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Thread: Benjamin Robert Cole, Sr. - Oklahoma Execution - October 20, 2022

  1. #21
    Senior Member CnCP Addict TrudieG's Avatar
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    What a surprise he is mentally ill and declined to speak to the board members. I believe once he opened his mouth the board would know he is sane or as sane as anyone could be after years on death row. These arguments are ridiculous and insulting. In my opinion, the standard should be mental competency and should be addressed at the time of trial and sentencing. If they are deemed mentally ill at that time, then take the DP off the table as they would not be able to comprehend the punishment rather than wait years and suddenly use that as an excuse to stay alive because you are a coward.

  2. #22
    Administrator Helen's Avatar
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    Attorneys for Oklahoma man set to die for girl's death say he's insane, try to halt execution

    OKLAHOMA CITY – An Oklahoma man sentenced to die for killing his 9-month-old daughter in 2002 has become insane while in prison, and his upcoming execution should be halted, the man's attorneys argue in a new court case.

    Attorneys for Benjamin Robert Cole, 50, of Claremore will present their arguments Friday before District Judge James Bland in McAlester, where Cole is being housed at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary.

    "Mr. Cole's condition has deteriorated steadily since his conviction," Federal Public Defender Susan Otto wrote in a court filing.

    The U.S. Supreme Court has held that executing an insane person is unconstitutional, and Cole's attorneys maintain the prison's warden is violating a state law that requires her to notify the local district attorney when an inmate has become insane.

    Otto says Cole's ability to participate in his defense has been in question since the inception of the case, and she told the state's Pardon and Parole Board last week during a clemency hearing that Cole once went two years without showering or leaving his cell.

    But Warden Anita Trammel wrote in an affidavit this week that she spoke to Cole about several topics recently and that he understands why he's being executed.

    "Mr. Cole expressed to me that he understood he was being executed by lethal injection for the murder of his daughter," Trammel wrote.

    "Mr. Cole was well versed in religion and we also discussed certain current events and his time in the Air Force."

    But a forensic psychiatrist hired by Cole's attorneys, Dr. Raphael Morris, testified at Cole's clemency hearing last week that Cole sat before him in a catatonic state during an hour-long visit at the penitentiary and didn't make eye contact or utter a single word.

    The Pardon and Parole Board voted 3-2 against recommending clemency to the governor, who could only have granted clemency with a recommendation from the board.

    But even a clemency recommendation would have been no guarantee that Gov. Mary Fallin would have spared his life. The board voted 4-1 to recommend clemency for death row inmate Garry Allen, but Fallin still rejected the recommendation and said his execution should proceed.

    Allen, who suffered a brain injury after being shot in the head during his arrest, appeared confused during his 2012 execution and seemed startled when a prison official announced the start of the lethal injection.

    Cole is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection Oct. 7 after being convicted of first-degree murder in Rogers County for killing his daughter, Brianna Cole, whose spine was broken and her aorta torn after she was forcefully bent backward. Cole has not denied killing the child.

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/08/28...e-try-to-halt/
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  3. #23
    Senior Member Frequent Poster elsie's Avatar
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    The Governor won't save this baby killer.
    Proverbs 21:15 "When justice is done, it is a joy to the righteous but terror to evil doers."

  4. #24
    Administrator Heidi's Avatar
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    Judge Denies Bid to Halt Oklahoma Inmate's Execution

    A judge ruled against an Oklahoma death row inmate on Friday after his attorneys argued he is insane and sought to halt his upcoming execution for the 2002 killing of his 9-month-old daughter.

    District Judge James Bland denied the request from Benjamin Cole's attorneys following a hearing in which Cole testified from a wheelchair. His lawyers wanted Bland to order the prison warden to find that Cole is insane.

    They say the warden is violating a state law that requires her to notify the local district attorney when an inmate has become insane. They are expected to appeal the judge's ruling to the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals.

