Pubdate: Fri 29 Jan 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Scott Charton - Associated Press Writer GOVERNOR SAYS SPARING INMATE AT POPE'S BEHEST WON'T BIND HIM IN FUTURE JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- With a papal plea, the governor's grace and a lottery winner's luck, convicted triple murderer Darrell Mease has escaped the death penalty. It remains to be seen whether Gov. Mel Carnahan will evade political consequences for commuting Mease's sentence to life in prison following a face-to-face plea from Pope John Paul II. "God help him if there are any grieving relatives (of Mease's victims), because he will need the pope to come back to campaign for him," said University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato. On 26 occasions, Carnahan has allowed the death penalty to proceed. Before Thursday, he had commuted a death sentence just once, for a man whose jury wasn't told of his mental retardation. The pope has spoken out frequently against capital punishment and he did so again during his two-day visit to St. Louis this week. In 1991, before Carnahan was governor, the pope asked Missouri to reduce the sentence of Glennon Sweet for killing a state trooper. Carnahan reviewed Sweet's case, but declined to halt his execution last year. On Wednesday afternoon, the Vatican's secretary of state, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, met with Carnahan and relayed the pope's plea for Mease. Later, the pope, after a prayer service at a St. Louis church, came down off the altar and personally asked the governor to "extend mercy" to Mease, Carnahan said. Mease was convicted of killing a former drug partner, Lloyd Lawrence, 69; his wife, Frankie Lawrence, 56; and their grandson, William Lawrence, 19, in May 1988. They were shot to death. His Jan. 27 execution date was set last November by the state Supreme Court. Four days later, the court changed the execution date to Feb. 10. The court didn't give a reason, but many believed it was because the papal visit to St. Louis would coincide with the execution. Carnahan announced his decision in Washington, defending it and insisting that it didn't bind him to any course of action in the future. The plea from the pope, under the ancient mosaics and soaring dome of the St. Louis Cathedral Basilica, created "extraordinary circumstances," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: derek rea