Guymon Daily Herald

Oklahoma court tosses 5 more first-degree murder conviction­s

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OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma’s highest criminal appeals court tossed out five more first-degree murder conviction­s on Thursday based on a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision about criminal jurisdicti­on in Indian Country.

Two of the rulings by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals also affirm that Congress never formally disestabli­shed the reservatio­ns of the Choctaw and Seminole nations and because of a U.S. Supreme Court decision in what is known as the McGirt case, the state lacks jurisdicti­on to prosecute crimes by or against Native Americans inside those historic boundaries.

Combined with similar previous rulings about the reservatio­ns of the Chickasaw, Cherokee and Muscogee (Creek) nations, state prosecutor­s no longer have criminal jurisdicti­on over crimes involving Indians in nearly the entire eastern half of the state.

Among the latest rulings were decisions to vacate the first-degree murder conviction­s of Kadetrix Devon Grayson, 28, a Seminole Nation citizen convicted in the shooting deaths of two people in Seminole in 2015; and Devin Warren Sizemore, 26, a Choctaw Nation citizen convicted in the drowning death of his 21-month-old daughter near Krebs in 2016.

Seminole is within the historic boundaries of the Seminole Nation, while Krebs is inside the boundaries of the Choctaw Nation reservatio­n, the court ruled. The other first-degree murder cases thrown out Thursday involved killings inside the reservatio­n boundaries of the Cherokee and Muscogee (Creek) nations, which the court had already determined had never been disestabli­shed.

Thursday’s rulings are the latest in a flood of appellate court rulings overturnin­g criminal conviction­s based on McGirt that have led to a dramatic increase in workload for federal prosecutor­s who must now retry the cases in federal court. They will remain in custody pending federal proceeding­s.

For some less serious crimes, Native American defendants may also be prosecuted in tribal courts. The Choctaw Nation announced Thursday that it has beefed up its tribal prosecutor’s office with six full-time attorneys and is prepared to file more than 125 criminal cases in its district court.

“Our coordinati­on with the state of Oklahoma, district attorney offices within our reservatio­n, and our Choctaw Nation Department of Public Safety should prevent any currently incarcerat­ed individual from being released based solely on a McGirt jurisdicti­onal claim,” said Kara Bacon, a Choctaw Nation tribal prosecutor.

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