    Cole sat motionless throughout the hearing that lasted more than five hours. When testifying, he sat slumped over and appeared to have his eyes closed.

    The 50-year-old with long hair and a graying beard mumbled about religion and didn't respond to most of the questions he was asked inside the Pittsburg County courtroom.

    When the judge asked Cole why he was being executed, the inmate answered: "Go home. Go home to be with Jesus."

    Cole, who is being housed at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, is set to be executed by lethal injection on Oct. 7. The Claremore man was convicted of first-degree murder in Rogers County for killing his daughter, Brianna Cole.

    He has not denied killing the child, whose spine was broken and aorta torn after she was forcefully bent backward.

    Julie Gardner, an investigator for the public defender's office who interviewed Cole several times, said he mostly talks about Scriptures and his "ministry," which she said she doesn't understand.

    "He always talks about the end times and various messages the Lord has given him," Gardner testified.

    But Warden Anita Trammell said she's been able to converse with Cole on numerous occasions and that he understands why he's being executed.

    "When I've pulled him out to talk to him, he's engaged in conversation," Trammell said in court.

    Federal Public Defender Susan Otto wrote in a court filing that Cole's "condition has deteriorated steadily since his conviction." The U.S. Supreme Court has held that executing an insane person is unconstitutional.

    Otto says Cole's ability to participate in his defense has been in question since the inception of the case, and she told the state's Pardon and Parole Board during a clemency hearing last week that Cole once went two years without showering or leaving his cell.

    Forensic psychiatrist Raphael Morris, who was hired by Cole's attorneys and also testified at the clemency hearing, said Friday that Cole sat before him in a catatonic state during an hour-long visit at the penitentiary.

    Morris said Cole didn't make eye contact or utter a single word. He said Cole has a lesion on his brain and that his condition has worsened since he first visited him in 2008.

    "Six years ago he was talking and talking, and now he's just giving one-word answers," Morris testified.

    The Pardon and Parole Board voted 3-2 last week against recommending clemency to the governor, who could only have granted clemency with a recommendation from the board.

    But even a clemency recommendation would have been no guarantee that Gov. Mary Fallin would have spared his life.

    The board voted 4-1 to recommend clemency for death row inmate Garry Allen, but Fallin still rejected the recommendation and said his execution should proceed. Allen, who suffered a brain injury after being shot in the head during his arrest, appeared confused during his 2012 execution and seemed startled when a prison official announced the start of the lethal injection.

    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2015...cole.html?_r=0
    An uninformed opponent is a dangerous opponent.

    "Y'all be makin shit up" ~ Markeith Loyd

  5. #25
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    Oklahoma AG tells court Cole execution should move forward

    By TIM TALLEY
    The Associated Press

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt is urging a state appeals court to reject a death row inmate's request to halt his execution, arguing that defense attorneys have failed to show the inmate is insane and ineligible for the death penalty.

    Legal papers filed by Pruitt's office urge the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals to deny a stay of execution for Benjamin Cole, 50, of Claremore.

    Cole was convicted of first-degree murder in Rogers County and is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection on Oct. 7 for the 2002 killing of his 9-month-old daughter, Brianna Cole, whose spine was broken and her aorta torn after she was forcefully bent backward.

    Pruitt filed the legal papers on Wednesday, and the appeals court did not immediately hand down a ruling.

    Defense attorneys are appealing a ruling by Pittsburg County District Judge James Bland last month that rejected claims Cole is insane and that executing him is unconstitutional.

    Attorneys for Cole asked the appeals court last week to halt his execution, claiming he is mentally ill, suffers from schizophrenia and brain damage and is incompetent to be executed under the U.S. Constitution. Cole is also challenging plans to use the sedative midazolam as the first in Oklahoma's three-drug lethal injection protocol instead of an ultrashort-acting barbiturate defense attorneys claim is called for in state law.

    Cole's attorneys claim Anita Trammell, warden at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester where Cole is scheduled to be executed, has been on notice since January "that there is good reason to believe Mr. Cole is insane for purposes of execution."

