Stacey Johnson is the fourth prisoner in Arkansas to receive a reprieve from execution this month, frustrating state authorities' efforts to run a batch through capital punishment before a key drug in the lethal injections expires.
The stay for Johnson stemmed from a bid to have an evidentiary hearing related to his request for DNA testing to prove his innocence.
"We are grateful and relieved" at the ruling by the Arkansas Supreme Court regarding Stacey Johnson," said Innocence Project senior staff attorney Nina Morrison, whose group is defending Johnson.
"As we argued in our brief, there is a significant amount of DNA evidence that has never been tested which could exonerate Mr. Lee and identify the real perpetrator of the crime."
Arkansas' Governor Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, had planned for eight men on death row to be executed within an 11-day period before the end of April, when the state's stock of midazolam, a sedative used in the lethal injections, expires.
But amid public opposition to the death penalty -- including protests in the state capital Little Rock including actor Johnny Depp and a judge linked to one of the cases -- lawyers obtained stays for three other executions.
Then, last Friday, Arkansas' Supreme Court suspended, with no explanation, the execution of prisoner Bruce Ward planned for Monday this week.
And late on Monday, after inmate Don Davis ate what was supposed to be his "last meal" and just minutes before his execution, the US Supreme Court gave a last-minute ruling sparing him.
But Arkansas' attorney general, Leslie Rutledge, has pledged to overcome the stays and haul Ward and Davis back into the death chamber.
Lee, who is also black, was sentenced to death in 1993 for the murder of his neighbor, a white woman.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
