Oklahoma Court Denies New Evidence Hearing for Death Row Inmate Richard Glossip
After the latest reprieve from the governor, he’s scheduled for execution in February.

Oklahoma's criminal appeals court has denied a motion by death row prisoner Richard Glossip for a new evidentiary hearing to consider the possibility that he's innocent of murder and shouldn't be executed.
Glossip has been on death row for most of the past 24 years, having been convicted in 1998 for orchestrating the murder of Oklahoma City hotel owner Barry Van Treese. Glossip was never accused of directly killing Van Treese. He was convicted of convincing Justin Sneed (who was 19 at the time), the maintenance man of the hotel where Glossip was the manager, to do the deed, with Glossip saying they would split Van Treese's money.
Glossip has maintained his innocence. Sneed's testimony has served as the primary evidence against Glossip. Sneed himself was sentenced to life in prison, and Glossip's lawyers have argued that detectives investigating the case essentially fed Sneed the story to blame Glossip to deflect full responsibility.
Though Glossip was first convicted in 1998, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals tossed out his conviction due to the poor evidence and he was retried. He was nevertheless convicted again in 2004.
The lack of much evidence outside of Sneed's testimony has lent a lot of credibility to claims of Glossip's innocence, and in the past year, a pack of bipartisan lawmakers (several of whom support the death penalty) have been calling for another review of the evidence. Bolstering Glossip's claims was a report from law firm Reed Smith detailing many problems with the case. In August they unearthed what appears to be a 2007 letter from Sneed to Gina K. Walker, who was his public defender, suggesting that he was rethinking his testimony, calling it a "mistake," and asking to meet with her.
Subsequently, Gov. Kevin Stitt ordered a two-month stay of Glossip's execution, which had been scheduled for Sept. 22, for his innocence to be considered. On Nov. 3, Stitt granted a second two-month stay as the legal proceedings continued. He is now scheduled for execution on Feb. 16, 2023.
But today's ruling puts a damper on those efforts and also serves to show how heavily the deck is stacked against defendants once they've been sentenced to death. Glossip's motion makes several claims of procedural and due process issues, none of which the court will consider, Judge David Lewis explains, because Oklahoma's Post-Conviction Procedure Act puts strict time limits on when these claims can be made.
The court can still consider claims of factual innocence, and Glossip did claim as such in this motion. Unfortunately the Criminal Court of Appeals did not find that Glossip had provided enough proof of his own innocence to call for a new hearing. Now that Glossip has been convicted by a jury, the onus fall on him to provide evidence that he's innocent. Oklahoma law requires that Glossip show by "clear and convincing evidence" (a legal standard showing a "high probability" that the claim is true) that he's innocent. David notes in the denial that "[The court's judges] weigh any evidence presented against the evidence as a whole, in a light most favorable to the State, to determine if Glossip has met his burden."
The judges note the various jailhouse informants who have provided affidavits claiming to have heard Sneed admit killing Van Treese in order to rob him while never mentioning Glossip and evidence that Sneed was a drug user with a "violent personality." But none of that clears Glossip. Davis writes, "Contrary to Glossip's assertion, there is no evidence that Sneed has ever sought to recant his testimony in any meaningful way. Further, none of the other witnesses against Glossip have changed their story."
In other words, the judges don't see a difference between the evidence used to convict Glossip in the first place and the evidence they're looking at now. But because Glossip has already been convicted, even if the evidence seems very thin now, the judges need Glossip to prove more than that it's highly likely that Sneed is lying. And mind you, all these hurdles are just to open a new evidentiary hearing, not to throw out the conviction.
"This is a very difficult decision to understand," said Don Knight, Glossip's attorney, in a written statement. "The evidence of Rich's innocence, and the State's misconduct, is overwhelming and deserving of, at the very minimum, a fair hearing where we can present our evidence. This is all we have ever asked for and is something that, obviously, the State is desperate to see never happen."
Glossip has a second petition for relief submitted to the same court, alleging prosecutorial misconduct and again mentioning Sneed's past interest in possibly recanting. Glossip has had his execution delayed six times now. But the clock is ticking again. In June, Oklahoma's attorney general asked the state to start scheduling executions of 25 inmates, Glossip just one among them. The state has executed four prisoners this year and has two more scheduled before the end of 2022.
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So, the guy who did the killing gets life, but the guy accused of encouraging him to kill gets the death penalty? Pretty sweet plea deal.
One of many reasons why death penalty is bullshit.
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The main issue here isn't the death penalty, but the ready acceptance by police, prosecutors, and courts of testimony from other criminals (jailhouse informants as well as alleged co-conspirators), without independent supporting evidence. That creates a situation where the most psychopathic criminal gets out of prison first - not only is a psychopath the first to betray others, but psychopaths are great liars and fool authorities all the time.
Did you read the transcript or the appellate court opinions?
Or just get it from the media?
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Glossip has maintained his innocence. Sneed's testimony has served as the primary evidence against Glossip.
It's insane to convict someone of any crime based on this. ridiculous
this is just another reminder that in a criminal trial by jury, your fate is in the hands of a bunch of morons who do not have the capacity to understand what "Beyond a reasonable doubt" actually means.
It's scary
I have suspected for some time that in many cases juries reason that if the man is guilty obviously we don't want to acquit, and if he's innocent, well, if we convict him now he'll get a second chance on appeal, so best to convict just to be on the safe side.
That is the most horrifying thing I have ever heard. =(
What happened to "better to let the guilty man go free, rather than convict an innocent man " ?
If true, what have we become ?
“better to let the guilty man go free, rather than convict an innocent man ”
I think that much of the time, neither jury nor prosecutors – and certainly not appellate judges – believe that.
And consider the whole emphasis on "finality" as though process matters more than people.
