Emmanuel Littlejohn Oklahoma Death Row

emmanuel littlejohn

Emmanuel Littlejohn was sentenced to death by the State of Oklahoma for a robbery murder. According to court documents Emmanuel Littlejohn and Glenn Bethany would enter a convenience store where the manager Kenneth Meers was shot and killed.

Oklahoma Death Row Inmate List

Emmanuel Littlejohn 2021 Information

Gender: Male

Race: Black

Height: 6 ft 0 in

Weight: 190 lbs

Hair Color: Black

Eye Color: Brown


Alias: Lorenzo Littlejohn


OK DOC#: 190341

Birth Date: 11/9/1971


Current Facility: OKLAHOMA STATE PENITENTIARY, MCALE

Reception Date: 7/27/1990

Emmanuel Littlejohn More News

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear an appeal from an Oklahoma man who was sentenced to death for the 1992 murder of a convenience store owner during a robbery.

The Oklahoman reports that Emmanuel Littlejohn had asked the court to consider if his sentence was unconstitutional because jurors didn’t hear of how brain damage could’ve explained his actions. Littlejohn has admitted to taking part in the robbery, but denies firing the shot that killed 31-year-old Kenneth Meers.

Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Crabb says Littlejohn’s attention deficit disorder, impulse control disorder and personality traits don’t account for his criminal behavior.

Littlejohn has now exhausted his appeals and is eligible for execution.

No execution dates in Oklahoma have been set as the state works on a new execution protocol using nitrogen gas

https://www.swtimes.com/news/20181002/us-supreme-court-declines-to-hear-oklahoma-death-row-appeal

Wade Lay Oklahoma Death Row

wade lay

Wade Lay was sentenced to death by the State of Oklahoma for the murder of a guard during a bank robbery. According to court documents Wade Lay and his son Christopher Lay would shoot and kill Kenneth Anderson during an attempted robbery at the MidFirst Bank in Tulsa. Wade Lay would be convicted and sentenced to death. Christopher Lay would be convicted and sentenced to life without parole.

Oklahoma Death Row Inmate List

Wade Lay 2021 Information

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 8 in

Weight: 161 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Green



OK DOC#: 516263

Birth Date: 2/28/1961


Current Facility: OKLAHOMA STATE PENITENTIARY, MCALE

Reception Date: 10/31/2005

Christopher Lay

christopher lay

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 9 in

Weight: 145 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Green


Alias: Christopher D. Lay

Alias: Christopher Lay


OK DOC#: 515483

Birth Date: 1/21/1985


Current Facility: R.B. DICK CONNER CORRECTIONAL CENTER, HOMIN

Reception Date: 10/20/2005

Wade Lay More News

Tulsa County jurors took about 40 minutes to convict a father and son of murdering a bank security guard during an attempted robbery.

Wade Lay, 44, and his son, Christopher Lay, 20, also were each found guilty Monday of a separate count of attempted armed robbery.

The sentencing phase of the trial was expected to resume Tuesday. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. Other punishment options for the murder are life in prison with or without the possibility of parole.

The bank guard, Kenneth Anderson, 36, was killed May 24, 2004, during a foiled robbery attempt of the MidFirst Bank in Tulsa.

Wade and Christopher Lay have testified that they went to the bank intending to rob it but with no intention to kill anyone.

Chris Lay carried a sawed-off shotgun, and Wade Lay had a .40-caliber pistol. They both were wounded in a gunfight with Anderson, who fired a .45-caliber handgun. Anderson was killed by shotgun pellet wounds and a gunshot wound, evidence indicates.

Wade Lay, who is not an attorney but who is handling his own legal defense, testified Monday that the bank money was sought “to buy adequate weapons.”

First Assistant District Attorney Doug Drummond said the father and son were “operating outside of reality” and had a “self-proclaimed mission to revenge Waco.”

From the witness stand, Christopher Lay acknowledged Friday that he had compiled a list of people who he thought were responsible for the deaths of about 80 Branch Davidians, who died in 1993 in a fiery end to a 51-day standoff with law enforcement agents and federal officials in Waco, Texas.

That “hit list” had 15 names designated as the “enemy,” Drummond said.

Wade Lay said that “we planned on holding the people who murdered those people accountable,” because the government had not.

“Those men that killed these people at Waco didn’t have to,” he testified Monday.

Under cross-examination, he said, “I think they should die.”

Wade Lay said it was “100 percent accurate” to say that he is willing to kill for his beliefs, but he said he hadn’t wanted anyone to get hurt at the bank.

“I wanted to spark a revolution. That is the truth,” he testified. “I’ve stood in the face of tyranny. I will continue to do so.”

Attorney Kevin Adams, representing Chris Lay, told jurors that the son shot Anderson in order to protect his father.

After the sentencing stage started Monday, jurors heard emotional impact statements from two sisters of Anderson’s.

“I am very proud of Kenny for doing his job and protecting all the people in the bank,” Kim Tryon said.

