Gov. Eric Greitens called off an execution on Tuesday so the state could make sure it sentenced a guilty man to death. Greitens
granted a stay of execution to Marcellus Williams, who had been facing
death by injection at 6 p.m. for the 1998 murder of Lisha Gayle at her
home in University City. Williams’ lawyers had claimed recent DNA tests
could prove their client’s innocence. With a little more than four
hours to go before the execution was scheduled to begin, Greitens said
he was appointing a board of inquiry to investigate the case in light of
an “inconclusive” DNA test. “A
sentence of death is the ultimate, permanent punishment," he said in a
statement. "To carry out the death penalty, the people of Missouri must
have confidence in the judgment of guilt.” Attorneys for Marcellus
Williams have insisted he could be innocent, after DNA found on the
murder weapon did not match Williams’ DNA. Kent Gipson, a Kansas
City-based lawyer for Williams said the governor's action was "good
news" and said the appointment of a board of inquiry was a "rare thing"
for a Missouri capital case. Greitens invoked a rarely-used
state law giving
him discretion to appoint a board of inquiry to gather information and
report back on whether a person condemned to death should be
executed. Former Gov. Mel Carnahan convened two such boards in the
1990s. Greitens said the five-member board would include retired
Missouri judges and have the power to subpoena witnesses and evidence.
His
executive order said all of the proceedings would be closed to the public. Williams,
48, was sentenced to death in 2001. The prosecution said Williams was
burglarizing the home when Gayle, who had been taking a shower,
surprised him. She fought for her life as she was stabbed repeatedly. Williams' attorneys claim recent DNA tests could prove Williams’ innocence. The Missouri Supreme Court in 2015
postponed Williams’ execution to allow time for the DNA tests. Using technology that was not available at the time of the killing,
those tests show that DNA found on the knife matched an unknown male,
according to an analysis by Greg Hampikian, a biologist with Boise State
University. Williams’ DNA was not found on the knife. Despite that finding, the state’s high court
denied his petition to stop the execution and
either appoint a special master to hear his innocence claim or vacate
the death sentence and order his sentence commuted to life in prison. Williams’ attorneys have also
petitioned Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, circuit justice for the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, to stop the execution. Gorsuch had not ruled by Tuesday evening. Williams’ attorneys were hoping for further DNA tests to compare
the case to another slaying in 1998, the unsolved stabbing death of
Debra McClain in Pagedale. “Americans don’t want their states
executing innocent people,” said Robert Dunham, executive director of
the Death Penalty Information Center, a Washington-based nonprofit
clearinghouse for studies and reports related to capital punishment.
“They want assurances that the evidence is at least carefully reviewed
before people are executed. And this decision backs Missouri off the
brink here.” He said the U.S. Supreme Court should still review
the case and “clearly declare that the Constitution guarantees that
death row prisoners who present substantial evidence of their innocence
be given a meaningful opportunity to prove it in court.” In
its response to the U.S. Supreme Court, the state said it had a wealth
of non-DNA evidence to convict Williams. The state could prove Williams
had sold Gayle’s laptop to a third party after the killing, and had two
witnesses who independently said he confessed to them. And, the state
said, the lack his DNA on the murder weapon did not mean he was
innocent. One of the witnesses was Henry Cole, who shared a cell
with Williams in the Workhouse in 1999. He testified that he had heard a
report on TV about a $10,000 reward offered by Gayle’s family, and that
Williams told him “I pulled the caper … I laid that down.” Cole
told police about Laura Asaro, Williams’ former girlfriend. She would
later testify that when police confronted her, she told them that
Williams had admitted killing Gayle. She helped police recover the
computer with serial numbers that confirmed it had been stolen from
Gayle’s house. Neither Cole nor Asaro could be reached on Tuesday.
An Ansaro relative said Williams’ ex-girlfriend “doesn't have a
statement to give and doesn't want to be contacted.” Gayle was a
Post-Dispatch reporter from 1981 to 1992. She left the paper to do
volunteer social work with children and the poor. Her husband, Dr.
Daniel Picus, declined to comment through a family member. A
spokeswoman for Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley, wrote in an email
that “we remain confident in the judgment of the jury and the many
courts that have carefully reviewed Mr. Williams’ case over (16) years.
We applaud the work of the numerous law enforcement officers who have
dedicated their time and effort to pursuing justice in this case.” St.
Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert P. McCulloch, whose office
prosecuted Williams, said in a prepared statement that he was "confident
that any Board and the Governor, after a full review of all evidence
and information, will reach the same conclusion reached by the Jury and
the various Courts." However, he said the statute invoked by
Greitens pertained only to criminal proceedings involving mental
illness, which was "not an allegation made by Williams." The case
has attracted national attention because no forensic evidence ever
pointed to Williams, and now what has been tested pointed away from him.
Protests across the state broke into celebrations after hearing about
Greitens’ action.
http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/greitens-stops-execution-after-questions-about-dna-evidence/article_7cccd545-19ad-5df4-94cb-5020bbe3590a.html