An Oklahoma state rep­re­sen­ta­tive has called for an inves­ti­ga­tion into the prac­tices of the Oklahoma County District Attorneys office fol­low­ing addi­tion­al rev­e­la­tions that coun­ty pros­e­cu­tors delib­er­ate­ly with­held excul­pa­to­ry evi­dence and man­u­fac­tured false tes­ti­mo­ny to secure a con­vic­tion and death sen­tence against Richard Glossip in his 2004 retrial.

At a news con­fer­ence on September 22, 2022, the fourth date Oklahoma had set to exe­cute Glossip, State Representative Justin Humphrey (R – Lane, pic­tured) called the prosecution’s con­duct in the case extreme­ly uneth­i­cal.” This is unac­cept­able,” Humphrey said. You’re look­ing at tak­ing a person’s life, which makes you no bet­ter than a mur­der­er. … I want to call for an investigation.” 

Humphrey, who describes him­self as a strong pro­po­nent” of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, said that he ini­tial­ly was very reluc­tant” to become involved in Glossip’s case. Now I’m at the point we’re inves­ti­gat­ing the wrong peo­ple,” Humphrey said. I don’t think that we should just let this go. … This is unac­cept­able. … Why would you do that? Why would you manufacture evidence?”

The news con­fer­ence was held in con­nec­tion with sup­ple­men­tal peti­tion filed by Glossip’s lawyers in the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals pre­sent­ing doc­u­men­ta­tion that Oklahoma County pros­e­cu­tors had with­held evi­dence that Justin Sneed, their lead wit­ness in the case, had want­ed to recant his tes­ti­mo­ny impli­cat­ing Glossip in the 1997 mur­der of motel own­er Barry Van Treese, but that Sneed feared doing so would jeop­ar­dize a plea deal that had spared him the death penal­ty for the mur­der. The pros­e­cu­tion files, which defense coun­sel were able to view for the first time on September 1, 2022, con­tained notes regard­ing a series of meet­ings between tri­al pros­e­cu­tor Connie Pope, Sneed, and his lawyer Gina Walker con­cern­ing this issue.

Pope’s co-coun­sel Gary Ackley told inves­ti­ga­tors for the law firm Reed Smith — whom leg­is­la­tors retained pro bono to con­duct an inde­pen­dent review of the case — that he was nev­er told about Sneed’s desire to recant or nego­ti­ate a bet­ter deal for him­self. Any pros­e­cu­tor would be con­cerned about any coop­er­at­ing wit­ness in any big case regard­ing the uncer­tain­ty of the waf­fling back and forth and the disin­gen­u­ous bad faith nature of such actions,” adding that this evi­dence clear­ly had to be dis­closed to the defense. 

The peti­tion also pre­sent­ed evi­dence long hid­den in the prosecution’s case file that Pope lied to the court, with­held evi­dence of numer­ous improp­er pre­tri­al and mid­tri­al com­mu­ni­ca­tions with Sneed, vio­lat­ed a wit­ness seques­tra­tion order, and man­u­fac­tured false tes­ti­mo­ny from Sneed to plug holes in the pros­e­cu­tion case that had devel­oped dur­ing the trial. 

Sneed had tes­ti­fied at Glossip’s first tri­al that Glossip had hired him to kill Van Trees and that, act­ing alone, he had beat­en Van Treese to death using only a base­ball bat. During the retri­al, med­ical tes­ti­mo­ny estab­lished that Van Treese also had been stabbed and that the dis­tinc­tive blade of a pock­etknife found under Van Treese body could have caused those wounds. When the defense final­ly obtained access to the pros­e­cu­tion file, they dis­cov­ered a mid­tri­al let­ter from Pope to Sneed’s lawyer that there are a few items that have been tes­ti­fied to that I need­ed to dis­cuss with Justin,” and that “[o]ur biggest prob­lem is still the knife.” Sneed then changed his account of the mur­der to com­port with the med­ical tes­ti­mo­ny, claim­ing that he also had stabbed Van Treese, and Pope feigned sur­prise to the court when the defense accused her of a dis­cov­ery vio­la­tion for fail­ing to reveal the full scope of Sneed’s anticipated testimony.