“I know that he would have done it all over again if he had lived,” she said. “That was the type of person he was.”

https://www.securityinfowatch.com/security-executives/protective-operations-guard-services/news/10594789/guilty-father-and-son-convicted-of-murder-of-bank-security-guard

Julius Jones Oklahoma Death Row

julius jones

Julius Jones was sentenced to death by the State of Oklahoma for a murder. According to court documents Julius Jones would carjack a vehicle and in the process would murder the owner Paul Howell in front of his wife and children. When police searched Julius Jones home they found the bandanna that he was wearing during the crime and the murder weapon. Julius Jones was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. He recently gained some notoriety as Kim Kardashian has been pushing for clemency

Oklahoma Death Row Inmate List

Julius Jones 2021 Information


Gender: Male

Race: Black

Height: 5 ft 9 in

Weight: 161 lbs

Hair Color: Black

Eye Color: Brown

Alias: Darius Jones


OK DOC#: 270147

Birth Date: 7/25/1980


Current Facility: OKLAHOMA STATE PENITENTIARY, MCALE

Reception Date: 4/29/2002

Julius Jones More News

 Attorney General Mike Hunter today released a summary of the trial transcript that shows the overwhelming evidence of guilt of convicted death row inmate Julius Jones.

The transcript directly refutes numerous instances of misinformation provided to the public in recent months by advocates for Jones. The release of the transcript summary comes after the attorney general met with the family of Paul Howell last week.

Attorney General Hunter said the mistruths being spread about the case led to his conversation with the Howell family and the release of the information.

“The fact is, Julius Jones murdered Paul Howell in cold blood in front of his sister and daughters,” Attorney General Hunter said. “No celebrity imploration or profusion of misinformation will change that. The information we are releasing today is from the trial transcript, and it disproves every claim that he is innocent. I strongly encourage those calling for his commutation to read the compelling evidence in this document. Jones had his day in court. We’ve heard a lot recently from those advocating for his release. I’m here today to support the Howell family’s plea for justice. They are the victims in this case, and the pain of their loss is reawakened with each misguided public appeal on Jones’ behalf.”

Last week, the attorney general sent a letter in response to an inquiry from the Pardon and Parole Board that questioned whether or not death row inmates are eligible for commutation. The attorney general’s letter references a 2012 opinion that establishes the board has the constitutional authority to recommend, and the governor has the constitutional authority to grant commutations to death row inmates. Read the letter, here: https://bit.ly/3e3yls5.

“This office will always follow the law, despite rhetoric to the contrary by Mr. Jones’ lawyer last week, who said we would not, alleging we would be a ‘biased actor’ and engage in ‘a flimsy legal cover’,” Attorney General Hunter said. “I know my responsibilities as attorney general and am faithful to them. I would ask that Julius Jones’ advocates, likewise be responsible to the public with respect to their efforts on his behalf.”

The Murder Weapon and the Red Bandanna

Jones was convicted in 2002 of murdering Edmond resident Paul Howell during a carjacking. At the 1999 trial, an eyewitness testified that the shooter was wearing a red bandanna. Authorities who searched Jones’ parents’ home found the murder weapon wrapped in a red bandanna in the attic space above the ceiling in his closet.

In 2018, at the request of the defense counsel, the state agreed to test the DNA on the bandanna. The bandanna was sent to a lab chosen by the defense. The conclusive results of the DNA profile on the red bandanna show the probability of the DNA belonging to someone other than Jones is one in 110 million African Americans.

More on the DNA test, here: https://bit.ly/2ZkcpDx.

History of Violence and Carjacking

Subsequent to Howell’s murder, Jones pleaded guilty to robbery with a firearm and unlawful possession of a firearm. This offense arose out of the armed carjacking of a vehicle outside a Hideaway restaurant the week before Howell’s murder.

The driver of this vehicle identified Jones. In addition, “substantial evidence linked Jones to the carjacking, which occurred just days before the instant offenses. The stolen vehicle, a Mercedes, was recovered from a Norman apartment complex where Jones lived. After Jones and a friend were arrested for Howell’s murder, the key to the stolen Mercedes was found in the Cutlass shared by Jones and co-defendant Christopher Jordan.”

Jones was also arrested for attempting to elude a police officer, arrested while driving a stolen car (he had a loaded gun during this incident, and also had a pair of gloves and a pair of pantyhose in his pocket), tied to the robbing of a jewelry store at gunpoint, committed another carjacking at the same Hideaway during the same week, and fought with a detention officer.

