal their car.

Smith asked for and received a death sentence, but later changed his mind. His legal avenues of appeal have all run out and the Montana Board of Pardons and Parole has scheduled a hearing in May after which it will make a recommendation on whether Smith should be spared. The final decision will fall to Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer.

The governor indicated last fall there is nothing more difficult than deciding if someone lives or dies.

But he said Wednesday that he is going to let the parole board do its job.

"The parole board is first stop shopping for someone who is asking for clemency. They will make that first decision whether to make a recommendation to the governor or not," Schweitzer said.

"It would be inappropriate for me to say anything or allow someone to write something about what this semi-judiciary board will be recommending."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservative government initially refused to support Smith, saying he had been convicted in a democratic country. The decision ran counter to a long-standing policy of seeking clemency for Canadians sentenced to death in foreign lands. The Federal Court ruled the government had to back Smith.

The government did write a letter asking the board to spare Smith's life, but its public support for the bid has been minimal.

"The government of Canada does not sympathize with violent crime and this letter should not be construed as reflecting a judgment on Mr. Smith's conduct,'' the letter said. "The government of Canada ... requests that you grant clemency to Mr. Smith on humanitarian grounds.''

The letter was signed by Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird.

"I feel a little bit of both (anger and hurt)," Smith said. "They don't know me. They're taking a look at what happened to me all that time ago. They're not taking a look at anything else.

"I don't think it will hurt, but it's not going to be a benefit obviously."

If Smith does win clemency, he will still spend the rest of his life behind bars.

He realizes that he is likely to die in Montana State Prison. The only remaining questions are when and how.

He said the support of his family — he has a daughter and two grandchildren — has helped him through his time on death row.

And he realizes that he took two men away from their own loved ones.

"I've always wanted an opportunity to step outside of all of this, and to be able to apologize to the family and explain to them just everything about me at that point in time. I was a completely different person," Smith said.

"I'm not looking for forgiveness. I don't think that is a possibility. I can see what it did to my family, so it's got to be considerably more to them because I'm still here. I've taken that away from them so again I try not to dwell on it."

Smith said he has turned to education to fill the long empty days.

He achieved his Grade 12 equivalency and had hoped to help troubled youth but realized that no one would trust him with their children. So he recently turned his studies to the law in order to give legal advice to others behind bars.

Officials at the prison said he has been a model prisoner for the past 25 years.

If Smith's bid for clemency fails, another execution date will be scheduled and there won't be any last-minute appeals that can rescue him from a lethal injection.

"I never did fear it. You've got to remember I'm the one that asked for this. The fear of dying — there's never been an issue with it. It is what it is. We all have to go at some time," Smith said.

"It's got to be over. Thankfully we've hit this point in time where there's no more long, drawn-out waiting. We're going to get it over one way or another. It's like triple overtime."

However his lack of fear about death doesn't mean he believes he will be going to a better place.

"I've gotten into religious discussions here recently with a priest trying to help me a develop a faith. The problem: I don't have the faith," he said.

"It's hard for me to think that there is some benign being out there watching over me and just waiting for me to accept him and he'll pick me up with open arms and away we go," he added.

"I would like to believe, but it comes down to developing that faith aspect."

Family members of Smith's victims said in the past that they wanted to see him executed, but that feeling has subsided among at least one relative recently.

Jessica Crawford, Running Rabbit's daughter, said before Christmas that she will ask the board to recommend clemency. She said before seeing Smith in person at a hearing she had built him into some kind of monster, but she then realized he is just a man.

Smith said he isn't about to minimize what he did.

"She was about the same age as my daughter when this all fell out. From a child's perspective I was some kind of monster. I'm not saying that I wasn't ...I killed people.

"I was a monster at the time. It's not who I am now."

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BentleysPal
We'd be better off if Springers ruled the world
10:03 AM on 02/27/2012
Shed no tears for poor misunderstood Mr. Smith. My opposition to the Death Penalty is based on the assumption that judicial mistakes can and do happen. He admits to his crimes, so there's no issue for me. Although I'd be just as content if he spent the rest of his life breaking rocks. It almost sounds like he has some remorse, so the prospect of him having to live with himself for another 25-30 years seems appropriate.
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piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
07:51 PM on 02/25/2012
One more thing. Are we short on news that we would give this guy air time?
03:07 PM on 02/25/2012
Hmmm。30 years on death row。

Hardly a death sentence。Wikipedia says Smith is 55 years old。So,he started his prison sentence when he was 25. Well,according to the actuarial charts,of 97834 25-year olds,in 30 years there will be 89270 left,a difference of about 8500。And that's about 1 in 11 in the general population who would have died in that time frame any way。
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09:06 AM on 02/24/2012
When in Rome

Though I don't personally support the death penalty the US does and this is where the crime was committed.

