Notable battle over death row defendant’s innocence claim in Missouri
The New York Times has this new piece, headlined “Prosecutors to Face Off Over Innocence Claim by Prisoner on Death Row,” reporting on the people behind a notable legal fight surrounding a defendant scheduled to be executed by the state of Missouri next month. Here is how it starts:
A man facing execution in Missouri next month will be in court on Wednesday for what could be his last chance to prove his innocence.
The guilt of the man, Marcellus Williams, has been challenged for years, and he has come close to execution twice. But the hearing on Wednesday in St. Louis County will be the first time that a court will consider DNA evidence that could exonerate him.
The case is notable because it has put two law enforcement officials, the local prosecutor and the state attorney general, on opposite sides. The prosecutor, Wesley Bell, supports Mr. Williams’s bid for exoneration and has filed a 63-page motion to overturn his conviction. The attorney general, Andrew Bailey, has argued that Wednesday’s hearing should not even take place.
Mr. Bell, a Democrat, recently defeated U.S. Representative Cori Bush in the Democratic primary for her House seat in a heavily Democratic district, so he will very likely be heading to Congress in January. Mr. Bailey, a Republican who was appointed to his office midterm to fill a vacancy, fended off a primary challenge this month and is also likely to win the general election in the deeply red state.
In his short time in office, Mr. Bailey has opposed three wrongful-conviction claims, going so far as to try to keep people in prison after they have been exonerated. In the Williams case, he has asked both the trial court and the State Supreme Court to block the hearing.
UPDATE: Thanks to a helpful commentor, I see there is new breaking news in this case: “Missouri death row inmate agrees to new plea in deal that calls for life without parole.” The latest:
A Missouri death row inmate on Wednesday dropped his innocence claim and entered a new no-contest plea in an agreement that calls for a revised sentence of life in prison without parole.
But the Missouri Attorney General’s Office opposes the new consent judgment and will appeal in an effort to move ahead with the scheduled Sept. 24 execution of Marcellus Williams.
ANOTHER UPDATE: Via CBS/AP, “Missouri Supreme Court blocks agreement that would have halted execution of death row inmate Marcellus Williams“