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This Week in Oklahoma Politics discusses the resignation of U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe from the seat he has held since 1994, the trial over Oklahoma's execution protocols, and more.
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Oklahoma's secrecy laws allow the state to obscure where it gets lethal injection drugs. Given the state's track record, the critics say, that shouldn't be the case.
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Gilbert Ray Postelle was pronounced dead by lethal injection at 10:14 a.m. Thursday morning. He's the fourth death row inmate to be killed since the state resumed capital punishment in October after a six-year moratorium.
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A poor reader, Matthew Reeves is intellectually disabled and wasn't capable of making a decision on the method of execution without assistance, his lawyers argued.
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Donald Anthony Grant was pronounced dead by lethal injection at 10:16 a.m. Thursday morning. He's the third death row inmate to be killed since the state resumed capital punishment in October after a six-year moratorium.
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Death row inmate Bigler Stouffer II was executed Thursday morning at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester.
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This Week in Oklahoma Politics discusses the Secretary of Defense denying a request from Gov. Kevin Stitt of a COVID-19 vaccination waiver and a federal judge putting an injunction against vaccine mandates against health care workers in facilities receiving Medicaid and Medicare funding.
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The episode features reports on capital punishment, reproductive rights and Black WWII veterans.
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Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt commuted the death sentence of Julius Jones after a public outcry. Jones, who maintains he was wrongly convicted of a 1999 murder, now faces life in prison without parole.
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By a vote of 3 to 2, the board recommended clemency for death row inmate Bigler Jobe Stouffer II. Its recommendation is for life without the possibility of parole.