Story Published:
Apr 21, 2008 at 2:49 PM CST
Story Updated:
Apr 21, 2008 at 2:49 PM CST
ST. LOUIS -- The U.S. Supreme Court turned down the lethal injection appeal of convicted murderer Michael Taylor of Kansas City. Taylor was one of 10 death row inmates who lost their appeals on Monday. The ruling came in the wake of the high court's decision last week upholding the constitutionality of lethal injection.
It's unclear whether Taylor can mount a new appeal to stop his execution. The court's decision last week left the door open to challenging lethal injection procedures in states where problems with administering the drugs are well documented.
Attorneys for Taylor asked the Supreme Court to hear his case last fall after the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against him. Taylor's attorneys said at the time that his was the first case of its kind to reach the Supreme Court after being fully litigated and reviewed on appeal.
Taylor was one of two men sentenced to die for the kidnapping, rape and
killing of 15-year-old Ann Harrison, who was taken from just outside her home
in Kansas City while waiting for a school bus in 1989.
He came close to being executed in February 2006 but his challenges to
Missouri's lethal injection procedures halted his and other executions in the
state. Missouri hasn't executed an inmate since convicted killer Marlin
Gray was put to death in October 2005.
A federal district judge in Kansas City ruled in 2006 that Missouri's
execution procedures violated constitutional protections against cruel and
unusual punishment. Last June, a panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals reversed the judge's ruling, and the full court refused to take up the
matter.
Last August, the St. Louis-based federal appeals court lifted a more-than-year-old
stay on executions in Missouri. The ruling cleared the way for the Missouri
Supreme Court to set execution dates for Taylor and other condemned inmates
sought by Attorney General Jay Nixon.