While he was on
death row at
Changi Prison, Daniel Chan, who lost his appeal, did not file for clemency despite his lawyer Spencer Gwee's advice, due to him feeling that such a move would damage his claims of innocence over the offence he was convicted of. Nevertheless, Gwee drafted a petition for clemency and submitted it in May 1994 on Chan's behalf, in hopes of obtaining a reprieve and commuting his client's death sentence to
life imprisonment. However, on 18 November 1994, the clemency appeal was rejected by then
President of Singapore Ong Teng Cheong. Soon after, a death warrant was made and the prison authorities informed Chan's family that Chan was scheduled to be executed a week later on 25 November 1994. Both the British High Commission and
Amnesty International appealed for clemency upon being given notice of the death warrant. Chan was described to be a devout Christian, and a volunteer noted that Chan was resigned to his fate, as he was able to cope with the help of religion. Chan was noticeably reformed and he showed regret and repentance for his crime, and often expressed concern to his family and fellow prisoners. His wife blamed herself for her husband's plight, given that Chan committed the crime for money to pay for his son's medical fees. When his family went to visit him one final time, Chan decided to change his mind after seeing his elderly father, wife and six-year-old son, feeling that he owed them and thus he appealed for a
stay of execution to allow him more time to prepare a second clemency plea. Nine hours before he was to be hanged, Chan received a notification on the night of 24 November 1994 that he would not be hanged the next morning, and instead, he was given a period of two weeks to prepare his personal letter for clemency while his execution was indefinitely suspended. On that morning of 25 November 1994, the same day when Chan was to hang as originally scheduled, two death row prisoners were put to death; one of them was
Ong Yeow Tian, who killed a police officer and even shot two other cops (who both survived). Ong was Chan's acquaintance and cellmate while on death row, and Chan was the one who preached his Christian beliefs to Ong and baptized him prior to Ong's execution. After his temporary reprieve, Chan therefore filed a personal plea for clemency, in which he pleaded for his life to be spared, recounting that he felt deep regret for his crime and hoped to have a second chance in life. The appeal was heard on 8 December 1994. During the time Chan was still pending his clemency outcome, two Hong Kong residents Elke Tsang and Angel Mou were hanged on 16 December 1994 and 6 January 1995 respectively, leaving Chan and three others from Hong Kong to remain on Singapore's death row, with their sentences pending to be carried out. During the time Chan was appealing for clemency, an eye expert,
Dennis Lam Shun-chiu, was consulted to examine Chan's son, and he found that the young boy would not be able to recover his eyesight. In fact, the child had a cornea transplant in one eye a few years prior to his father's execution, but the surgery was unsuccessful. ==Execution==