Victims’ family asks for delay of federal inmate’s execution
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Family members of the victims of an inmate scheduled to be put to death next week asked a federal judge to delay his execution Tuesday, saying the coronavirus pandemic puts them at risk if they travel to attend it.
The family members of Daniel Lewis Lee’s victims asked that Lee’s execution be put off until a treatment or a vaccine is available for the virus. Lee, convicted of killing an Arkansas family as part of a plot to establish a whites-only nation in the Pacific Northwest, is scheduled to be executed on July 13.
Lee is scheduled to be the first federal inmate executed in 17 years. Lee, 47, was convicted of the 1996 murders of gun dealer William Mueller, his wife, Nancy, and her 8-year-old daughter, Sarah Powell.
The request to halt the trial was filed by Earlene Peterson, Nancy Mueller’s mother and Sarah’s grandmother; Kimma Gurel, who is Nancy Mueller’s sister and Sarah’s aunt; and Monica Veillette, who is Nancy Mueller’s niece and Sarah’s cousin. Peterson lives in Arkansas, while Gurel and Veillette live in Washington.

