The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board has rec­om­mend­ed clemen­cy for James Coddington (pic­tured at his clemen­cy hear­ing), the first of 25 death-row pris­on­ers sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed in Oklahoma between August 2022 and December 2024.

In a 3 – 2 vote on August 3, 2022, the Board rec­om­mend­ed that Coddington’s death sen­tence be reduced to life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole. Gubernatorial appointee Ed Konieczny, Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals appointee Larry Morris, and Oklahoma Supreme Court appointee Richard Smothermon vot­ed yes. Gubernatorial appointees Scott Williams and Cathy Stockler voted no. 

Coddington was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for the addic­tion-dri­ven mur­der of his friend, Albert Hale. In an emo­tion­al five-minute pre­sen­ta­tion to the board, Coddington said I can’t apol­o­gize enough for what I did.” 

Hale, Coddington said, was one of my friends, and he tried his best to help me, … and for that, he lost his life.” Coddington said he is no longer the per­son who killed Hale. I’m clean, I know God, I’m not … I’m not a vicious mur­der­er.” Accepting respon­si­bil­i­ty for his action, he said, If this ends with my death, I can’t say it’s wrong.”

Hale’s fam­i­ly oppos­es the grant of clemen­cy. His son Mitch told the board, I am here to say that I for­give James Coddington, but my for­give­ness does not release him from the con­se­quences of his actions.”

The rec­om­men­da­tion now goes to Governor Kevin Stitt, who can accept, reject, or mod­i­fy the Board’s recommendation.

In addi­tion to his per­son­al state­ment at the hear­ing, Coddington’s lawyers pre­sent­ed evi­dence of his good con­duct in prison and the work he has done to redeem him­self dur­ing his near­ly two decades on death row. The peti­tion gar­nered sup­port from prison staff, notably for­mer Oklahoma Department of Corrections Director Justin Jones.

Coddington’s clemen­cy coun­sel also pre­sent­ed evi­dence of his dimin­ished cul­pa­bil­i­ty for his crime. The lawyers argued that Coddington killed Hale in the midst of a drug binge that put him in a men­tal state that made it impos­si­ble for him to form the req­ui­site intent for first degree mur­der. However, his coun­sel said, the jury nev­er heard crit­i­cal evi­dence regard­ing his men­tal state because the tri­al court exclud­ed expert eval­u­a­tions explain­ing Coddington’s drug-induced psy­chosis. On appeal, courts agreed that the exclu­sion of this evi­dence was con­sti­tu­tion­al error, but the fed­er­al courts deferred to state court rul­ings that the vio­la­tion was ulti­mate­ly harm­less.”

Coddington also pre­sent­ed exten­sive evi­dence of his trau­mat­ic and abu­sive child­hood. Coddington’s moth­er was impris­oned when he was a tod­dler, leav­ing Coddington to be raised by an alco­holic and drug-addict­ed father who put alco­hol in his baby bot­tles. Coddington began abus­ing drugs as a child and bat­tled his addic­tion for years until he was con­vict­ed of Hale’s mur­der at the age of 24.

In a press release, Coddington’s attor­ney, Federal Public Defender Emma Rolls, said: By vot­ing to com­mute James Coddington’s death sen­tence, the Board has acknowl­edged that his case exem­pli­fies the cir­cum­stances for which clemency exists.”

The clemen­cy request is now sent to Governor Kevin Stitt. In a state­ment released by the Oklahoma Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty released, Reverend Don Heath, Chair of the Coalition said that James’ life is now in Governor Stitts’ hands.” We ask Gov. Stitt to read the clemen­cy pack­et, to watch the clemen­cy hear­ing today and to look to his own faith to decide when mer­cy and for­give­ness is appro­pri­ate and we hope that he will allow James Coddington to spend the rest of his nat­ur­al life behind bars,” Rev. Heath added.

In a Twitter thread, Adam Luck, the for­mer Chair of the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board, said he hoped that the Board’s rec­om­men­da­tion in Coddington’s case is not a mean­ing­less step on the inevitable path to death.” Governor Stitt pres­sured Luck to resign from the Board in January 2022 because of Luck’s votes in favor of clemen­cy for death-row prisoners.

Luck tweet­ed that the clemen­cy process is the last step in ensur­ing fair­ness, so “[w]e should treat this result as sacred.” If we ignore this rec­om­men­da­tion, we acknowl­edge the appear­ance of fair­ness and due process the clemen­cy hear­ings pro­vide make us feel bet­ter but do noth­ing to sway us from what we want: vengeance death, and what we call jus­tice,” he added.

Stitt appoint­ed Konieczny, a for­mer police offi­cer and Episcopal bish­op, to the Board in January 2022 as Luck’s replacement.

Coddington is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on August 25, 2022, the first of a more than two-year, near­ly one-per-month exe­cu­tion sched­ule. If the exe­cu­tions are all car­ried out, 58% of all death-row pris­on­ers in the state would be put to death.

Citation Guide
Sources

Nolan Clay, Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board rec­om­mends clemen­cy for death row inmate James Coddington, The Oklahoman, August 4, 2022; Elizabeth Caldwell, With con­cerns around extra­or­di­nary’ child­hood abuse, parole board votes to spare James Coddington, Tulsa Public Radio, August 3, 2022; Ryan LaCroix, Hannah France, Oklahoma Pardon And Parole Board rec­om­mends clemen­cy for James Coddington, KOSU Radio, August 3, 2022; Khaleda Rahman, Who Is James Coddington? Death Row Inmate Step Closer to Clemency, Newsweek, August 4, 2022; Colleen Wilson, Former Pardon & Parole Chair doesn’t want Coddington deci­sion to be mean­ing­less step,” News Channel 8 Tulsa, August 32022

Read the news release issued by James Coddington’s counsel.