This undated photo provided by the Arkansas Department of Correction shows Willie Mae Harris. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Wednesday, March 4, 2020, he plans to commute the life sentence of Harris, making her immediately eligible for parole. Harris was convicted of first degree murder in the shooting death of her husband, who she said abused her. (Arkansas Department of Correction via AP)

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas’ governor on Wednesday announced he planned to commute the life sentence of a woman convicted more than three decades ago of fatally shooting her husband, who had physically abused her.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced his intent to make Willie Mae Harris, 72, immediately eligible for parole, citing the physical abuse Harris suffered. Harris was convicted of first-degree murder in 1985.

“She had been a victim of domestic violence for a long period of time, there’s evidence of that,” Hutchinson said in a speech at the Governor’s Mansion to the Political Animals Club. “She proclaimed her evidence but for a lot of different reasons, I granted clemency to Willie Mae Harris today.”

Harris admitted to shooting her husband, Clyde Harris, but said it was an accident related to self-defense. Harris is legally blind and the state Parole Board several times over the years has recommended she receive clemency. Her case has gained renewed attention in recent months following columns by Arkansas Democrat-Gazette columnist Mike Masterson and a story by The Appeal, a website focused on criminal justice issues.

“I’ve basically been crying over the past hour,” Lee Easton, an attorney for Harris, said Wednesday afternoon following Hutchinson’s announcement. “She’s missed generations of her family.”

In her most recent application for clemency, Harris said she did not receive a fair trial because none of the evidence of the abuse she suffered was presented. She included an affidavit from her aunt, who said Clyde Harris once broke Willie Mae’s hand with a universal joint from a car.

Easton said Harris has been a model prisoner and cited her work as a tutor for other inmates. There is a 30-day waiting period to receive public feedback before final action is taken on the commutation.

Hutchinson also said planned to commute the sentence of Robert R. Johnson Jr., 36, who was sentenced in 2008 to 86 years in prison on multiple nonviolent drug offenses.