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How Did The Clutter Deserve To Die

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Herbert Clutter; Age: 48 years; Honest farm owner and family man
Bonnie Clutter; Age: 45 years; Mild mannered mother suffering from anxiety
Nancy Clutter; Age: 16 years; A talented, bright, and incredibly sweet young lady
Kenyon Clutter; Age: 15 years; An awkward, yet sweet, young man fascinated with carpentry

Did they deserve to die?
Richard Hickock; Age: 34 years; Charming, yet dangerous; the boy next door gone bad
Perry Smith; Age: 37 years; Mentally unstable; abused, neglected, and denied opportunity

Did they deserve to die?

It’s a loaded topic and a long debated question. Clearly the Clutters, an average all-American family, did not deserve to die. But what about Mr. Hickock and Mr. Smith, their killers?

The Hickock and Smith were peculiar fellows and made for a peculiar sort of duo. Despite being raised in incredibly different environments, the lives of the two men converged in prison. Incidentally their lives would end together ten years after the murders of the Clutter family, in the same place as they met- a prison. …show more content…
The murders of the four Clutters after a planned robbery turned out to be a bust.
The modus operandi? 12-gauge Savage Model 300 shotgun used to shoot all four Clutters straight through the head, a knife to slit Mr. Clutter’s throat, some rope to tie family’s hands and feet, a mattress box to make Mr. Clutter more comfortable, and a pillow for Kenyon. Those last two details had law enforcement puzzled until Smith himself revealed he just wanted to make his victims more comfortable as he genuinely “...didn't want to harm the [Herb Clutter]. I thought he was a very nice gentleman. Soft-spoken. I thought so right up to the moment I cut his throat."
The punishment? The death penalty. Their lives ended in the early morning hours, gasping for air with rope broken necks on the gallows, thirteen long steps from the

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