My hopes are the fellow isn't executed but if he is I wont lose any sleep over it.
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Russg
05:01 PM on 02/23/2012
How dare he be appalled by the treatment he is receiving. He slaughtered two people in cold blood, and now he EXPECTS to receive mercy?

Putting politics aside for a moment, for somebody on death row to EXPECT clemency is absolutely ridiculous. If he was truly deserving of clemency, he sure wouldn't be "bothered" with our government's response.
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Atim-moot Tugayak
Sun News is Dark and Hateful.
12:20 PM on 02/23/2012
Am I that horrible a person that you have to be forced to act like a human being? YES, YES YOU ARE THAT AND MUCH MORE. LET THE USA DO TO HIM WHAT OUR PEN SYSTEM CANNOT.
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Ansdlmol
12:41 PM on 02/23/2012
Amen. However I think living out another possible 30 years in prison will be worse than execution so let him rot in endless days of monotony.
12:01 PM on 02/23/2012
Let him die in jail.. How would killing him help anybody? Would it bring his victims back? Would it fix anything? Would it benefit anything or anybody? Killing him is no different than the murders he committed.
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colpy
11:32 AM on 02/23/2012
This was a charge of double murder, murders he undoubtedly committed, for which he was convicted by a jury of his peers, and he literally asked for the death sentence.

Canada owes him nothing.
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12:02 PM on 02/23/2012
Canada should protect all Canadians abroad from murder and torture, even if its the other country's legal system that is doing it. The rest of it is details. Keep in mind I dont want to free him, just that murder is wrong regardless of who is doing the killing. Btw, he asked for a death sentence 25 years ago, and they clearly didn't do it. It seem ridiculous to claim that if I said I want ice cream 25 years ago and you give it to me today that you fulfilled my want in any way. So I think that is particularly irrelevant.
11:12 AM on 02/23/2012
Canadians aren't above anyone else.

He chose to commit the crimes in another jurisdiction; he is subject to the laws of that jurisdiction.

I am sure Canadians expect that people from other jurisdictions have to abide by Canadian laws.
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12:05 PM on 02/23/2012
Sure, but we are also morally superior than any country that supports the death penalty or torture so I see no problem being objective about this. Where do you get this moral relativity? And how far does it go? There is a guy in Cuba, Canadian, in jail for a traffic accident that was not his fault, and the authorities know it. There is a minor in US not-so-secret prison without being charged, although he is no longer a child because he has been there so long. There was that one guy captured by the US while on a flight that connected through the US and sent to Syria for torture.

We are above these people.
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Ansdlmol
12:44 PM on 02/23/2012
What a sanctimonious load of claptrap.
sunnydee07
"Your micro-bio is empty". Yes, yes it is.
12:53 PM on 02/23/2012
Any pertinent point you may have tried to make was immediately lost after your first 7 words...morally superior, please? We are as fallible as anyone else.

As far as the support of the gov't goes, I would rather they expend all that energy to help a Canadian overseas who has truly found himself in a legal jam, such as the person in Cuba, or someone who is under the death penalty for something minor.

This man is a confessed murderer, claiming his right to be treated as a human being, which is what he denied his victims.
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geminivoyager
10:48 AM on 02/23/2012
suck it up buttercup
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piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
09:55 AM on 02/23/2012
Certainly a hardship for the family every day. As for the parole taking a look since he is a different guy back then, well we all make our lives what they are and this was your chosen path. Why should anyone say, well you have been a model prisoner? You could still be on the lose and then what would you be saying?
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12:06 PM on 02/23/2012
No one wants him loose, murder is just wrong. Unless it is self-defence, killing him is murder. Keep him locked up.
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piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
12:28 PM on 02/23/2012
When I said loose I was saying he could be still loose and would be singing a different song, I.e. doing what he likes, drugs, sex, and rock and roll. Anyways he just wants to get back to Canada where they have cosy full service rooms with a view. They can even have sugar hook ups. What's even better, it's all free. Keep him in Montana.