The U.S. Supreme Court has granted a stay of execution for a Missouri death row inmate who has argued that a hole in his brain could cause him to have seizures, pending the convicted killer’s appeal before a lower court.
Ernest Lee Johnson, 55, was scheduled to be put to death Tuesday for killing three store workers with a claw hammer in 1994 in Columbia.
RELATED: Death-row inmate says hole in his brain means he can’t be executed
Johnson’s attorneys have argued that a brain tumor that left a hole in his skull and blank space in his brain where the tumor was removed could cause “uncontrollable seizures” and a “severely painful execution” if he is put to death with an injection of Pentobarbital.









