Oklahoma Almost Killed Him 3 Times. Now, the State Is Trying To Vacate His Conviction.
"It is critical that Oklahomans have absolute faith that the death penalty is administered fairly and with certainty," said the state's attorney general in a Thursday press release.

Oklahoma's attorney general has filed a motion to overturn the capital murder conviction of Richard Glossip, who has spent almost 26 years on death row. The move comes after the release of a new report detailing considerable issues in the state's case against Glossip, concluding that he was "deprived of a fair trial."
Richard Glossip was convicted in 1998 for the murder of his boss, Barry Van Treese, the year prior. Another man, Justin Sneed, had confessed to the murder, but testified during Glossip's trial that he killed Van Treese in a murder-for-hire scheme set up by Glossip. In exchange for his testimony against Glossip, Sneed avoided the death penalty and received a life sentence.
Cracks in the case against Glossip—who has long claimed innocence—began to show soon after his conviction. In particular, Sneed's testimony against him was the only direct evidence tying Glossip to the murder.
In 2001, an Oklahoma court overturned Glossip's conviction, writing that "the evidence at trial tending to corroborate Sneed's testimony was extremely weak." However, in 2004, another jury yet again convicted Glossip of murder, sentencing him to death. Over the years, Glossip has received four separate stays of execution.
In 2021, a group of over 30 lawmakers requested an independent investigation into Glossip's case. When the 343-page report was released in 2022, it revealed that the state had intentionally destroyed evidence before Glossip's trial and "uncovered police contamination of the state's star witness, Justin Sneed, the actual killer, who implicated Glossip only after the detectives mentioned Glossip's name to Sneed six times during his interrogation." Most damning of all, the investigation "uncovered additional evidence, never presented to the jury or to any court, that would likely have led to a different outcome in the case in the estimation of the Reed Smith team."
On Thursday, Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond announced that he had filed a motion to vacate Glossip's conviction. The development comes just three days after the conclusion of another independent investigation into Glossip's case—this one ordered by Drummond himself in January.
"After thorough and serious deliberation, I have concluded that I cannot stand behind the murder conviction and death sentence of Richard Glossip," Drummond said in a Thursday press release. "This is not to say I believe he is innocent. However, it is critical that Oklahomans have absolute faith that the death penalty is administered fairly and with certainty. Considering everything I know about this case, I do not believe that justice is served by executing a man based on the testimony of a compromised witness."
The attorney general "confirms in his report what we have long known: Richard Glossip's conviction is unreliable and granting him a new trial is required," wrote Don Knight, Glossip's attorney, in a statement.
While this is a major victory for Glossip, his case should serve as a reminder of how often death row inmates are executed before their cases get the reexaminations they deserve.
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A death sentence relying on an accusation by a ... well, "compromised" witness, and no other direct evidence???
Damn.
If you can indict a former president on a compromised pathological liar witness, why not a murder suspect?
True.
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Well because murder suspects aren't usually popular politicians running for President against a demented, disliked, inept Democratic President. That alone excuses every abuse by the government. (sarc)
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"If you can indict a former president on a compromised pathological liar witness, why not a murder suspect?"
Is the suspect named Donald Trump?
Yeah, normally I roll my eyes when Reason goes on about death penalty cases, but this time I think they have a point.
Possibly, unfortunately they tend to omit critical information, and sometimes even lie. So I remain skeptical of little Emma’s take on this case.
Fair. I wouldn't be surprised if that applies here.
Yes well he is white after all.
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The legal witch-hunting of Trump | The spiked podcast
I notice they didn't title it, The Enabling of Donald Trump's With Hunt Paranoia | The Spiked Podcast
In exchange for his testimony against Glossip, Sneed avoided the death penalty and received a life sentence.
Weird, I've been repeatedly told that a life sentence is far, far worse than the death penalty.
So just sentence him to a very late term abortion and have leftists like Emma cheering you on.
Some states are more conservative, and dislike arepas. Sarait might know too.
Lawyers (with an agenda) can take what's written on the back of a post card, turn it into a 343 page report on any homicide - murder, plane crashes, train crash, and nit pick and raise questions and doubts about everything. Must be a billion pages about JFK and look how many idiots think Oswald didn't do it. Two trials and two convictions - the witness (co defendant) and the circumstantial evidence was very strong - he had half the stolen money and sold everything he owned and announced he was leaving town for good. No alibi. Out of clear blue sky, he told the motel cleaning lady NOT to clean ONE room - the room where the murder took place (and contained the dead body lying it it) - the room he lied to his girlfriend saying some occupant got drunk and broke a window that he admits being in the next day with co defendant, to repair a window but somehow he and his co defendant did not see a body nor did they leave their finger prints. 30 years out, the co defendant has never recanted his story that fits the let's murder, let's split the money and then run, like a glove, and all they can do is say he was on lithium for a short while and agreed to a life sentence instead of death.
So why did the appellate courts uphold his second conviction?
Why did hundreds of appellate courts uphold hundreds of convictions of innocent people after thousands of hearings.
The former prosecutor to former defense attorney ratio among federal judges is massively large. And once a conviction (correct or not) occurs the presumption of innocence is gone and the government runs on inertia anyway and the odds of getting a reversal are almost non existent.
Both of the convictions you reference were founded on the testimony of a witness that was given a massive inducement by the government. Testimony that he resisted giving initially, several times. Was he telling the truth? I don’t know You don’t know. Nobody knows but him, and I guess Glossip. Given that whether or not the critical witness is or isn’t telling the truth is basically a coin flip, how do you get past reasonable doubt?
this is precisely why there shouldn't be a death penalty, too many innocent people have died as a result. Studies have shown that probably at least 10% of them are actually innocent and upwards of 25% for black men. The death penalty is bullshit.
That’s an awful lot of speculation. In the last fifty years, how many innocent people have been executed?
At least four in Texas alone.
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I would like to know exactly how many, relative to the total number of people executed. Then I want to see the common denominators in each case.
I’m not beating up on you. It’s just frustrating when death penalty opponents speak in generalities, as opposed to documented data. I personally support the death penalty, but would like to see legislative and procedural adjustments that preclude the possibility of innocent people being executed. As an example, no circumstantial case should result in capital punishment.
There should be no problem employing the death penalty against real monsters (serial murderers, contract killers, Shrike, etc), but there are likely cases where it should not be applied. It also shouldn’t take decades to execute someone.
^this^
Dude, your cite didn't post.
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