The Supreme Court orders the new Oklahoma prisoner process

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The US Supreme Court has ordered a new process for Richard Gladip, a man from the Oklahoma of Death.

The court ruled 5-3 in favor of Glossip, turning a decision of the criminal complaints in Oklahoma.

This move comes after the Republican Attorney General joined Glossip in the summoning for a new process.

The 62 -year -old Glossip was convicted of killing the owner of the owner of Oklahoma City, where he worked. He postponed nine dates and has eaten his “last meal” three times.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in the opinion of Tuesday on the court: “We conclude that the prosecutor’s office violates his constitutional obligation to correct the false testimony.”

Join the decision of fellow liberal judges Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Brett Cavano and Chief Justice John Roberts, both conservatives, have also joined the opinion.

Justice Amy Connie Barrett, another conservative, agreed with the opinion, but said he would send the case back to more proceedings.

Justice Neil Gorshuh did not join the case.

Don Knight, a Glossip lawyer, called the decision “Victory for Justice and Justice in our judicial system”.

The defense lawyer said Glossip would be given a chance to have a fair process “which has always been denied.”

The Oklahoma Prosecutor’s Office will determine how to continue his work.

Glossip has maintained its innocence for 27 years.

His boss Barry Van Traise, the owner of Budget Inn’s best motel in Oklahoma City, was beaten to death with a baseball bat in 1997.

Glossip colleague Justin Snede was convicted of the murder, but said Gladip told him to commit the murder.

Sneed acknowledged the murder, but managed to avoid execution by adopting a legal basis agreement involving a certificate that Glossip paid him $ 10,000 to do so.

Glossip admitted that it was helping Sneed in concealing the murder after it happened, but denied knowing a Van Traise murder plan.

Since then, prosecutors have not revealed that Sneed, dependent on methamphetamine, has been treated for a serious psychiatric condition.

“If the prosecutor’s office corrected a snid on the podium, his authenticity would be clearly injured,” writes Sotomayor justice.

“This correction would not only reveal to the jurors that Snyde is unreliable … but also that Snyd is ready to lie to them under the oath.”

Glossip was first sentenced in 1998, but it was canceled in 2001. He was convicted again three years later.

In 2015, just a few steps from the execution camera, its execution was stopped for review of the deadly injection drugs.

In 2023, the Supreme Court intervened after the Prosecutor General of Oklahoma and Glossip requested a new process.

A number of big names have supported Glossip’s efforts in the past, including Pope Francis, Kim Kardashian and Sir Richard Branson.

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