Community Corner
COVID-19 Concerns Raised At St. Louis Death Penalty Trial
Attorneys for Lawson sought a continuance in January and again in March, citing concerns about COVID-19 each time.

April 26, 2021
Attorneys for a St. Louis man accused of killing his ex-girlfriend, her mom and his baby boy are asking the Missouri Supreme Court to delay his capital murder trial for two weeks after two potential jurors tested positive for COVID-19. Jury selection began last week in the trial of Eric Lawson, who is accused of fatally shooting 22-year-old Breiana Ray and 50-year-old Gwendolyn Ray before setting an apartment fire that killed his 10-month-old son, Aiden. Lawson, 32, has been in pretrial detention since his arrest nearly nine years ago. The case is being prosecuted by the Missouri Attorney Generalβs Office.
Attorneys for Lawson sought a continuance in January and again in March, citing concerns about COVID-19 each time. Circuit Judge Michael Noble denied both requests.
Find out what's happening in St. Louisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Lawsonβs attorneys asked Noble for a continuance a third time on Wednesday, this time citing the two positive cases among potential jurors. When Noble again refused to pause the case, defense attorneys asked the Missouri Supreme Court to intervene.
βMr. Lawson and his attorneys have been exposed to COVID-19 in the past 10 days,β the court motion states. βSo have the judge, the prosecutors, courthouse staff, and prospective jurors.β
St. Louis Circuit Court spokesman Thom Gross said a potential juror appeared in court on April 14. She tested positive for COVID-19 two days later and notified the jury supervisor on April 19, saying she didn't know when or where she was exposed.
Seven of the 39 prospective jurors from the April 14 session had originally been asked to return later, but Jury Supervisor Joanne Martin called each of them and told them they were dismissed, Gross said. Martin mailed letters to the others who attended that session to inform them of the positive test.
Gross said a second prospective juror told Martin on April 16 that they had just learned that a COVID-19 test taken earlier was positive. All 40 prospective jurors from that session were dismissed. The court filing from Lawsonβs lawyers said one of the lawyers, Julie Clark, is pregnant and thus considered vulnerable. An expert witness for the defense also βhas several preexisting health conditions putting him at the greatest risk of contracting COVID,β the court filing said.
A response signed by Republican Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Assistant Attorney General Gregory Goodwin noted that attorneys on both sides and trial staff have been fully vaccinated for COVID-19, and that Lawson himself has received one Pfizer dose and is scheduled to get the second shot next week.
βThis Courtβs extraordinary intervention is not warranted because Petitioner Eric Lawson has understated the trial courtβs protective measures, because none of Lawsonβs rights are violated by Respondentβs procedures, and because this Court cannot practically delay an in-progress capital case for a βtwo-week continuance,β the response read.
Elyse Max, executive director of Missourians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, said that moving ahead with the trial is βblood-thirstyβ and creates the risk of a βsuperspreaderβ event.
βTheyβre putting everyone at risk in order to move forward,β Max said. βItβs just concerning.β
Investigators say that after shooting the two women in Breiana Ray's apartment in May 2012, Lawson set two fires and locked the door as he exited, trapping his son and Breiana Rayβs 3-year-old daughter, who was critically injured.
This is the second time Lawsonβs case has come to trial. In 2019, prosecutors and defense lawyers were unable to find enough jurors from a pool of hundreds. Some potential jurors cited scheduling conflicts, but others cited opposition to the death penalty.