COLUMBUS, Ohio — A condemned Cleveland killer moved one step closer to execution Tuesday despite a rare plea for mercy from the prosecutor overseeing his case and support from nearly half of a board that previously voted unanimously against him.
The Ohio Parole Board voted 6-4 to turn down a request for clemency for death row inmate Billy Slagle, sentenced to die for stabbing a neighbor 17 times almost three decades ago.
The entire board ruled against clemency two years ago for Slagle, but that was before the election of new Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty and a change in his office's approach to capital punishment.
McGinty, who is applying new criteria to both old and new death penalty cases, has said he doesn't believe his office could obtain a death sentence for Slagle today. McGinty is pushing for life without parole, arguing that without that option in 1987, jurors trying to ensure that Slagle would never go free chose the only option before them: a death sentence.
Slagle was convicted in the death that year of Mari Anne Pope, who was killed while two young children she was watching were in the house.
"The egregious nature of Slagle's crime and circumstances surrounding it outweigh the mitigation present here," the parole board wrote in Tuesday's ruling, which called the slaying "unprovoked, merciless, and completely senseless."
McGinty said he respected the board's decision.
"We will continue to make our position known to Gov. John Kasich as he weighs one of the most difficult decisions that any governor must make," the prosecutor said in a statement.