    "Substantial evidence has been presented to the warden documenting an abnormality in Mr. Cole's brain in a specific region associated with schizophrenia," the defense motion states. "This evidence presents 'good reason' to believe Mr. Cole is insane."

    Defense attorneys allege that the warden is violating a state law that requires her to notify the local district attorney when an inmate has become insane.

    In his response, the attorney general maintains Cole's claims of insanity were rejected when Bland denied his request for a stay of execution following a hearing on Aug. 28. During the hearing, Trammell testified she has been able to converse with Cole on numerous occasions and that he understands why he's being executed.

    "Petitioner has made it clear that he understands he is being executed because he murdered his daughter," Pruitt's office states in its legal response. Trammell is under no legal duty to refer the case to local prosecutors, it says.

    http://www.fox23.com/ap/ap/oklahoma/...ld-move/nnm42/

  6. #26
    Administrator Helen's Avatar
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    Benjamin Cole and ‘the Bakersfield Prophecy’

    By Cary Aspinwall
    The Frontier

    In storage, attorneys at the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System have more than 13 boxes of correspondence Benjamin Cole has sent them over the years, all of it religious ramblings and scribblings in unintelligible code.

    MCALESTER — Everyone seated in the courtroom leaned in, trying to discern what the disheveled, slumping killer in the wheelchair was murmuring and what, if anything, it meant.

    “Do you believe God is going to let you die on October 7,” federal public defender Michael Lieberman asked his client, Benjamin Cole. “What do you think?”

    In the hushed courtroom, Cole muttered: “Wait and see.”

    Cole, sentenced to die for killing his own daughter, believes that if and when the state of Oklahoma executes him on Oct. 7, it will bring about a prophecy told to him at a jail revival in Bakersfield, Calif., in the 1980s, his attorneys argued Friday in Pittsburg County District Court.

    At legal proceedings and in court filings, Cole’s attorneys have described him as a delusional schizophrenic with brain damage who barely communicates.

    The Bakersfield Prophecy, as his attorneys refer to it, is when a man at a prison revival in California (where Cole served time in the 1980s) told Cole that the world would “know him.”

    Cole believes that his role is to bring glory to the Lord’s name and now he thinks that the 2002 murder of his infant daughter was part of that prophecy, his attorneys said.

    Attorneys representing the state and the warden of Cole’s prison argue he’s simply a devoutly religious, possibly remorseful man who believes God will protect and care for him. He’s lucid enough to be aware of his upcoming execution date and the crime for which he will die, they’ve argued.

    Friday, Cole spoke quietly and sparingly for himself in the courtroom, at a hearing evaluating evidence on whether the warden at Oklahoma State Penitentiary had performed her legal duties to notify county officials of Cole’s mental state.
    The Pittsburg County District Court hearing Friday focused on a narrow aspect of state law.

    “If, after his delivery to the warden for execution, there is good reason to believe that a defendant under judgment of death has become insane, the warden must call such fact to the attention of the district attorney of the county in which the prison is situated, whose duty is to immediately file in the district or superior court of such county a petition stating the conviction and judgment and the fact that the defendant is believed to be insane and asking that the question of his sanity be inquired into. Thereupon, the court must at once cause to be summoned and impaneled from the regular jury list a jury of twelve persons to hear such inquiry.”

    The prison’s warden, Anita Trammell, testified Friday that she has had conversations with Cole where he understands his conviction and death sentence and she does not have “good reason” to believe Cole is insane. Sometimes he crawls on the floor and doesn’t respond to questions, but sometimes he talks to her about the Bible and his past in the Air Force, Trammell testified.

    Ultimately, the judge ruled, attorneys for Cole did not meet the burden of proving the warden neglected her duty under state law.

    District Judge James Bland said that “clearly there is some evidence” that supports claims Cole may not be sane, but Cole’s attorneys did not meet the legal requirement of proving the warden was negligent in her duty under the law.

