Steven Thacker Oklahoma Execution

Steven Thacker

Steven Thacker was executed by the State of Oklahoma for a murder committed in 1999. According to court documents Steven Thacker during a ten day crime spree would murder three people in three different States from December 1999 to January 2000. As well as receiving a death sentence in Oklahoma he was also sentenced to death in Tennessee. Steven Thacker would be executed for the murder of Laci Dawn Hill, 25, who was kidnapped and sexually assaulted. Steven Thacker would be executed by lethal injection on March 12, 2013

Steven Thacker More News

A man convicted of killing three people in three different states was executed Tuesday evening at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary.

Steven Ray Thacker, 42, waived his right to a clemency hearing last month and was put to death by lethal injection Tuesday evening in the prison’s execution chamber.

In the hours before his execution, Thacker visited with clergy and family, prison officials said. He also was served his last meal — a large meat lover’s pizza, a small bag of peanut M&Ms and an A&W root beer — at around noon.

Witnessing the execution were six members of the media; family members of each of Thacker’s three victims; Thacker’s step-father, Donald Johnston, two people from the federal public defenders office, a clergy member on behalf of Thacker; two law enforcement representatives; Oklahoma Department of Corrections Director Justin Jones and three DOC employees.

Before the execution process began, one of the federal public defenders placed his hand in a consoling manner on Thacker’s step-father’s back. The hand remained there throughout the execution.

At 6:02, the blinds between the witness room and the execution chamber were raised. Five additional DOC employees, including OSP Warden Anita Trammell and an attending physician, were with Thacker in the execution chamber.

Thacker then gave his last statement.

“I’d like to apologize sincerely to the families of Laci Hill, Forrest Boyd and Ray Patterson. I don’t deserve it but as God has forgiven me, I hope you will forgive me for the pain I’ve caused.

“I would like to thank my family and friends for your love and support. When my body is gone, my spirit will be with them.

“Jesus Christ died for my sins. God has forgiven me and eternity in heaven is mine.”

Thacker then turned his head slightly and winked at his step-father, who then in turn raised his head to Thacker.

At 6:03, Trammell said, “Let the execution process begin.”

At 6:05, Thacker’s lips bubbled outward and he exhaled heavily. At 6:06 his lips moved slightly and then the color from his face began to drain.

At 6:10, the attending physician pronounced Thacker’s time of death.

Thacker was the first person to be executed in Oklahoma in 2013. The last execution in the state took place at OSP on Dec. 4, 2012, when George T. Ochoa was put to death for the 1993 first-degree murders of Francisco Morales and Maria Yanez. Thacker was the 186th person to be put to death in Oklahoma since 1915.

Following his execution, Laci Hill’s best friend, Marnie Reed, gave a statement on behalf of her family.

“On behalf of Laci’s family and friends I want to thank everyone for the enormous support and love we have received the last 13 years. There are too many people to name individually. Laci impacted many.

“They say time heals all wounds, which I guess is true, but Laci’s murder has left a huge scar to remind us all daily of what we have lost, what we will never have again.

“It was time, justice needed to be served, 13 years was long enough. We believe Steven Thacker deserved to be punished. His selfish act 13 years (ago) destroyed a family and took away a person who was just starting her young life.

“His death won’t erase what happened but hopefully we can now focus on happier memories — memories of the joy Laci brought to our lives. Now we can truly celebrate and remember what an amazing person she truly was.”

When asked her thoughts about the execution, another one of Laci Hill’s friends spoke: “So humane,” Nikki Hodgson said, “He just got to go to sleep .. it’s nothing like what the victims endured.”

The condemned killer arrived at OSP on Feb. 12. Prior to his arrival, Thacker was being held on death row in Tennessee at the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville.

The request for an execution date for Thacker was made on Jan. 7 by Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt immediately following the U.S. Supreme Court denial of the killer’s final appeal.

“Steven Thacker was sentenced to death for savagely ending the life of an innocent young woman,” Pruitt stated in a press release on Tuesday. “My thoughts are with the families of Laci, Forrest and Ray, who all lost loved ones due to Thacker’s heinous killing spree.”