That's why the governor has pardon powers.
"a pack of bipartisan lawmakers (several of whom support the death penalty) have been calling for another review of the evidence."
I suppose that if you're going to support the death penalty, you have an interest in making certain that it's fairly administered when it's used, don't you?
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24 years is a very severe sentence. I would support commutation for him even if he's legitimately guilty.
no state should have the power something something
Sounds like the Sneed fellow might never gave half of his ill-gotten gains to Glossip. Wonder if those gains were seized by police or if there were any physical record of whom Sneed actually communicated with at that time, since 24 years ago lawyers were less accustomed to tech forensics.
Treasonous girl-bullier and prohibitionist defendants naturally want to be supported in comfort by the tax hostages whose Constitution they attacked. This pitiful wretch will get no sympathy from me, much less be precedent for taxing Americans hotel rates to keep confesses, videotaped multiple killers fed and warm until all jurors are homicidal maniac nullifiers of laws against murder. Mises-flag anarcho-Anschluss infiltrators are the only ones pulling for preservation of murderers.
And don't get me started on that whole Comstock thing.
Commies contaminated your precious bodily fluids again?
Sneed's testimony has served as the primary evidence against Glossip. Wrong. Glossip's story he told the police the day after, didn't make any sense, and this was BEFORE they zeroed in on Sneed. The owner discovered Glossip was embezzling money from him and told him he wanted certain records produced the next day. Evidence shows there is usually around $4,000 in receipts at the managers office. He was murdered that night. Glossip was usually broke but suddenly had thousands of dollars in his pocket (so did Sneed - they split the money). He managed the Motel rooms but his fingerprints appear no where in the room where the murder took place. (He told Sneed to buy cleaning materials). He told the housekeeper not to clean the downstairs rooms because the victim himself (now lying dead in the same room) rented it out to drunks who broke a window - he and Sneed would clean the room and fix the window. Sneed shows up at his room at 4am (as planned) after the murder, and says (overheard by Glossip girlfriend) that some drunks were fighting in the room where the murder took place, trying to set up some flimsy alternate theory of the crime. Glossip lives paycheck to paycheck and is always broke, but suddenly has $2000 on him. Sneed gets room and board, no cash, for doing maintenance work but shows up with $2,000 after telling police they split the money. After his 'deer in the headlight' first interview with police, Glossip starts selling his possessions and tells everyone he's leaving town for good, but they arrest him before he can flee. They claimed incompetence of counsel at the first trial because they did not show Sneed's 'confession' on videotape which they claim should have 'cleared' Glossip. That fails because his second set of attorneys, with benefit of the first trial, also decided not to the show the video because they too, understood it pointed to Glossip's guilt, not innocence. Two juries convicted him. Case closed.
Every time I see an article about the death penalty on Reason I always look for one of these posts first because Reason cannot, will not, ever take half a glance at whether someone may be facing the table for a damn good reason.
Lauren Galik even wrote that Glossip was convicted on Sneed's testimony alone.
The Wikipedia article on this case doesn’t include this incriminating evidence. And the article on the Danielle van Dam case contains very little exculpatory evidence. Which shows that you can “prove” just about anything you want if you carefully select the evidence you present. And it shows that Wikipedia is not always a reliable source of information.
Reason doesn't do itself any favors by not giving the full picture. Glossip's guilty as sin.
Twenty-five years on death row? Just do it! Do it today - now.
I don't care that they let the other guy off with a time sentence - that has nothing to do with the justice of this man's death sentence. "Johnny's mom lets him do it!" is not an excuse.
Somehow, in this country, everyone in prison is innocent. Isn't it remarkable how we seem so successful at getting every trial wrong?
More like eighteen years, since his first conviction was reversed.
This reminds me of David Westerfield, who has been on death row for 20 years after being convicted of kidnapping his 7-year-old neighbor Danielle van Dam from her bed at night, and then killing her.
There were two definite crime scenes, her home and the body recovery site, yet there was NO evidence he had been at either. Moreover, no one could understand how he could have kidnapped her, in the dark, in an unfamiliar house he’d never been in, a house with a burglar alarm, a house with a large and lively dog, a house with up to 6 adults and two other children, a house he was stuck in for maybe over an hour, without anyone noticing him and without leaving any evidence behind. And cell-phone and other evidence confirmed his alibi, that he was nowhere near the body recovery site.
And there was dog scent evidence that he hadn’t kidnapped her, and entomology evidence - by both the police’s regular entomologist and even the prosecution’s own entomologist! - that her body was only dumped there long after he was under police surveillance.
He was convicted based on a small amount of evidence of her in his house, which is easily innocently explained by her and other family members being in his house just a couple of days earlier, and especially on an even smaller amount in his RV, which is also easily innocently explained as it was often parked unlocked in the streets outside their houses, so she had plenty of opportunities to sneak inside it. Moreover, there are question marks over that evidence, for example a blood drop which wasn’t photographed or measured, and a blood stain on his jacket which wasn’t seen by the dry cleaners, in fact there’s no record of it being seen by anyone until it had been in police custody for almost a week.
The “guilty” verdict therefore couldn’t have been based on evidence, certainly not physical evidence, but was surely instead based on emotion, fear. The community was outraged at the crime, and the judge refused to sequester the jury, so the poor jurors had to run the gauntlet through an angry crowd every day.
Where did you get this idea?
I’m puzzled. What idea? Could you please be more specific.
It's my recollection that Westerfield's attorneys were bargaining with prosecutors--no DP if Westerfield would let them know where body is.
Here is more about the case.
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/ok-court-of-criminal-appeals/1466730.html
That is a very comprehensive analysis of the evidence - which is exactly what is required in every case. But before I could unreservedly conclude that Glossip is guilty, I would first like to see his rebuttal of all this evidence.