It was almost 10 a.m. and the eighth-floor courtroom in downtown Oklahoma City was nearly empty, save for a few onlookers and reporters. A Thursday morning hearing had been scheduled in the case of Richard Glossip, but he wasn’t there — neither were his attorneys nor the attorneys for the state. Minutes later, the gaggle of lawyers emerged from a door leading to the judge’s chambers, and Don Knight, Glossip’s longtime lead attorney, approached Glossip’s wife Lea in the front row of the gallery to deliver some news: Judge Heather Coyle had just recused herself from Glossip’s case. There was no explanation why, reported The Intercept.
The recusal came as a surprise — not only because trial
judges rarely willingly step away from a case, but also because there was no
recusal request on the official court docket. Coyle was previously a prosecutor
in the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s Office under the former DA who sent
Glossip to death row, and the recusal was likely rooted in concern about those
ties. It was the latest twist in Glossip’s case since the U.S. Supreme
Court overturned
his conviction at the urging of Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner
Drummond — only for Drummond to announce that he would retry
Glossip for first-degree murder.
Glossip was twice
convicted of the 1997
murder of Barry Van Treese inside room 102 of the rundown motel his
family owned on the outskirts of Oklahoma City. A 19-year-old maintenance man
named Justin Sneed admitted to bludgeoning Van Treese to death but insisted
Glossip put him up to it. Sneed, who is currently serving a life sentence,
escaped the death penalty by becoming the star witness against Glossip.
Glossip, who has always maintained
his innocence, faced execution nine times as the Oklahoma courts repeatedly
denied his appeals. He may well have been executed if Drummond hadn’t
intervened. In early 2023, Drummond ordered an independent investigation into
the case, which concluded that rampant prosecutorial misconduct had infected
Glossip’s conviction. Drummond asked the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals to
overturn the case, and, when that failed, joined Glossip in asking the Supreme
Court to intervene, arguing that Sneed — that the state has described as
its “indispensable witness” — had lied on the witness stand.
Drummond’s concessions about the flaws in the state’s case
and his unprecedented advocacy in support of overturning Glossip’s conviction
made his announcement in June that he would seek to retry
Glossip for murder all the more shocking. According to Glossip’s
lawyers, the decision also betrayed a long-standing agreement with Drummond to
resolve the case and set Glossip free.
The alleged agreement, first
reported by The Intercept, was at the heart of an explosive court filing
last month, which included a 2023 email exchange between Drummond and Knight
laying out the deal. According to the email, Glossip would agree to plead
guilty to a lesser charge and would be immediately released in exchange for a
promise that Glossip would not sue the state for anything related to his
“arrest and incarceration.”
“We are in agreement,” Drummond replied.
The state has since denied that any deal was ever reached,
writing in a court filing that the first anyone in the AG’s office had heard
about it was just before Glossip’s team filed their brief that included the
email exchange. “Needless to say, the defendant is not entitled to enforcement
of a non-existent plea agreement,” prosecutors wrote.
Thursday’s court hearing was meant to figure out how to
proceed with the matter.
In anticipation of the hearing, Glossip’s attorneys on
August 11 filed a lengthy affidavit from Knight that outlined his
ongoing communications with Drummond and members of his staff regarding the
deal. The filing shed new light on the negotiations, including that Drummond,
who is currently running for governor, told Knight that the timing for carrying
out the deal “was based on his own political calculus.”
In fact, it was Drummond who initially approached Knight in
the spring of 2023 asking if they could strike a deal, Knight recalled.
Drummond was preparing to admit that Glossip’s trial had been tainted by
prosecutorial misconduct and to ask the state’s Court of Criminal Appeals to
overturn the conviction.
Drummond’s “big fear was that the court would grant it,”
Knight told The Intercept, and that Glossip would walk free and would sue the
state. “So Drummond did what a good lawyer does for his client and looked for
an insurance policy. This agreement was that insurance policy.” Knight noted
that if Glossip had been released as planned and then had gone on to sue the
state, “the shoe would be on the other foot, and Drummond would be asking for
this agreement to be enforced now, instead of me.”
In his affidavit, Knight lays out how after the Supreme Court ruled in Glossip’s favor in February, Drummond was quick to lay out a plan to follow through with the deal in a way that would avoid too much publicity — by releasing Glossip on the Friday before Easter. “I was informed that AG Drummond planned to effectuate the agreement on April 18, 2025,” Knight wrote. Knight recalled that he told Drummond’s solicitor general that he had shoulder replacement surgery scheduled in March, which would preclude him from traveling. Knight said he’d be willing to put off the surgery if Glossip’s release date was firm and was told that it was. “Having been assured that it was a firm plan, I rescheduled my surgery to May 13, 2025,” Knight wrote.
During a phone call in early April, however, Drummond told
Knight that he would need additional time, but assured him the deal was still
on. Just days before Knight’s surgery, the two talked again, and Drummond
“reaffirmed he was still working on timing,” Knight wrote. Instead, a few weeks
later, Drummond put out a press release announcing he
would be retrying Glossip for first-degree murder.
Drummond’s office did not respond to a request for comment.
In their most recent brief, Glossip’s legal team argues that
prosecutors’ characterization of the deal merely reveals their own ignorance
about what was happening behind the scenes.
“The thing that makes me kind of chuckle about the
situation,” Knight told The Intercept, “is that I believe the people in
Drummond’s office who are writing these petitions are learning about the truth
of this matter from us … rather than from Gentner Drummond.”
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