Thacker was convicted of going on a 10-day killing spree over the Christmas and New Year holidays between December 1999 and January 2000. He killed three people in three states, according to court records.

“In December 2002, Thacker pleaded guilty to the kidnapping, rape and first-degree murder of Laci Dawn Hill, 25, of Bixby,” according to Pruitt.

“Thacker met Hill in her home on Dec. 23, 1999, after answering an ad Hill placed to sell a pool table,” Pruitt said. “When his attempt to rob Hill failed, Thacker kidnapped her and took her to a rural cabin and raped her. Thacker attempted to strangle Hill, but eventually stabbed her in the chest and neck.”

In a videotaped confession, according to police, Thacker told authorities he raped Hill and returned to kill her after realizing she could turn him in.

Thacker then fled to Missouri where he killed 24-year-old Forrest Reed Boyd, stealing his car and credit cards, Pruitt said.

Thacker then drove to Tennessee “where the car ultimately broke down, and he called a tow truck,” according to Pruitt. “Thacker murdered Ray Patterson (age 52), the tow truck driver, after being confronted for using a stolen credit card.”

Thacker was arrested at a Super 8 Motel in Union City, Tenn., after being located by police, according to court documents. After searching Thacker’s motel room, police found several items belonging to Patterson, including credit cards, according to court records. Police also found a pistol, hair dye, two bloodstained coats and two knives, court records state.

Police also searched Thacker’s vehicle and found a third knife, which was covered in Patterson’s blood, court records state. While in police custody, Thacker told authorities “how he had left his home in Chouteau, Okla., on about December 28, 1999, and traveled to Springfield, Mo.,” court records state.

“He left Springfield on December 31 and traveled toward Dyersburg, Tenn., but his car broke down ‘two-and-a-half miles this side of the Mississippi River.’ An unidentified man gave the defendant a ride into Dyersburg and dropped him off at a truck stop,” where he obtained a name and phone number for a local tow-truck driver.

“While at this truck stop, (Thacker) called the victim and asked him to tow his vehicle into the service station,” court records state. “Once they arrived back at the victim’s service station, (Thacker) attempted to pay the victim (Patterson) with the stolen credit card, but the card was rejected.

“According to (Thacker), ‘he wasn’t gonna give my credit, my card back ‘cause I couldn’t pay the bill … And I knew I was wanted in other states, so I just stabbed him and took off.’”

Along with his Oklahoma death sentence, Thacker was serving 10 years for kidnapping and 50 years for first degree rape in Oklahoma. He was sentenced to death in Tennessee for first degree murder and was sentenced to life for a murder charge in Missouri.

https://www.mcalesternews.com/news/three-state-killer-was-executed-tuesday-night-at-osp/article_1910b0bf-5285-5e62-9a1b-f84705d77aa5.html

Justin Long Teen Killer Murders Father

justin long teen killer photo

Justin Long was fifteen years old when he stabbed his adoptive father to death. According to court documents Justin Long who had been taken in by the Long family two years before the murder would stab to death 42 year old Hoyt Long. Justin Long who was taken into Oklahoma protective services at an early age due to physical and sexual abuse would be sentenced to life in prison without parole. This teen killer is due for resentencing in the upcoming year

Justin Long 2023 Information

justin long photos 2021

Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 6 ft 1 in

Weight: 167 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Blue



OK DOC#: 411389

Birth Date: 3/27/1985


Current Facility: NORTH FORK CORRECTIONAL CENTER, SAYRE

Reception Date: 12/14/2001

Justin Long More News

A 15-year-old Duncan boy is facing a murder complaint for allegedly stabbing his adoptive father to death Monday night, police said.

Justin Long is accused of killing Hoyt Long, 42, who was found dead in his living room of multiple stab wounds with a large knife in his lap, said Duncan police.

Department Investigator George Williams said the boy’s mother called police after she reported hearing strange noises coming from
the home’s living room.

Police said she found her husband sitting on the living room sofa, making gasping noises.

She said the boy was sitting nearby and ran from the house when she called 911, Williams said.

