By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) โ A Missouri inmate convicted of fatally stabbing a woman in 1998 will avoid the death penalty and instead be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, prosecutors said on Wednesday, after DNA testing of the murder weapon did not match him.
Marcellus Williams, 55, who had been scheduled to be put to death next month, will enter what is known as an โAlford pleaโ to a first-degree murder charge on Thursday as part of a deal with prosecutors that vacates his original conviction.
The plea allows Williams to continue to maintain his innocence, as he has done since the murder, while forgoing a new trial and accepting the recommended sentence.
In an order, Judge Bruce Hilton in St. Louis County Circuit Court said that the St. Louis Prosecuting Attorneyโs office conceded there were โconstitutional errorsโ during the trial that โundermine confidenceโ in the verdict. He also noted that the family of the victim, Felicia โLishaโ Gayle, did not wish for Williams to be executed.
Gayle was stabbed 43 times in her suburban home, and Williams was convicted in 2001 largely on the testimony of two witnesses whom prosecutors have now described in court papers as โunreliable.โ
Prosecutors had initially concluded that DNA tests excluded Williams. Additional testing, however, found the lead investigatorโs DNA on the knife, which suggested the weapon had been mishandled and contaminated at the time but did not definitively exclude Williams.
Williamsโ attorney, Tricia Rojo Bushnell, said in a statement that no reliable evidence has ever connected her client to the crime.
โMarcellus Williams is an innocent man, and nothing about todayโs plea agreement changes that fact,โ she said in a statement. โBy agreeing to an Alford plea, the parties will bring a measure of finality to Felicia Gayleโs family, while ensuring that Mr. Williams will remain alive as we continue to pursue new evidence to prove, once and for all, that he is innocent.โ
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey opposed the courtโs decision, arguing that the evidence used to convict Williams remained undisturbed. A spokesperson for the St. Louis Prosecuting Attorney said the office expects Bailey to appeal Wednesdayโs decision.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Josie Kao)
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