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Missouri executes man for 1998 murder of woman despite her family’s requests to spare his life
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Missouri executes man for 1998 murder of woman despite her family’s requests to spare his life

BONNE TERRE, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri man was executed Tuesday for breaking into a woman’s home and killing her, despite demands from her family and the prosecutor who put him on death row to let him spend the rest of his life in prison.

Marcellus WilliamsThe 55-year-old was convicted of the 1998 murder of Lisha Gayle after she was stabbed multiple times during a break-in at her home in a St. Louis suburb.

Williams hopes to have his sentence commuted to life imprisonment suffered two setbacks On Monday, Republican Gov. Mike Parson almost simultaneously denied him a pardon and the Missouri Supreme Court declined to grant him a stay of execution. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to intervene on Tuesday.

Williams was executed despite his lawyers raising questions about jury selection at his trial and the handling of evidence in the case. His clemency appeal focused heavily on Gayle’s relatives’ desire to commute Williams’ sentence to life without the possibility of parole.

“The family defines closure as the life of Marcellus,” the petition states. “Marcellus’ execution is not necessary.”

Last month, Gayle’s relatives gave their blessing to an agreement between the St. Louis County District Attorney’s Office and Williams’ attorneys to commute the sentence to life in prison. But after an appeal by the office of Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, the state Supreme Court voided the agreement.

Williams was under Death row in five states who were to be executed within a week – an unusually high number that years of decline in the application and support of the death penalty in the USA The first was carried out Friday in South CarolinaA prisoner was also scheduled to be executed in Texas on Tuesday evening.

Gayle, 42, was a social worker and former reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Prosecutors in Williams’ trial said he broke into her home on Aug. 11, 1998, heard the shower running and found a large butcher knife. Gayle was stabbed 43 times as she came down the stairs. Her purse and her husband’s laptop were stolen.

Authorities said Williams stole a jacket to hide blood on his shirt. His girlfriend asked him why he would wear a jacket on a hot day. She said she later saw the purse and laptop in his car and that Williams sold the computer a day or two later.

Prosecutors also relied on testimony from Henry Cole, who was in a cell with Williams in 1999 when he was incarcerated on other charges. Cole told prosecutors that Williams confessed to the murder and provided details about it.

Williams’ lawyers responded that both the girlfriend and Cole had been convicted of serious crimes and asked for a $10,000 reward. They said fingerprints, a bloody shoe print, hair and other evidence at the crime scene did not match Williams’.

An investigator at the crime scene testified that the killer was wearing gloves.

On Tuesday, Williams faced his third execution. In January 2015, he was less than a week away from the lethal injection when the state Supreme Court has cancelled itto give his lawyers time to conduct additional DNA tests.

Williams was just hours away from his execution in August 2017 when then-Governor Eric Greitens, a Republican, a stay granted.Greitens a committee appointed of retired judges to investigate the case. But this body never came to a conclusion.

Questions about DNA evidence also prompted St. Louis District Attorney Wesley Bell to request a hearing Williams’ guilt. But days before the hearing on August 21, new tests showed that the DNA on the knife came from employees of the public prosecutor’s office who had handled it without gloves after the original tests in the crime lab.

Because there was no DNA evidence pointing to another suspect, attorneys with the Midwest Innocence Project reached a compromise with prosecutors: Williams would plead guilty again to first-degree murder in exchange for a new life sentence without parole. A guilty plea is not an admission of guilt, but it is treated as such in sentencing.

Judge Bruce Hilton and Gayle’s family signed the agreement. But Bailey appealed, and the state Supreme Court blocked the agreement and ordered Hilton to pay a Evidence hearingwhich took place last month.

Hilton decided on September 12 that the first-degree murder conviction and death sentence would stand, noting that Williams’ arguments had all been previously rejected. That decision was upheld by the state Supreme Court on Monday.

Lawyers for Williams, who was black, also questioned the fairness of his trial, particularly the fact that only one of the 12 jurors was black. Tricia Bushnell of the Midwest Innocence Project said the prosecutor in the case, Keith Larner, excluded six of seven black potential jurors.

Larner testified at the August hearing that he rejected a potential black juror in part because he looked too much like Williams – a statement that Williams’ lawyers said showed inappropriate racial bias.

Larner claimed that the jury selection process was fair.

Williams was the third inmate executed in Missouri this year and the 100th since the state reinstated the death penalty in 1989.

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AP writer Mark Sherman contributed from Washington. Salter reported from O’Fallon, Missouri.

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