    A separate federal court challenge regarding Cole’s sanity remains pending.

    Friday’s hearing was certainly unusual, with at least seven armed Department of Corrections officers guarding an inmate who barely moved and refused a lunch break. Attorneys for Cole and the state had to sit in a chair next to him while asking questions just to elicit the occasional mumbled response.

    Cole answered a few questions posed directly to him by Judge Bland during the hearing, and chatted sparingly with the correctional officers transporting and guarding him.

    Cited nearly as often as statute and case law was the Bible, with entire chapters of the Book of Luke read at Cole’s request.

    “I will read all of Luke 21 and you can tell me why you think it’s important,” Lieberman said while questioning Cole.

    “But before all these things, they will lay their hands on you and persecuteyou, delivering you up to the synagogues and prisons. You will be brought before kings and rulers for My name’s sake. 13 But it will turn out for you as an occasion for testimony. 14 Therefore settle it in your hearts not to meditate beforehand on what you will answer; 15 for I will give you a mouth and wisdom which all your adversaries will not be able to contradict or resist. 16 You will be betrayed even by parents and brothers, relatives and friends; and they will putsome of you to death. 17″

    Parts of Luke 21 refer to end times, and Luke 21:36 is a frequent reference of Cole’s, Lieberman said.

    Then the questioning turned to the Book of Revelation and the blood moon, another fixation of Cole’s.

    Lieberman asked: “Do you think the end times are here?”

    “Yes,” Cole responded.

    “Why do you think that?” Lieberman asked.

    1948. The Jerusalem Clock started, Cole responded quietly.

    Is Jesus coming soon?

    Today, he answered. This very second. Praise Jesus.

    Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Dickson attempted to ask Cole several questions on cross-examination, but the only response she got was when she asked if he could hear her.

    Then it was the judge’s turn. He spoke loudly and directly to Cole from the bench, eliciting a few mutterings in response.

    “Has somebody explained why you’ve been brought to court today?” Bland asked.

    “Hearing,” Cole said.

    Are you aware there’s an execution date that’s been set?

    “The seventh.”

    Do you understand why there is an execution date set?

    “Go home. Go home to be with Jesus.”

    The execution is a sentence that was imposed. Do you know why you’re being sentenced that way?

    “Death of daughter,” Cole muttered.

    In December 2002, Cole was playing a video game at home in Rogers County when his infant daughter, Brianna, started crying during her nap time. He pressed pause on the game, went into her room and bent her feet back until he snapped her spine.

    He resumed playing his video game until the child’s mother, Susan Young, noticed something was wrong. Cole at first denied there was a problem until Brianna turned blue and foam came out of her mouth. She died a short time later at a hospital.

    Investigators said Cole’s primary concern after confessing that he killed his daughter was how many years in prison he would get.

    The court also heard Friday from Dr. Raphael Morris, the same psychiatrist who spoke earlier in August at Cole’s clemency hearing, where the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board voted 3-2 against recommending clemency for Cole to Gov. Mary Fallin. Cole declined to appear at that hearing.

    Morris testified Friday that in his medical opinion, Cole has been incompetent since at least 2008, if not earlier. Scans from 2004 show a lesion in his brain and much of his unusual behavior observed by attorneys and prison medical staff are classic symptoms of schizophrenia. Untreated while on death row, Cole’s condition has worsened over the past decade, Morris testified.

    Morris’s testified that some of Cole’s religious utterings are symptoms of schizophrenic delusions. This resulted in a line of cross-examination by attorneys for the state — which seeks to execute Cole for a murder considered “especially heinous, atrocious, cruel or depraved” — suggesting that he’s simply a devoutly religious man entitled to his beliefs.

    “Aren’t there are a large number of people who believe Christ is coming at any minute?” Assistant Attorney General Robert Whittaker questioned Morris. “Did he say he was glad he was forgiven?”