An officer used a dog to track Justin Long down.

Justin Long is in the Stephens County Jail. District Attorney Gene Christian said he will be charged with first-degree murder in district court.

https://www.newson6.com/story/5e3685982f69d76f6209b0a4/duncan-boy-facing-murder-complaint-for-allegedly-killing-father

Justin Long FAQ

Justin Long 2021

Justin Long is currently incarcerated at the North Folk Correctional Center

Justin Long Release Date

Justin Long is serving life without parole

Dana Barker Teen Killer Murders Stepmother

dana baker teen killer photos

Dana Barker was seventeen years old when she fatally shot her stepmother. According to court documents Dana Barker would use a stolen car and a stolen gun, would cut the phone line in Brenda Barker’s home before entering the home. A fight ensued and Dana Barker would shoot Brenda Barker who would die from her injuries almost two weeks later. Dana Barker would be convicted and sentenced to life without parole. This teen killer is still appealing her sentence

Dana Barker 2023 Information

dana barker 2021 photos

Gender: Female

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 5 in

Weight: 185 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Brown



OK DOC#: 233887Birth Date: 4/29/1976


Current Facility: MABEL BASSETT CORRECTIONAL CENTER, MCLOU

Reception Date: 5/4/1995

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Dana Barker made a lot of bad decisions when she was a teenager.

She and her friends once packed 15 people like circus clowns into a 2-door Nissan Sentra — a few of them rode in the trunk. They got sloppy drunk and went swimming in the deep, dark waters of Lake Eufaula at night.

She dropped out of high school, made thousands of dollars in unauthorized charges on her dad’s credit cards and ran away from home.

And in January 1994 — when she was just 17 years old — Barker shot her former stepmother Brenda Barker three times and left her to die.

Barker had rubber gloves, a stolen handgun and a rented car, according to court records. She cut the phone lines before knocking on the front door of Brenda Barker’s house in Okmulgee. A struggle ensued.

Brenda Barker’s two sons later found her lying in a pool of blood in the kitchen. She died 13 days later in the hospital.

Now 42, Barker has spent the past 25 years in prison for the murder. She’s serving life without parole.

She lives at Mabel Bassett Correctional Center, a mostly grey cluster of buildings ringed with razor wire in Pottawatomie County.

Barker has long, straight hair that falls to the middle of her back and a gap between her front teeth that gives her an expressive look when she talks.

Today, Barker says she knows what she did was wrong and she takes responsibility for her actions. She also believes she deserves a second chance.

“I should have gone to prison,” she said. “I did something horrible, but I don’t know that I should have given up the rest of my life.”

In recent rulings, the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that research over the past 20 years shows the human brain is still developing in adolescents, making them less culpable for their actions. The regions of the human brain that manage decision making, aggression and impulse control are still forming during adolescence.  The Supreme Court has also recognized that adolescents are more susceptible to peer pressure, and are less able to consider future negative consequences of their actions. These same differences mean adolescents have a greater capacity for rehabilitation.

Two U.S Supreme Court decisions and subsequent state appellate court decisions have held that most people serving without parole for crimes committed as juveniles in Oklahoma are entitled to new sentencing trials that take their youth and potential for rehabilitation into account.

Barker now hopes for a new sentencing hearing that could give her a second chance at freedom.

When she was 17, Barker says she was a troubled, angry teenager who had suffered years severe physical and sexual abuse at the hands of her late father, Joe Barker.

“There was never an escape,” she said. “No matter how hard I tried, no matter what I did to break free, I couldn’t break free from my dad.”

She claims her father threatened to kill her unless she killed his ex-wife for him and that he groomed and manipulated her over a period of two years to commit the crime.

Joe and Brenda Barker were involved in a contentious fight over custody of their 9-year old son—Barker’s little brother.

She says Joe Barker told her that her little brother was being molested—something she now believes was a lie.

“Now I think he just didn’t want to pay child support,” she said.

Police investigated Joe Barker’s involvement in Brenda Barker’s murder, but they couldn’t find much hard evidence to link him to the crime.