Glossip’s peti­tion stressed the excul­pa­to­ry nature of the evi­dence relat­ing to the knife. If Sneed did not use the pock­etknife, then some­body else must have been inside the room, and that flat­ly con­tra­dict­ed the state’s case that rest­ed on Sneed’s account of com­mit­ting the mur­der alone,” coun­sel wrote. During the press con­fer­ence, Glossip’s lead coun­sel, Don Knight, said that the prosecutor’s delib­er­ate vio­la­tion of the seques­tra­tion order to sup­ply infor­ma­tion to Sneed calls into seri­ous ques­tion the reli­a­bil­i­ty of his tes­ti­mo­ny. That infor­ma­tion was known by the pros­e­cu­tion since 2004, nev­er turned over to the defense at all. … Not only did the pros­e­cu­tion destroy evi­dence, they man­u­fac­tured evi­dence. They changed people’s tes­ti­mo­ny. They broke the rules, all to try to get a con­vic­tion against Rich Glossip on a death penal­ty case that should nev­er have been brought at all.”

No phys­i­cal evi­dence con­nects Glossip to Van Treese’s mur­der and, insist­ing on his inno­cence, he turned down a plea deal at his tri­al for a parole-eli­gi­ble life sen­tence. His con­vic­tion and death sen­tence rest­ed pri­mar­i­ly on the repeat­ed­ly chang­ing accounts of the mur­der pro­vid­ed by Sneed. Multiple wit­ness­es have since come for­ward with evi­dence that Sneed false­ly impli­cat­ed Glossip in order to avoid the death penalty.

In February 2022, a bipar­ti­san group of 35 Oklahoma leg­is­la­tors engaged pro bono attor­neys at Reed Smith to review the case. While the firm’s review was under­way, Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor filed a motion with the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals on June 10, 2022 seek­ing exe­cu­tion dates for 25 Oklahoma death-row pris­on­ers, includ­ing Glossip. Reed Smith issued its report five days lat­er, doc­u­ment­ing that pros­e­cu­tors had destroyed key excul­pa­to­ry records in advance of Glossip’s retri­al and con­clud­ing that no rea­son­able jury pre­sent­ed with all the evi­dence would have con­vict­ed him. The firm’s con­tin­u­ing inves­ti­ga­tion into the case has pro­duced even more evi­dence of pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct and Glossip’s like­ly inno­cence, which it released in sup­ple­men­tal reports issued on August 9, August 23, and September 202022

In two orders issued on July 1, the court grant­ed O’Connor’s request to set the exe­cu­tion dates, sched­ul­ing Glossip’s exe­cu­tion for September 22. With his exe­cu­tion date pend­ing, Glossip filed a peti­tion in the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals seek­ing a new tri­al based on the ini­tial Reed Smith report. Governor Kevin Stitt tem­porar­i­ly stayed Glossip’s exe­cu­tion on August 16, 2022, to pro­vide the appeals court time to deter­mine whether to grant Glossip a hear­ing on his inno­cence claim and resched­uled Glossip’s exe­cu­tion for December 82022.

Two-thirds of Oklahoma’s leg­is­la­tors, led by Republican State Representative Kevin McDugle, sent a let­ter to Attorney General John O’Connor urg­ing him to sup­port Glossip’s request for a new hear­ing. O’Connor declined and is con­tin­u­ing to oppose grant­i­ng Glossip an oppor­tu­ni­ty to present evi­dence to the court.

I’m not afraid to have a hear­ing,” Knight said at the press con­fer­ence. I think the state is afraid to have a hear­ing. They just want to kill this man.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Liliana Segura and Jordan Smith, Oklahoma Lawmaker Calls For Investigation Of Prosecutors Who Convicted Richard Glossip, The Intercept, September 23, 2022; Nolan Clay, Death row inmate Richard Glossip accus­es pros­e­cu­tor of fla­grant mis­con­duct at retri­al, The Oklahoman, September 23, 2022; Natalie Clydesdale, Lawmaker calls out DA over new Glossip evi­dence, KFOR News4, Oklahoma City, September 22, 2022; Jordan Tidwell, Glossip’s Attorney Says Uncovered Evidence In Death Row Case Requires New Hearing, KOTV News on 6, Tulsa, September 222022.

Read Richard Glossip’s sup­ple­men­tal appli­ca­tion for post-con­vic­tion relief.