Alleged Juror Bias

During the trial, a juror allegedly overheard another juror remark [they] “should place him in a box in the ground for what he has done.” That claim was thoroughly explored by the trial court and on appeal. The juror admitted only hearing part of the comment and couldn’t confirm that it was made about Jones. As a result, no error was found. Now decades later, this same juror claims a racial epithet was also overheard, as the appellate court’s review of this allegation noted, “…it is highly improbable that [the juror] neglected to add, during the trial court’s investigation that [the other juror also] used a clearly offensive racial epithet…”

Additionally, a full hearing was held during the trial, where every juror was asked if they heard the allegation. All denied hearing it.

https://oag.ok.gov/articles/attorney-general-hunter-reiterates-facts-julius-jones%E2%80%99-trial

Raymond Johnson Oklahoma Death Row

raymond johnson

Raymond Johnson was sentenced to death by the State of Oklahoma for a double murder. According to court documents Raymond Johnson would murder Brooke Whitaker, who was 24, and her 7-month-old daughter, Kya, in 2007. Raymond Johnson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Oklahoma Death Row Inmate List

Raymond Johnson 2021 Information

Gender: Male

Race: Black

Height: 5 ft 5 in

Weight: 185 lbs

Hair Color: Black

Eye Color: Brown


Alias: Halfpint

Alias: Hitman

Alias: Cedrick R. Lewis


OK DOC#: 207742

Birth Date: 3/26/1974


Current Facility: OKLAHOMA STATE PENITENTIARY, MCALE

Reception Date: 8/10/2009

Raymond Johnson More News

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to review the appeal of Oklahoma death row inmate Raymond Eugene Johnson, who was convicted of killing his girlfriend and her infant daughter in Tulsa County.

Johnson, 45, is the 24th death row inmate in the state who has exhausted his appeals and will be eligible for an execution date if the state resumes executions.

Johnson was given two death sentences for killing Brooke Whitaker, who was 24, and her 7-month-old daughter, Kya, in 2007.

Johnson hit his girlfriend several times with a hammer and then doused her with gasoline and set her on fire. The bodies of Whitaker and her daughter were found in the charred remains of their home.

Along with the death sentences, Johnson received a life sentence for arson.

Johnson’s appeals in federal courts have focused on whether the judge in his case allowed enough mitigating evidence intended to spare Johnson from capital punishment and whether the judge properly informed the jury about mitigating evidence; also, the appeals have faulted Johnson’s attorney for not correcting misstatements about mitigating evidence.

“The crime at issue in this case was horrific, but there is no crime so bad that a juror might not be persuaded to grant the defendant life in prison over death, particularly under Oklahoma’s capital sentencing system,” Johnson’s petition to the U.S. Supreme Court states. “Nor is there a crime so bad that the defendant forfeits his rights to a fair trial and effective assistance of counsel.”

The Oklahoma attorney general’s office countered that the evidence needed to impose a death sentence far outweighed mitigating evidence such as a video of Johnson preaching in prison during a previous incarceration.

“The evidence overwhelmingly established four aggravating circumstances for both murders,” the attorney general’s office told the high court. “The brutal murders of Ms. Whitaker and K.W. were not (Johnson’s) first homicide. (Johnson’s) sentences were not rendered unreliable by the absence of additional evidence that he was a singer and preacher in between his homicides.”

The Supreme Court declined without comment to review Johnson’s appeal.

Oklahoma has not executed an inmate since 2015. Last year, the state abandoned lethal injection as its execution method and has been exploring the use of nitrogen gas.

https://www.oklahoman.com/article/5648140/man-who-killed-girlfriend-infant-loses-final-appeal

Jimmy Harris Oklahoma Death Row

jimmy harris

Jimmy Harris was sentenced to death by the State of Oklahoma for a murder. According to court documents Jimmy Harris would go to his ex wife’s place of work and would shoot and kill Merle Taylor and would also shoot his ex wife who would survive her injuries. Jimmy Harris would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

Oklahoma Death Row Inmate List

Jimmy Harris 2021 Information

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 8 in

Weight: 238 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Hazel


Alias: J M. Hirris

Alias: Jack O. Jones JR


OK DOC#: 408711

Birth Date: 10/20/1956


Current Facility: OKLAHOMA STATE PENITENTIARY, MCALE

Reception Date: 11/5/2001

Jimmy Harris More News

The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday that an Oklahoma death row inmate convicted of murder in 2001 can present evidence to a federal judge to determine whether his attorney’s assistance was ineffective.

Jimmy Dean Harris, now 63, was convicted of murder for fatally shooting Merle Taylor in 1999 at a transmission shop in Oklahoma City. He also shot his ex-wife, who worked at the shop, and she survived, The Oklahoman reported.

The high court on Monday upheld a ruling by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which granted Harris a hearing before a judge in Oklahoma City to argue whether his attorney should have sought a pretrial hearing to assess if Harris was intellectually disable.

The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last October that Harris’ attorney should’ve requested the hearing because if Harris was determined intellectually disable, he would have been ineligible for the death penalty under U.S. Supreme Court precedent.

The Oklahoma attorney general’s office requested that the Supreme Court reverse the appeals court decision, contending that the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals had determined that the evidence already showed Harris was not intellectually disabled.

Harris was first convicted of murder in 2001, but it was thrown out because the trial judge mistakenly answered a question from the jury. He was convicted and sentenced to the death penalty again in 2005.

https://apnews.com/article/69020d359c8e1695a69e9c52b4a53cd1