Former Okmulgee County District Attorney Tom Giulioli remembers Dana Barker’s case well. He wouldn’t say whether he thought she should be released from prison.

But he continues to believe that Barker had very little remorse about the crime.

“She had a very cold personality,” he said. “She never showed any emotion.”

Barker said she was intimidated by Giuloli and the legal proceedings, much of which she didn’t understand as a 17 year old. Her court-appointed attorney told her to be quiet and reserved in court.

“I don’t think that’s a fair assessment. I’d like to know what his definition of remorse is,” she said. “I don’t know what these people want from you sometimes.”

Outside of Barker’s testimony, there was little to show her father’s involvement in the crime, Giulioli said. Since Joe Barker wasn’t present at the crime scene, there wasn’t enough independent corroboration of her story to file charges, he said.

“We spent considerable time trying to link the ex-husband to the crime, but we weren’t able to do so,” he said.

Joe Barker was never charged in connection with Brenda Barker’s death. He died in 2010.

Several family members said that Joe Barker was abusive to his entire family and that Barker was frequently singled out for the worst treatment, according to a pre-sentencing investigation report from 1995.

In an interview, Barker’s mother Mary Rine said Joe Barker was sadistic and controlling for the duration of their marriage. He beat her and sexually assaulted her, she said.

Joe Barker was fond of rare beef for dinner. He once pressed Rine’s hand against the heating element of an electric stove when she overcooked his steak, she said.

“He said ‘now that’s what you call rare,’” Rine said.

Joe Barker worked as a prison guard at Jackie Brannon Correctional Center in McAlester.

Strangers — particularly women —found Joe Barker charming, Rine said. He married and divorced at least six times.

“I don’t know if he was a psychopath, a sociopath or all the paths, but if you met him, you’d say he was the nicest man you’d ever want to meet,” she said.

There is also documentation of multiple reports of Joe Barker to Child Protective Services, according to Dana Barker’s court file.

“Back in those days, DHS just took you back home,” Barker said. “I couldn’t get away from him. I had to go to prison before I was free.”

And yet, she maintained contact with her father until his death. He visited her in prison and deposited money in her commissary account. He became her sole financial provider in prison.

“It’s an ugly situation. There’s not a good explanation for it at the end of the day,” Barker said. “He was still my dad and as bad as he was, there was still some good in him.”

Brenda’s Barker’s daughter Kerry Whitley was also just 17 when her mother was murdered. After Brenda Barker’s death, Whitley raised her brothers, who were ages 9 and 15 in 1994.

She and her siblings declined an interview request.

In 1995, Whitley told a probation and parole investigator that she believed Joe Barker was the “mastermind” behind her mother’s murder. She also said that she and her siblings thought Barker should spend the rest of her life in prison, according to court records.

“I’ve become a ‘parent’ of my two brothers,” Whitley said in the report. “My youngest brother has problems sometimes dealing with the fact that his mom is gone and I stay up with him if he’s crying on just wants to talk about it.”

In prison, Barker took a faith and character class in prison where the instructor encouraged her to write a letter to Brenda Barker’s children, but she decided against it. 

“I think the best thing I can do is stay away,” she said.

The last time Barker saw her little brother, it was in an Okmulgee County courtroom. He told her that he hated her.

“If it would be important, I would say that I’m sorry but I don’t know that that’s enough,” she said. “They’ve gone 25 years without their mother. You can’t fix that.”

https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/still-waiting-convicted-of-murder-as-a-teenager-dana-barker-now-hopes-for-freedom/

Dana Barker FAQ

Dana Barker 2021

Dana Barker is currently incarcerated at the Mabel Bassett Correctional Center

Dana Barker Release Date

Dana Barker is serving a life without parole sentence

William Lewis Reece Jury Recommends Death

William Lewis Reece

A jury in Oklahoma has recommended that serial killer William Lewis Reece be sentenced to death. William Lewis Reece who was convicted of abducting a woman from a car wash and later murdering her more than twenty years ago. William Lewis Reece was convicted last week of the 1997 kidnapping and killing of 19-year-old Tiffany Johnston. Just because the jury recommended death there is still a chance that the Judge will sentence him to life in prison without parole, formal sentencing is not til August.

