AG Marshall calls on Governor Ivey to reject clemency for 1998 pawn shop killer, won’t ‘give in to the loud voices of a few far-left activists’

Jeffery Lee clemency
(Alabama Department of Corrections, Fox News Digital, YHN)

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall on Monday urged Governor Kay Ivey to reject clemency for Jeffery Lee, a convicted double murderer scheduled to be put to death this week, dismissing a growing campaign to spare his life as the work of “a few far-left activists.”

Lee is set to be executed by nitrogen hypoxia during a 30-hour window that opens at midnight June 11 and closes early June 12. He would be the first inmate Alabama has executed this year.

Lee was convicted of capital murder in the Dec. 12, 1998, shooting deaths of Jimmy Ellis and Elaine Thompson at Jimmy’s Pawn Shop in Orrville, in Dallas County. Court records show Lee entered the store, asked an employee to see wedding rings, then left and returned with a sawed-off shotgun.

“On December 12, 1998, Jeffery Lee walked into Jimmy’s Pawn Shop in Orrville, Alabama, and murdered Jimmy Ellis and Elaine Thompson,” Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall said in a statement from his office Monday afternoon.

“He drank liquor and smoked a marijuana cigarette laced with cocaine before arming himself with a sawed-off shotgun and opening fire, killing both victims and wounding a third. He left the murder weapon on the counter and fled to Georgia, where he was apprehended the following morning.

“There is absolutely no question as to his guilt. Lee confessed. The surviving victim identified him. Surveillance footage captured the entire attack. Multiple courts have called the evidence against him ‘overwhelming.’

“For nearly 30 years, courts at every level have reviewed and upheld Lee’s conviction and sentence. As recently as one week ago, a federal court ruled that his method of execution is constitutional. Every legal avenue has been exhausted. The legal process has run its full and proper course,” Marshall said

In 2000, a jury voted 7-5 to recommend life in prison without parole, but the trial judge overrode that recommendation and imposed death. Alabama abolished judicial override in 2017 but did not make the change retroactive — a point at the center of the clemency campaign.

The Equal Justice Initiative, the ACLU and the Catholic Mobilizing Network are among the groups urging Ivey to commute the sentence, arguing the state should honor the jury’s verdict. Supporters have delivered more than 60,000 signatures on Lee’s behalf.

Marshall rejected that pressure.

“We should not give in to the loud voices of a few far-left activists from organizations like the ACLU and AL.com who want to see this sentence set aside and would like nothing more than for dangerous criminals to be released back into our communities,” he said.

Over time, it can be easy to look at these convicted murderers as old men rather than as the killers they were when they stole the lives of their victims and terrorized their communities. Those victims are the people I keep in mind. I think of the hopes and dreams of Jimmy Ellis and Elaine Thompson, the futures and the lives with their families that were senselessly taken from them by Jeffery Lee’s premeditated and cruel actions. Their voices were silenced on December 12, 1998, and it is a shame that there are those out there who feel the need to amplify the voice of Mr. Lee over the voices of his victims.

The people of Alabama have not forgotten Jimmy and Elaine. I have not forgotten them. Anything short of carrying out the sentence imposed by the court falls short of justice for the victims, and that is not what victims of this state deserve.”

Grayson Everett is the editor in chief of Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on X @Grayson270.