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  2. Fourteen Days in May - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteen_Days_in_May

    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 .

  3. There Are No Guilty People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_Are_No_Guilty_People

    According to the Cambridge Companion on Tolstoy, the work is directed against the death penalty. It was incomplete, and when published after Tolstoy's death, resulted in a flood of letters, the reaction mixed. The government tried to censor the work, sentencing one person distributing copies of it to prison. [2]

  4. Return with Honor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Return_with_Honor

    Return with Honor is a 1999 documentary film about U.S. prisoners of war during the Vietnam War. [1] Among those profiled is Senator John McCain. It is narrated by Tom Hanks. Directors Freida Lee Mock and Terry Sanders won the Best Film award at the 1999 Cleveland International Film Festival.

  5. Repatriation of Cossacks after World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repatriation_of_Cossacks...

    In 1992, Sir Carol Mather, a veteran turned Conservative MP wrote in his memoirs Aftermath of War: Everyone Must Go Home that the overwhelming feeling shared by himself and other British Army officers in Austria in 1945 was that the Cossacks had willingly fought for Nazi Germany and had committed terrible atrocities against Italian civilians ...

  6. Clive Stafford Smith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clive_Stafford_Smith

    Clive Adrian Stafford Smith OBE (born 9 July 1959) is a British attorney who specialises in the areas of civil rights and working against the death penalty in the United States of America. [1] He worked to overturn death sentences for convicts, and helped found the not-for-profit Louisiana Capital Assistance Center in New Orleans. By 2002 this ...

  7. Moral Injury - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/projects/moral...

    After 90 days, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, then the top allied war commander, admitted Marjah had become a “bleeding ulcer.” It would be 10 months before the Marines could declare victory. Charlie One-Six was in the thick of it. They started taking casualties even before the battle officially began. “There was a lot of death. They lost close ...

  8. Capital punishment debate in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_debate...

    The anti-death penalty movement began to pick up pace in the 1830s and many Americans called for abolition of the death penalty. Anti-death penalty sentiment rose as a result of the Jacksonian era, which condemned gallows and advocated for better treatment of orphans, criminals, poor people, and the mentally ill.

  9. He’s the world’s longest-serving death row inmate. A court ...

    www.aol.com/world-longest-serving-death-row...

    A pair of blood-spattered trousers in a miso tank and an allegedly forced confession helped send Iwao Hakamata to death row in the 1960s. Now, more than five decades later, the world’s longest ...