This Death Row Inmate Says He's Innocent. The Supreme Court Has Agreed To Hear His Case.
After multiple investigations shed doubt on his conviction, the Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether Oklahoma death-row inmate Richard Glossip will get a new trial.

The Supreme Court announced on Monday that it will hear a case deciding whether Richard Glossip, an Oklahoma death-row inmate, can receive a new trial. Glossip, who was convicted of the 1997 murder of his boss, Barry Van Treese, has long maintained his innocence—and narrowly avoided execution multiple times.
The Supreme Court has rarely heard appeals from death-row inmates in recent years. But Glossip's case has been mired in an unusual level of controversy. Notably, no one claims that Glossip murdered Van Treese. The murder was instead committed by Justin Sneed, the 19-year-old maintenance man of the hotel where Glossip served as manager. However, Sneed testified that Glossip had actually planned the crime after reaching a deal with prosecutors that would allow Sneed to avoid the death penalty himself.
Glossip's conviction almost immediately fell under suspicion. He received a retrial in 2004 but was again convicted and sentenced to death. Over the years, Glossip has remained on death row in Oklahoma and narrowly avoided execution nine separate times.
In 2021, a bipartisan group of legislators ordered an independent investigation into Glossip's case. The resulting report cast serious doubt over the veracity of Glossip's conviction. The report found that the state had deliberately destroyed evidence before Glossip's trial and that police had "[elicited] Sneed to mention Glossip's name" during his interrogation. The report even went so far as to find "additional evidence, never presented to the jury or to any court, that would likely have led to a different outcome in the case," according to the outside investigators.
Following the release of a second investigation last year, Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond announced that he was requesting that Glossip's conviction again be overturned and a new trial granted.
"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 a statement last April. "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."
But an appeals court refused to order Glossip a new trial just three weeks later. Soon after, a parole board denied Glossip clemency—despite Drummond himself testifying in favor of Glossip—and attempted to go forward with Glossip's execution.
The Supreme Court stepped in last May to halt Glossip's execution. Now, the Court has agreed to hear a case that could determine whether Glossip receives a new trial. In recent years, the Court's conservative majority has been hesitant to hear cases from death-row inmates. The particularly glaring issues with Glossip's cases likely motivated the unusual step.
"We have a situation here where the attorney general of the state, the highest law enforcement officer in the state, has said that Richard Glossip did not receive a fair trial," Don Knight, Glossip's attorney, told CNN's Jake Tapper on Monday. "And that should be something that we think the Supreme Court should take very seriously."
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He wouldn’t have gotten arrested if he wasn’t guilty.
/sarc
I know. Right?
Sarc, who thinks cops are the worst pieces of shit ever, except for the one who murdered Ashli Babbit.
>>"And that should be something that we think the Supreme Court should take very seriously."
we've all seen of recent whether the Supreme Court is capable of "seriously"
This case always looked sketchy and watching the appellate system circle the wagons to protect their phony "justice" system is a thing to behold. I could be convinced otherwise but my current impression is that this case deserves SCOTUS review.
How was his case sketchy?
In other news. Zoolander tries to save democracy and some guy gets all pissy about it.
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/trudeaus-orwellian-attack-truckers-declared-unconstitutional
I'm a big advocate for the death penalty, but it should only be used in cases of multiple murder where there is no doubt as to the actual murderer. None of this "Murderer says someone planned it" BS.
You do realize the US legal system doesn't have "Guilty" and "Guilty as sin" verdicts, don't you?
It should. For death penalty cases, the jury should have a choice between "guilty beyond reasonable doubt" and "guilty beyond ANY doubt".
But the J6 commission and prosecutions plus the trials against Trump are all totally beyond reproach and totally guilty according to the writers here. Sure, I'll trust your ability to think past your id once you all prove you have anything more to guide you.
Ah,m the Glossip bandwagon rolls again.
How many times do I have to remind people that Glossip's own words and deeds were used to buttress the murderer's claims?
https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca10/10-6244/10-6244-2013-07-25.html
Most of the writing on the posters consists of statements Glossip made on January 7, 1997, . . . in an attempt to cover up the crime, including when he had last seen the victim, the cause of the broken window, the room in which the victim had spent the night, and who was to clean the downstairs motel rooms. Two posters include references to statements Glossip made to Officer Tim Brownat different times during the day on January 7, 2010, and then afterVan Treese’s body was found. They demonstrate inconsistencies inGlossip’s statements to the police, reflecting that Glossip told Brownat 4:30 p.m. on January 7, 1997, that he had seen Van Treese walkingthrough the parking lot that morning at 7:00 a.m, sometime after 7p.m. told him that he was not sure when he had last seen Van Treese,and, around 9 p.m., said that everything was getting turned aroundand he did not say he had seen the victim at 7:00 a.m. The writingson these posters also show that petitioner did not mention anything toOfficer Brown about Justin Sneed’s involvement in Van Treese’s disappearance until after the body was discovered. The statements on these posters did not directly link Glossip to the murder
The article mentions "additional evidence" which was suppressed that might have led to a different verdict. Supreme Court isn't letting him off, just going to rule if he deserves a new trial. Seems reasonable in the situation.
Strangely doesn't mention what this blockbuster evidence is that would totally make a difference.
By and large Teason has skipped past criminal justice reform and just moved to criminal advocacy.
And pedophilia/child mutilation.
If the government committed misconduct to help get a conviction, than I believe that the benefit of the doubt should go to the accused.
I actually believe that this guy IS guilty, but it might be a case like the Bill Cosby situation, where somebody who is almost certainly guilty walks free because the government can't stop being a bunch of fuck-ups.
When government wants to scale back our rights, they always start with scumbags who don't elicit sympathy from the overwhelming majority of the public, but they NEVER stop there.
'... executing a man based on the testimony of a compromised witness."...' If that statement had a grain of truth to it, he should be pardoned and exonerated and let free. Unfortunately, it was the testimony and overwhelming circumstantial evidence that proved he's guilty.