JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A Missouri man seeking to avoid execution suffered dual setbacks Monday as the state's top court and governor each rejected requests to cancel his scheduled lethal injection.
Marcellus Williams is set to be executed at 6 p.m. Tuesday for the 1998 murder of Lisha Gayle, a social worker and former newspaper reporter who was repeatedly stabbed during a burglary of her suburban St. Louis home.
Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican, rejected Williams' clemency request to spare him from the death penalty and instead sentence him to life in prison. The Missouri Supreme Court, almost simultaneously, also rejected a request to cancel the execution so that a lower court could make a new determination about whether a trial prosecutor wrongly excluded a potential Black juror for racial reasons.
Attorneys for Williams still have an appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Williams, 55, has asserted his innocence. But his attorney did not pursue that claim Monday before the state's highest court, instead focusing on alleged procedural errors in jury selection and the prosecution's alleged mishandling of the murder weapon.
The state Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision, affirmed a lower court ruling rejecting Williams' arguments.
''Despite nearly a quarter century of litigation in both state and federal courts, there is no credible evidence of actual innocence or any showing of a constitutional error undermining confidence in the original judgment,'' Judge Zel Fischer wrote in the state Supreme Court ruling.
Parson said Williams received extensive legal opportunities to try to argue his innocence and accused Williams' attorneys of trying to ''muddy the waters about DNA evidence'' with claims that courts have repeatedly rejected.