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Oklahoma to retry Richard Glossip for noncapital murder after Supreme Court threw out conviction

  • Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond announced that Richard Glossip will face a new trial for first-degree murder related to the killing of Barry Van Treese in 1997, but the state will not pursue the death penalty in the case.
  • This ruling comes after the U.S. Supreme Court's February 2023 determination that prosecutorial misconduct, including the use of false testimony, resulted in Richard Glossip being denied a fair trial.
  • Glossip was initially sentenced to death but was removed from death row in April 2023 after serving 27 years, while Justin Sneed, who confessed to the murder, serves life without parole.
  • Drummond acknowledged that both he and the U.S. Supreme Court recognized that Mr. Glossip was not given a just trial, but emphasized that he has never declared Glossip to be innocent, and committed to providing a new trial grounded in reliable evidence and honest testimony.
  • The retrial could result in a conviction with life imprisonment, reflecting Drummond's duty to seek justice under current standards while acknowledging the past prosecution's errors and the Van Treese family's suffering.
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KJRH broke the news in on Monday, June 9, 2025.
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