Again, I got it by chance while watching the documentary genre. The title may make you think it’s a showoff of some scary killers, but it’s a story of death row inmates from a different perspective. The story of the scary crime they committed is not the main one, but the stories around it. This is the story of a death row prisoner. The beginning is an interview with a death row prisoner. Interviews follow with people about the crimes they committed and about them. It is the story of the death row’s lawyers, prosecutors, or victims’ families, and friends of the death row inmates’ own family members. Personally, I am against the execution. The reason is that even if the probability is less than 1 percent, a person can make a mistake simply because a wrong judgment can be made by mistake. Perhaps you think so because there are no victims of crime near you, but on the other hand, I am against execution. Looking at each interview, I think there could be a real mistake. Looking at these interviews, I wonder if we or society could not have prevented the moment when the crime was committed. Most of them grow up unloved in their childhood. They grow up amid parental abuse or neglect, sexual crimes committed by pedophiles, and in the late 10s, they come to the streets, starting with alcohol, drugs, and crime, eventually ending their journey to death row. Not all hard-earned people become criminals, but I thought that if the children had been rescued from such a long period of neglect and abuse, their stories might have been different if they had grown up to be loved and able to share love. Maybe I’m the mother of the child. And when I look at the interviews of the victims, I can feel their pain, too. The child or the brother is the father. And the sadness and anger of unknown depth, sometimes people who want to see the execution carried out in front of him, or sometimes in prison, they want to die old in pain. What’s amazing is that there are families of victims who have forgiven those inmates. And there were people who confessed the truth of the case at the words of forgiveness. What I saw and felt was that I had to raise my children well and that I was grateful that people I knew were not involved in crimes, big or small.