The Board of Pardons and Paroles will meet behind closed doors on
Tuesday morning to consider "supplemental information" in the case
of Kelly Gissendaner, 47, opening the possibility for her sentence
being commuted to life, with or without parole, it said.
Supporters urged government and court officials on Monday to spare
Gissendaner's life, arguing she has been a model prisoner and
questioning the lethal injection method that will be used to execute
her.
Gissendaner is scheduled to be put to death on Tuesday night for
plotting her husband's 1997 murder. It would be the first execution
of a woman in Georgia in 70 years.
Earlier on Monday, a federal judge refused to halt the lethal
injection. U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Thrash said
Gissendaner's lawyers failed to show they were likely to prevail in
their challenge of Georgia's lethal injection protocol, which the
lawyers contend is "cloaked in secrecy, fraught with errors (and)
potentially painful."
Gissendaner's execution was postponed in March after prison
officials noticed the lethal injection drug appeared cloudy.
Prison officials later said the drug had been stored at too low a
temperature.
Gissendaner's attorney Gerald King said in court that the state,
which plans to use the same procedures on Tuesday, does not know
what caused the drug's cloudy appearance.
"There's no reason to believe tomorrow night will go any different
than March 2," King said.
An attorney for the state, Sabrina Graham, said Georgia would not
use a defective drug to execute an inmate.
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King said he would appeal Thrash's ruling.
Gissendaner was convicted of murder and sentenced to death after
prosecutors said she convinced her then-boyfriend, Gregory Owen, to
kill her husband, Douglas Gissendaner.
Owen confessed to fatally stabbing Douglas Gissendaner and was
sentenced to life in prison, though he will eventually be eligible
to seek parole.
Kelly Gissendaner's supporters, including her three grown children,
want her sentence commuted to life in prison. According to a website
set up on her behalf, she completed a theology program and has
mentored other inmates while behind bars.
"My dad would not want my mom to be executed," Kayla Gissendaner,
the couple's daughter, has said in a statement. "He would not want
us to endure another devastating loss."
(Additional reporting and writing by Colleen Jenkins)
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