    Julie Gardner, an investigator with the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System, testified Friday that in years of representing Cole, he has never assisted attorneys in his defense.

    His appearance, hygiene, mental state and verbal skills have degraded over the years that OIDS has worked with him, she said. Other inmates have told them that Cole refuses to shower and bathes himself from the toilet water in his cell.

    In storage, attorneys at OIDS have more than 13 boxes of correspondence Cole has sent them over the years, all of it religious ramblings and scribblings in unintelligible code.

    He requests only Bibles from his attorneys, which they send and he sends back. He has returned more than 35 Bibles to his defense team over the years, Gardner testified. He talks only of his ministry, not his case.

    “What is his ministry?” defense attorney Susan Otto asked.

    “I have no idea,” Gardner responded. “I can’t say he thinks he’s a messiah. He certainly thinks that he’s a messenger here to tell us something.”

    He does seem to understand that Oct. 7 is the day Oklahoma plans to execute him, Gardner said.

    When she talked to him about it, Cole uttered “a weird giggle,” and told her to “wait on the Lord and pray.”

    “Sometimes the Lord likes to show up at the very last second.”

    https://www.readfrontier.com/investi...ield-prophecy/
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  7. #27
    Moderator Ryan's Avatar
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    Oklahoma AG Suspends Executions Indefinitely After Drug Mix-Up

    The Oklahoma attorney general has suspended all executions in the state following a disastrous lethal injection drug mix-up that occurred just hours before a scheduled Wednesday execution.

    Attorney General Scott Pruitt (R) on Thursday afternoon wrote that his office "needs time to evaluate the events that transpired on September 30, 2015," including how the state Department of Corrections secured a drug contrary to protocol, and the DOC's internal protocol surrounding executions. (See the order below.)

    The order applies to the three inmates with scheduled executions: Benjamin Cole on Oct. 7, John Grant on Oct. 28 and Richard Glossip on Nov. 6.

    Glossip was being prepared for his 3 p.m. execution Wednesday when DOC realized the state had purchased potassium acetate instead of potassium chloride.

    Oklahoma has a three-drug protocol that uses a cocktail of midazolam to sedate the inmate, pancuronium bromide to paralyze him and potassium chloride to induce a heart attack.

    According to an order from Gov. Mary Fallin (R), who issued the stay for Glossip's execution, the state is investigating whether it can lawfully use potassium acetate in executions.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/...=death-penalty

  8. #28
    Administrator Heidi's Avatar
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    Court denies Oklahoma death row inmate's sanity challenge

    The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals has denied a death row inmate's request to halt his execution over claims that he is insane and challenges to the state's drug formula.

    But Benjamin Robert Cole's upcoming execution was stayed anyway on Friday, as the court delayed all pending executions at the request of Attorney General Scott Pruitt following concerns about the wrong drug that was shipped for an execution this week.

    Cole's attorneys are pursuing a separate legal challenge, arguing his mental state has deteriorated while he's been on death row to the point that he is no longer sane enough to be executed.

    Cole was sentenced to die for killing his 9-month-old daughter in 2002.

    http://www.kswo.com/story/30173684/c...nity-challenge
    An uninformed opponent is a dangerous opponent.

    "Y'all be makin shit up" ~ Markeith Loyd

  9. #29
    Administrator Helen's Avatar
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    Oklahoma death row inmate's attorneys ask for new hearing on mental competency

    In a Tuesday filing in the Northern District of Oklahoma federal court, attorneys for Benjamin Robert Cole, 50, contended their client has schizophrenia and that a 2004 MRI shows he has brain lesions.

    Attorneys for a death row inmate are asking an Oklahoma court to reevaluate him and perform additional brain scans in order to show he is not mentally competent for execution.

    In a Tuesday filing in the Northern District of Oklahoma federal court, attorneys for Benjamin Robert Cole, 50, contended their client has schizophrenia and that a 2004 MRI shows he has brain lesions.

