U.S.
James A. Finley/AP

Missouri executes man for 1994 killing at gas station

Leon Taylor became the ninth person executed in Missouri this year after the Supreme Court rejected his appeal

A man who killed a suburban Kansas City gas station attendant in front of the worker's young stepdaughter in 1994 was put to death early Wednesday.

Leon Taylor, 56, was pronounced dead at 12:22 a.m. at the state prison in Bonne Terre, minutes after receiving a lethal injection.  

Taylor's fate was sealed Tuesday when Gov. Jay Nixon declined to grant clemency and the U.S. Supreme Court turned down his appeal.

Taylor was the ninth inmate executed in Missouri and the 33rd person executed in the United States this year, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

With Taylor's death, 2014 ties 1999 for having the most executions in a year in Missouri.

Taylor shot Robert Newton, an attendant, to death in front of Newton's 8-year-old stepdaughter during a gas station robbery in Independence, Missouri on April 14, 1994. Taylor tried to kill the girl, too, but the gun jammed.
  
According to court records, Taylor, his half brother and half sister had decided to rob a gas station and Newton was at the station with his stepdaughter.

Taylor entered the store, drew a gun and told Newton, 53, to put $400 in a money bag. Newton complied and the half brother, Willie Owens, took the money to the car.

Taylor then ordered Newton and the child to a back room. Newton pleaded with Taylor not to shoot him in front of the little girl, but Taylor shot him in the head. He tried to kill the girl but the gun jammed, so he locked her in the room and the trio drove away.

"She had the gun turned on her," said Michael Hunt, an assistant Jackson County prosecutor who worked on the case. "It didn't fire. If it had fired, we'd have had a double homicide."

Hunt said the child's testimony at trial was pivotal in the death sentence.

Taylor was arrested a week after the crime when police responded to a tips hotline call.

Court appeals claimed the death penalty for Taylor was unfair for several reasons.

Taylor's original jury deadlocked and a judge sentenced him to death. When that was thrown out, an all-white jury gave Taylor, who was black, the death sentence.

In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that only a jury could impose a death sentence. Taylor's lawyers contended that a Missouri Supreme Court ruling after the U.S. Supreme Court decision led the state to commute at least 10 other death sentences for inmates sentenced by a judge to life in prison — everyone except Taylor.

Attorney Elizabeth Carlyle said Taylor essentially was penalized for successfully appealing his first conviction.

The clemency request to Nixon said Taylor had turned his life around in prison, becoming a devout Christian who helped other prisoners.

The petition also cited abuse Taylor suffered as a child, saying his mother began giving him alcohol when he was 5 and that he later became addicted to alcohol and drugs.
  

The Associated Press

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