MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) 鈥 Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey commuted the death sentence of to life in prison Friday, saying there were enough questions about his guilt that she could not move forward with his execution.
Ivey said Myers, 63, will spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole instead of being executed later this year. Ivey noted that was the sentence jurors recommended at his 1994 trial.
The Republican governor said she is a staunch supporter of the death penalty but 鈥淚 have enough questions about Mr. Myers鈥 guilt that I cannot move forward with executing him.鈥
鈥淚n short, I am not convinced that Mr. Myers is innocent, but I am not so convinced of his guilt as to approve of his execution. I therefore must respect both the jury鈥檚 decision to convict him and its recommendation that he be sentenced to life without parole,鈥 Ivey said in a statement.
Myers was convicted of capital murder in the 1991 stabbing of Ludie Mae Tucker, 69, at her Decatur home. Myers, who lived across the street from Tucker, has long maintained he is innocent, and a juror at his 1994 trial supported the push for clemency.
The reprieve came over the objections of Republican Attorney General Steve Marshall, who said he was 鈥渁stonished鈥 by the decision.
Last week the Alabama Supreme Court granted the state attorney general鈥檚 request to authorize an execution date for Myers using nitrogen gas. The next step was for Ivey to set that date.
It was the first execution Ivey has stopped since she first took office in 2017. Ivey, who has presided over more than 20 executions, called it 鈥渙ne of the most difficult decisions I鈥檝e had to make as governor.鈥
鈥淏ut I pray that the Tucker family may, in some way, find closure and peace knowing this case is closed, and Mr. Myers will spend the rest of his life in prison,鈥 Ivey said.
There were multiple questions surrounding Myers鈥 case, his attorney had argued. No physical evidence at the scene connected him to the crime. Tucker identified her assailant as a short, stocky Black man but did not name Myers or a neighbor as the attacker even though they had met several times, according to Myers鈥 son. Jurors voted 9-3 that he serve life in prison. However, the judge sentenced Myers to death under Alabama鈥檚 that let judges decide death sentences.
Ivey said there was 鈥渃ircumstantial evidence鈥 against Myers, but it is 鈥渞iddled with conflicting evidence from seemingly everyone involved.鈥 Much of the state鈥檚 case involved a VCR taken from Tucker鈥檚 home and whether Myers was the person who brought it to a drug house to sell, according to court records.
鈥淕od is answering prayers,鈥 juror Mae Puckett, who now believes Myers is innocent and had urged Ivey to intervene.
鈥淕overnor Ivey put it back into the jury鈥檚 hands,鈥 Puckett wrote.
Kacey Keeton, a lawyer for Myers, had said that there were multiple failures in Myers case, including how an earlier attorney abandoned his case, causing him to miss a deadline to raise issues in federal court. Myers, who is a Black, was convicted by a nearly all-white jury.
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure there are words enough to convey my joy, relief, and gratitude at learning of Gov. Ivey鈥檚 decision to commute Mr. Myers鈥檚 sentence,鈥 Keeton wrote in an email.
鈥淚 have represented Mr. Myers since 2007. As evidence accumulated of his innocence and the many injustices he experienced over the course of his case, I held out hope that he would someday see some measure of justice, of mercy, of humanity.鈥
The last time an Alabama governor commuted a death sentence .
Marshall sent the governor a letter Thursday disputing the innocence claim and urging her to let the execution go forward.
鈥淚 am astonished by Governor Ivey鈥檚 decision to commute the death sentence of Rocky Myers and am bewildered that she chose not to directly communicate with me about this case or her decision,鈥 Marshall said Friday in a statement.
He added that his staff 鈥渨ill go home tonight deeply saddened, not for themselves, but for the family of Ludie Mae Tucker.鈥
Kim Chandler, The Associated Press