The Sentinel-Record

Mississipp­i justices block more DNA tests in death row case

- EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON, Miss. — A Mississipp­i Supreme Court has ruled that a death row inmate will not be allowed to seek additional DNA testing on crime scene evidence from the shooting deaths of two college students nearly 30 years ago.

Willie Jerome Manning, now 54, remains in the Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry at Parchman. He was convicted in 1994 on two counts of capital murder in the December 1992 killings of Mississipp­i State University students Jon Steckler and Tiffany Miller in Oktibbeha County.

In 2013, shortly before Manning was scheduled to be executed, the U.S. Justice Department said there had been errors in FBI agents’ testimony about ballistics tests and hair analysis in the case. Manning’s attorneys asked the Mississipp­i Supreme Court to stop the lethal injection, and justices voted 8-1 to delay the execution to allow the testing of evidence.

Manning’s attorneys said they hoped DNA testing would exonerate their client, who has maintained his innocence. In 2014, they sent a rape kit, fingernail scrapings and other items to a laboratory. One of the attorneys, Rob Mink of Jackson, said the objective of the testing was to answer whether any DNA was attributab­le to Manning.

In the ruling Thursday, a majority of state Supreme Court justices wrote that Manning received “allegedly inconclusi­ve results” after six years of fingerprin­t analysis and DNA testing.

Manning’s attorneys asked an Oktibbeha County circuit judge for permission to send items to a more specialize­d lab. The judge denied that request, and a majority of justices on Thursday agreed with the judge’s ruling.

“If additional testing had been granted and another individual’s DNA profile was discovered from the crime scene evidence, no proof has been shown that it would change the outcome of Manning’s case,” Justice Robert Chamberlin wrote for the majority.

Mink told The Associated Press on Friday that he is disappoint­ed in the ruling.

“We’re considerin­g right now what options he has for additional relief,” Mink said.

The ruling noted that during the trial, Manning’s cousin testified that Manning confessed to shooting the two students. The bodies of Steckler and Miller were found in rural Oktibbeha County, and Miller’s car was missing. The car was found the next morning. Prosecutor­s said Manning was arrested after he tried to sell items belonging to the victims.

Justices Leslie King and Jim Kitchens dissented from the majority ruling Thursday. King wrote that any potential harm in waiting for additional DNA testing at a specialize­d lab “is surely minimal considerin­g that Manning has been sentenced to death.”

Manning is Black, and Steckler and Miller were white. During Manning’s trial, an FBI agent testified that some hair found at the crime scene was “from an individual of the Black race,” but that did not mean the hair came from Manning. In closing arguments, a prosecutor mentioned the hair fragments “as a way to implicate Manning because he was a member of the African-American race,” wrote King, the only Black justice currently on the Mississipp­i Supreme Court.

A 2013 letter from the FBI said the agent’s testimony in 1994 included informatio­n about DNA testing of hair that contradict­ed what was known about such testing nine years later, Mink said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? This April 2, 2019, photo provided by the Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s shows death row inmate Willie Jerome Manning. The Mississipp­i Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Manning will not be allowed to seek additional DNA testing on crime-scene evidence from the shooting deaths of two college students nearly 30 years earlier.
The Associated Press This April 2, 2019, photo provided by the Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s shows death row inmate Willie Jerome Manning. The Mississipp­i Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Manning will not be allowed to seek additional DNA testing on crime-scene evidence from the shooting deaths of two college students nearly 30 years earlier.

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