WARREN, Ohio - Trumbull County's prosecutor says it's been nearly 32 years since a Warren husband and wife were murdered in their home and it's time for the man convicted of those killings to have his death sentence carried out.

Prosecutor Dennis Watkins on Monday filed a motion to set an execution date for 51-year-old Charles Lorraine, who was sentenced to death for the 1986 stabbing deaths of 80-year-old Doris Montgomery and her 77-year-old husband Raymond.

He was convicted on two counts of aggravated murder, two counts of burglary, two counts of complicity to commit burglary, and one count of robbery.

According to court records, the Montgomerys had been friendly and generous to Lorraine in the past and they had hired him to perform tasks around their home.

On May 6, 1986, investigators say Lorraine got Raymond Montgomery to go to the second floor of his home on the pretense that he had forgotten an item.

Upon entering the room, Lorraine, while wearing rubber gloves, stabbed Montgomery five times with a butcher knife.

After killing the husband, police say Lorraine returned to the first floor, where Mrs. Montgomery was confined to bed and stabbed her nine times.

He then burglarized the home and went to a bar and bought drinks with the stolen money, according to court documents.

Investigators say Lorraine and a friend returned to the Montgomery home to steal again.

In his motion, Watkins says Lorraine has exhausted all of his state and federal appeals and has not asked for a stay of his execution.