As Oklahoma's Attorney General Calls for Clemency, the State Keeps Planning To Execute Richard Glossip
Two damning investigations and a request from the state attorney general haven't been enough to stop the execution.

Richard Glossip has been on Oklahoma's death row for almost 25 years. In that time, considerable doubt has been raised about the state's case against him—including two damning investigations that lead even the state's attorney general to advocate for a new trial. But none of that has been enough to stop the state's plan to execute Glossip later this month.
Richard Glossip was convicted for the 1997 murder of his boss, Barry Van Treese. However, no one claims Glossip himself actually killed him. Instead, the state asserts that Glossip, who had been working as the manager of a motel owned by Van Treese, convinced 19-year-old maintenance man Justin Sneed to beat Van Treese to death with a baseball bat as part of an elaborate murder-for-hire scheme. While Glossip claims he was not at all involved in the murder, Sneed—as part of a plea deal with prosecutors to avoid the death penalty—testified during Glossip's trial that Glossip had masterminded the crime.
Soon after Glossip's conviction, the weaknesses of the case began to show. In 2001, Glossip's conviction was overturned, and he was granted a new trial after an appeals court found that "the evidence at trial tending to corroborate Sneed's testimony was extremely weak." However, in 2004, he was reconvicted and resentenced to death. In the following years, Glossip has narrowly avoided death several times—coming so close that he has received three last meals.
However, in the past two years, a spate of new inquiries into Glossip's case has sparked hope that he may receive a new trial. In 2021, a bipartisan group of legislators requested an independent investigation into the case. When it was finished in July 2022, it revealed staggering misconduct on behalf of the state, including that a county district attorney's office had directed police to destroy physical evidence favorable to Glossip.
The investigation also "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," wrote investigators in a 2022 press release. "Likewise, 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."
Last month, after the results of a second investigation into the case, Oklahoma's Attorney General Gentner Drummond announced that he was requesting that Glossip's conviction be overturned and that he be granted a new trial.
"After thorough and serious deliberation, I have concluded that I cannot stand behind the murder conviction and death sentence of Richard Glossip," said Drummond in an April 6 statement. "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."
However, the attorney general's intervention hasn't been enough to stop the state's plans to execute Glossip. Last month, an appeals court declined to vacate Glossip's conviction, concluding that Glossip "has not provided this Court with sufficient information that would convince this Court to overturn the jury's determination that he is guilty."
Making matters worse, last week, an Oklahoma parole board seemed to put to rest all hope that Glossip may finally escape death row. On April 26, the board declined to grant Glossip clemency and cleared the way for his execution, now set for May 18.
Drummond himself made the unusual step to testify before the parole board to argue for clemency. "I want to acknowledge how unusual it is for the state to support a clemency application of a death row inmate," Drummond said during the parole board's hearing. "I'm not aware of anytime in our history that an attorney general has appeared before this board and argued for clemency. I'm also not aware of any time in the history of Oklahoma when justice would require it. Ultimately that is why we are here."
But even this wasn't enough, and the board narrowly voted to deny Glossip clemency.
"The public support for Mr. Glossip is diverse, widespread, and growing, including at least 45 death penalty supporting Republicans in the Legislature who also reached the conclusion that there is too much doubt to execute Mr. Glossip," said Don Knight, Glossip's attorney. "It would be a travesty for Oklahoma to move forward with the execution of an innocent man."
The state made grave errors in its prosecution of Richard Glossip—errors that several investigations have argued could have caused his conviction. But since those errors were discovered, it has proved nearly impossible to correct them—and nearly impossible to stop the ever-ticking execution countdown.
As the Los Angeles Times editorial board noted yesterday, "The bureaucracy of death has a schedule to keep….Those impatient to keep the state's killing on track correctly note that Glossip's case has gummed up the works for decades." Rather than granting Glossip a new trial once the state's errors had been revealed, "the execution bureaucracy" decided that "it's better, in this cruel and bloodthirsty nation of equal justice under the law, to kill people now. We can always sort out the truth later."
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https://twitter.com/FromKulak/status/1653083030221733911?t=N08Qdz8qaz74bVqpe_1USQ&s=19
Fedposting is your Civic Duty
(Not legal advise)
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The tabooing of “FedPosting” is now almost total on the internet.
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I’m glad you brought this up.
Once the Catholic priests were exposed, over 20 years ago, it stopped.
Now we are in the process of exposing men in thongs who tuck their d***s into their a**es and demand to dance sexually for an audience of children.
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Like to see them apply this standard to cops.
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Test
Fuck you, Reason
Edit: apparently including the @ sends posts into the abyss
https://twitter.com/amuse/status/1653054842040901632?t=28LNMfd535ly73mM8-WcQQ&s=19
SOURCE: Zelenskyy warned members of the Murdoch family they would be added to its blacklist of Russian sympathizers and collaborators if they did not pull Tucker Carlson from the air in March - just weeks later he was out. Current names on Ukraine’s list include [Glenn Greenwald, Rand Paul, Tulsa Gabbard] and so on…
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https://twitter.com/amuse/status/1653102290490867712?t=ckRXBqxPWnAWZ0WTHMxSgA&s=19
The call between Murdoch and Zelensky is now being widely reported. Just weeks before Tucker Carlson was ousted from Fox News the pair talked though it is being reported they didn't 'directly' talk about Tucker.
