Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Death row inmate seeks clemency

- JEANNIE ROBERTS

LITTLE ROCK — A deathrow inmate, scheduled to be executed in November, has requested executive clemency, a state Parole Board official said Thursday.

Stacey Johnson, 45, filed the request — which can be either total forgivenes­s for the crime or a reduction of the criminal penalty — Wednesday, said state Parole Board administra­tor Solomon Graves.

Johnson and Terrick Nooner, 44, are scheduled to die by lethal injection Nov. 3. Nooner hadn’t requested clemency as of late Thursday, but has until noon Monday to do so, Graves said.

The Parole Board will hold a clemency hearing with Johnson at the Arkansas Department of Correction’s Varner Unit in Gould at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 15. The second part of the hearing — which includes the state’s objection to the clemency as well as victim-impact testimony — will be at 1 p.m. Oct. 15 at the Parole Board’s office in Little Rock.

The Parole Board will consider the applicatio­n and the testimony, then make a recommenda­tion to Gov. Asa Hutchinson to either grant the clemency or deny it. The governor isn’t obligated to follow the board’s decision.

Death-row inmates Bruce Ward, 58, and Don Davis, 52 — who are set to die by lethal injection Oct. 21 — didn’t submit a clemency request by the Sept. 21 deadline, Graves said.

Besides Johnson, Nooner, Ward and Davis, inmates Marcel Williams and Jack Jones Jr. are scheduled to be executed Dec. 14 and Jason McGehee and Kenneth Williams are scheduled to die Jan. 14.

All eight have exhausted all standard appeals. Williams and Jones have until Nov. 3 to request clemency and McGehee and Williams have until Dec. 4 to request it.

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