Guymon Daily Herald

Oklahoma panel advances convicted killer’s commutatio­n

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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma’s Pardon and Parole Board voted 3-1 on Monday to advance death row inmate Julius Jones’ request for a reduced sentence, setting up the possibilit­y that he could avoid lethal injection.

The board’s approval moves Jones’ commutatio­n request to a second-stage hearing later this year in which Jones and his supporters will be able to address the board. If approved at the second stage, the commutatio­n request will be forwarded to Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt for a final decision.

Jones, 40, maintains he is innocent of the 1999 shooting death of Edmond businessma­n Paul Howell, who was shot to death in front of his family during a carjacking.

Jones’ case drew the attention of reality television star Kim Kardashian West and numerous profession­al athletes with Oklahoma ties after it was featured in 2018 on the ABC television documentar­y series “The Last Defense.”

State prosecutor­s say the evidence against Jones is overwhelmi­ng and have defended his death sentence, urging the board to reject his commutatio­n request.

“To this day, Jones has not expressed an ounce of remorse for his callous actions,” District Attorney David Prater wrote in a letter to the panel. “Instead, he continues to victimize the Howell family by fueling a media circus with outright lies and by making a farce of this clemency process.”

Last week, Jones’ legal team released a video and a letter from a man who served time in an Arkansas prison with a man who claimed he was with Jones when Howell was killed, testified against him and served 10 years in prison. That man, Christophe­r Jordan, has since been released. In the video, Arkansas inmate Roderick Wesley alleges that Jordan confessed to killing Howell and framing Jones.

Prater’s letter didn’t specifical­ly address this most recent allegation, but noted that appellate courts rejected claims that Jones’ attorneys were ineffectiv­e for not calling two other inmates who made similar claims that Jordan confessed to killing Howell.

“Christophe­r Jordan spent years behind bars casually confessing to murder and to framing Julius,” Jones’ attorney Dale Baich said in a statement. “It is unimaginab­le that the state would execute a man given that another suspect in the case confessed to the crime multiple times.”

Attorney General Mike Hunter said he was disappoint­ed with the board’s recommenda­tion.

“The three members who voted in favor of moving Jones to stage two did not apply objective standards to the law or the evidence,” Hunter said in a statement. “I encourage those members to go back and look at the 33-page protest letter and 849-page appendix we submitted last Monday, which completely invalidate­s every claim that Julius Jones is innocent.”

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