    Cole was set to die Wednesday, but his execution was postponed indefinitely when the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals granted a request by Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt to place a moratorium on executions.

    The request from Pruitt came after Gov. Mary Fallin was forced to halt the Sept. 30 execution of Richard Eugene Glossip, 52, when it was discovered hours before his scheduled 3 p.m. lethal injection the Oklahoma Department of Corrections did not receive the right drugs for the procedure.

    Cole was sentenced to death for the 2002 death of his 9-month-old daughter Brianna Cole in Claremore. After Brianna would not stop crying, Cole flipped her over so forcefully it snapped her spine in half and tore her aorta.

    Cole was found mentally competent to stand trial, but his attorneys said they were not allowed more time for further testing beyond the MRI so they could show the significance of his brain lesions. The judge ruled Cole's lawyers should have introduced such evidence much sooner.

    In recent weeks, the court of criminal appeals and a district judge ruled Cole is mentally fit for execution. At the September hearing before District Judge James Bland, Cole mumbled inaudibly several times when asked questions and said his execution date was when he would "Go home. To be with Jesus."

    In the Tuesday filing, Cole's attorneys say the state denied their request for a reevaluation of their client at a local hospital for additional brain scans. They claim they have also been denied access to state Corrections Department employees who interact with Cole and could testify to his mental state.

    "It is undisputed that Mr. Cole has had something physically wrong with his brain since at least 2004," Cole's federal public defenders wrote. They added that by denying additional testing the state has "invited arbitrariness and error into the process."

    At Cole's clemency hearing in September, his public defenders told the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board his mental state has deteriorated steadily since his incarceration. They said Cole had become almost catatonic, was refusing to cooperate with counsel, and his muscles had atrophied from a lack of use.

    “It is wrong to kill mentally ill people. It is uncivilized, and it is inhumane," federal public defender Susan Otto told the board, citing a U.S. Supreme Court decision that found it is unconstitutional to execute the mentally ill.

    Attorneys for the state contended Cole was only unresponsive when it was beneficial to him and noted he had recently engaged the warden of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in conversation about his upcoming execution and appeared to fully understand the circumstances of his incarceration.

    "He made a self-deprecating remark about talking too much, and the assessment came to a close," a clinician for the state wrote in a Sept. 1 evaluation. "The total time of the ... assessment was approximately two hours, during which time offender Cole was actively engaged."

    The board denied Cole clemency by a 3 to 2 vote.

    http://newsok.com/oklahoma-death-row...451729/?page=2
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  10. #30
    Moderator Ryan's Avatar
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    Oklahoma court overturns two death sentences, citing McGirt

    The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals on Thursday overturned the death sentences of two more convicted killers, following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that Oklahoma lacks jurisdiction for crimes on tribal reservations in which the defendants or victims are tribal citizens.

    The court reversed the convictions of Benjamin Robert Cole Sr., 56, and 59-year-old James Chandler Ryder. Cole had been sentenced to death for killing his 9-month-old daughter in Rogers County in 2002. Ryder had been sentenced to death for the 1999 killing of Daisy Hallum, 70, and to life without parole for killing her son, Sam Hallum, 38, in Pittsburg County.

    Phone calls to the attorney representing Cole and Ryder were not immediately returned.

    In both cases, the crimes occurred on land within a tribe’s historical reservation and the victims were found to be, or were posthumously enrolled, as tribal citizens.

    According to the Supreme Court ruling, known as McGirt, the cases now fall to federal authorities to pursue. Indictments have been issued in Cole’s case.

    The state court has overturned at least eight murder convictions and the manslaughter conviction of a former Tulsa police officer based on McGirt, in addition to numerous other cases.

    https://apnews.com/article/oklahoma-...d1d1c8e77ef64e
    "How do you get drunk on death row?" - Werner Herzog

    "When we get fruit, we get the juice and water. I ferment for a week! It tastes like chalk, it's nasty" - Blaine Keith Milam #999558 Texas Death Row

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