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Phony Investigations are 100's of pages that throw sheet against the wall to see what sticks. The evidence of guilt walks right up to the beyond the shadow of a doubt line. Victim said he was going to confront him over missing money. He helped plan it with Sneed. Caught fleeing town with half the money. 3am he's told by Sneed the deed is done but lies to girl friend and says he was told someone downstairs broke a window. Next day he tells front desk worker the man and his car isn't 'missing' - he's gone into town. Orders maid NOT to clean the room where with the 'broken window' is (but where the dead body is decomposing). He and and his cohort clean a room where a dead body is later found, but leave no fingerprints. Tells police he searched all rooms for the missing man, and found nothing. When they finally get the story from Sneed and realize how many lies he's told, and saying 100 times he has no idea who killed the man, he then blurts out Sneed said he did it and then goes off to sell his belongings and attempts to flee. They redo the search of the rooms and find the body. Sneed's story fits the time line perfectly - not one inconsistency - every fact and detail and motive is explained and accounted for, and he's never recanted.
I think the principle of the article is the whole felony murder rule, right? Charging everyone involved with murder.
No felony murder here. Just overwhelming evidence that two people planned and carried out first degree murder.
This goes well beyond felony murder, this is a hiring a hitman!
Assuming the evidence is there. It would be nice if there was an accurate trial record of the evidence, or something less than a one-sided view that makes you wonder how this guy ever could have been convicted twice.
There are trial transcripts for both the first and second trials.
Could be better. He could've been poisoned to death by his fellow inmates for shoplifting or put in isolation for his schizophrenia, only to be found dead, covered in bugs days later, or he could've been held for a decade without a trial.
It's sad that, just on the basis of it being Emma Camp, and a story of an unjust conviction, I knew there were important details they weren't telling us.
It's sad that I know, before even reading the story, that they won't have talked to ANYBODY on the opposite side of the issue, to find out why they're on the opposite side.
It's sad that Camp thinks her position is so weak it can't survive a balanced analysis.
But if they *don't* kill him he'll still be in Oklahoma. And that's a fate worse than death.
About all the other things going on with this, I do not know enough to judge, but pointing out that Glossip is not accused of doing the act of murder, but hiring the guy who did is not exactly a terribly exonerating point. If Glossip had indeed hired Sneed to do the killing then he would be justly guilty of murder. The question is if the hiring is provable beyond a reasonable doubt.
https://twitter.com/SwipeWright/status/1653100377263185920?t=Vc05ljohKOkfAuQY7C1Jsw&s=19
This new piece in [Scientific American] by [at]Anthrofuentes arguing that "Human Sex Is Not Binary" is so poorly argued I'm embarrassed on his behalf. I don't even know if it even qualifies as "pseudoscience" because it's just so supremely confused. Response incoming.
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The state should not have the power to kill us.
Also, most americans and basically every jury are mentally incapable of understanding what ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’ actually means.
Better to be carried by six than judged by 12?
obviously not but the 12 are still a bunch of morons with poor reasoning skills.
We're nearing, and in some places like Austin already there, where if you have to defend yourself you then stay out of the state's hands and continue defending yourself against all who come for you, regardless of their official status
The state should not have the power to kill us.
Fortunately, it doesn't.
Juries do. Citizens. Not the state.
In this particular case, TWO SEPARATE juries.
Based on what I just read, including the destruction of exculpatory records and evidence and if I was the state attorney general; I would notify every person involved that unless they come to the local Police station and give a complete confession that includes all criminal activity or activity that wrongfully convicted this man they will stand trial for murder one as soon as he is executed.
That simple, done deal
Now, good luck as most are probably dead or fully retired and not long to death.
Based on what I just read,
What you just read was self-serving lies.
At what point does having the opposing side, AG no less, mean that you should keep going full speed ahead to kill a man no matter what ? They want to kill this man so much, you'd think he had dirt on important politicians or something.
Probably when your opposing side looks favorably on the destruction of western civilization, just a guess there sweetie.
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The State Prosecutor should make it known that he will prosecute every living person who was involved in the unlawful conviction, specifically destroying exculpatory information and leading a witness to make false testimony.
He needs to tell them that they need to make sure the governor and the execution board know the truth at least 5 days before the execution by sworn testimony to their unlawful acts.
Failing to do that the prosecution will seek murder 1 charges on all involved.
Easy man, just use the rules that exist. Why try and end an execution what you can have 2, 3 or even 4 more on the same crime!
I suspect that the AG takes it to the Supreme Court who send it back to the OK courts to rectify (Thomas and Alito dissenting).
Which means this was not so in the second trial.
When Glossip's second conviction was affirmed, the state court of appeals presented the case against Glossip. The evidence they presented included testimony about Glossip's own behavior around the time of the murder.
Perhaps there is an artticle that fisks this opinion, refuting the case against Glossip. Such an article was never published on Reason.com.
how many trails is enough. two seems like enough and he was convicted twice.
The only injustice here is that Sneed isn't also being executed. As usual, the part that Reason doesn't tell you:
https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/two-truths-and-a-lie-what-records-interviews-reveal-about-richard-glossips-murder-conviction/
Yea, fighting back takes courage.
Continuing in silence sure as hell isn't going to have good results.
Going to take a lot of people deciding to stand up in the face of intimidation if we're to have a chance.
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Fuck off, you lying racist POS.