Articles

  • 1 week ago | theintercept.com | Liliana Segura |Jordan Smith

    Jimmy Harmon, chief of the criminal division of the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office, was standing in a courtroom packed with journalists and onlookers during a Tuesday afternoon bond hearing in Richard Glossip’s case, when he announced that the state would be calling a couple of witnesses. The announcement was unexpected; the state hadn’t notified Glossip’s attorneys that they planned to put anyone on the stand.

  • 1 week ago | flipboard.com | Liliana Segura

    9 hours agoPacers force winner-take-all, rout OKC in Game 6 of NBA FinalsINDIANAPOLIS -- A no-look pass from Tyrese Haliburton and a ferocious dunk from Pascal Siakam left the home crowd in a frenzy with less than a minute …14 hours agoOklahoma man could soon be deported for a crime committed decades agoOKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) – Family and friends of Ton Vongphakdy are pleading for him not to be deported after he was detained at his last immigration …

  • 2 weeks ago | rsn.org | Liliana Segura |Jordan Smith

    During a hearing in Oklahoma City, the state made clear it will go ahead despite the fact that the case against Glossip has fallen apart. It was after 10 a.m. on Monday morning when Richard Glossip was led into an eighth-floor courtroom in the Oklahoma County Courthouse by three sheriff’s deputies. Wearing orange prison scrubs and Crocs, and shackled at the waist and ankles, Glossip, now 62, looked small compared to the hulking deputies around him.

  • 2 weeks ago | theintercept.com | Liliana Segura |Jordan Smith

    It was after 10 a.m. on Monday morning when Richard Glossip was led into an eighth-floor courtroom in the Oklahoma County Courthouse by three sheriff’s deputies. Wearing orange prison scrubs and Crocs, and shackled at the waist and ankles, Glossip, now 62, looked small compared to the hulking deputies around him. His hair, now almost entirely gray, was long and combed to the side.

  • 2 weeks ago | flipboard.com | Liliana Segura |Jordan Smith

    3 hours agoThe state will not seek the death penalty in the new trial against Richard Glossip, who spent nearly 30 years on Oklahoma death row and came close to the execution chamber several times.

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Liliana Segura
Liliana Segura @LilianaSegura
1 Apr 25

RT @theintercept: Florida prosecutors say Michelle Taylor used gasoline to set a fire that killed her son. Top forensic chemists say they’r…

Liliana Segura
Liliana Segura @LilianaSegura
1 Apr 25

RT @MaryamSaleh: Often, problematic prosecutions come to light only after a person has already been convicted, when it's much harder to rig…

Liliana Segura
Liliana Segura @LilianaSegura
1 Apr 25

New from me @theintercept: A FL woman faces life in prison for killing her son in a fire. But the fire marshal's lab has a history of misidentifying gasoline in fire debris & experts say that's what happened here. A new twist on an all-too familiar story. https://t.co/o6lalDrnGx

The Intercept
The Intercept @theintercept

“The lab report that says they found gasoline is bullshit. Every part of the state’s case rests on that.” https://t.co/rtmOjyHrIt