William Lewis Reece Videos

William Lewis Reece More News

A jury in Oklahoma has recommended a death sentence for an alleged serial killer who was convicted of kidnapping a woman from a car wash and killing her more than 20 years ago.

The jury on Wednesday recommended the death penalty for William Lewis Reece, who was convicted last week of first-degree murder for the 1997 kidnapping and killing of 19-year-old Tiffany Johnston. Formal sentencing is set for Aug. 19.

Reece did not testify at his trial, but the jury heard recordings of his confessions to police in which he admitted killing Johnston and three other people in Texas, The Oklahoman reported.

Johnston, 20-year-old Kelli Cox, 17-year-old Jessica Cain and 12-year-old Laura Smither all disappeared over a four-month period in 1997, after Reece had been released from an Oklahoma prison for previous rape and kidnapping convictions.

Smither’s body was found shortly after her disappearance, but the remains of Cain and Cox weren’t found until 2016, when Reece began cooperating with prosecutors.

“We’re all so happy that he got the death penalty,” said Johnston’s mother, Kathy Dobry.

“Even though it helped families in Texas … it was for Tiffany,” she said of the verdict. “After 24 years, and 10 months, this is Tiffany’s time.”

Reece’s defense attorney, Jacob Benedict, did not dispute that Reece killed Johnston, but said his client only confessed because a Texas Ranger had promised that prosecutors wouldn’t seek the death penalty.

“A promise he couldn’t keep, but still a promise,” Benedict said.

Gay Smither, the mother of 12-year-old Laura Smither, traveled to Oklahoma for the trial, Houston TV station KPRC reported. Reece still faces charges for her daughter’s death in Texas.

“If we don’t have our day in court in Galveston, we can live with it because he’s at least held accountable here,” she said. “The most important thing is we know now for sure there is absolutely no way this man will ever get out.”

https://ktla.com/news/nationworld/oklahoma-jury-recommends-death-for-alleged-serial-killer-convicted-in-teens-1997-kidnapping-killing/

William Reece Sentenced To Death

Admitted serial killer William Lewis Reece had one last opportunity to apologize directly to the family of the newlywed he abducted from a Bethany car wash and strangled to death in 1997.

He stayed silent.

“No,” he said loudly behind a mask when the judge asked him if he wanted to say something.

“There’s an old saying in the law, ‘Justice delayed is justice denied,'” Oklahoma County District Judge Susan Stallings then told him. “Justice will not be delayed any longer in this case. I sentence you to death.”

A jury in June decided Reece, 62, should be executed for the murder of Tiffany Johnston. He showed no emotion as the judge sentenced him Thursday morning.

He will appeal, his defense attorney announced.

He never testified at his trial but jurors heard hours of his confessions to the killing in Oklahoma and three in Texas in 1997. The victims were all females, the youngest 12.

“He’s not sorry,” Johnston’s mother, Kathy Dobry, of Anadarko, said after the 15-minute formal sentencing. “He’s just a serial killer. He doesn’t care about anyone but himself.”

She also said she will never forgive him.

“Never. I’m sorry,” Dobry said. “I believe in God and all that but I will never forgive him. And I’m glad people can. But not this momma.”

Reece began confessing in 2016 from a Texas prison after being linked to the Oklahoma cold case by his DNA. He eventually revealed where in Texas he buried two bodies with bulldozers.

He admitted to first killing Laura Smither, 12, in the Houston suburb of Friendswood. 

Smither disappeared on April 3, 1997, while jogging. Her body was found later that month in a retention pond.

He next killed Kelli Cox, a 20-year-old student at the University of North Texas in Denton. She disappeared on July 15, 1997, after going on a class field trip and locking herself out of her car.

Her remains were found at a rice field south of Houston in April 2016.

He confessed to raping and killing Johnston after throwing her inside his horse trailer at the Sunshine Car Wash in Bethany on July 26, 1997. 

The newlywed was 19.

He said he dumped her in tall grass off a dirt road. The mostly nude body was found the next day. 

He admitted to last killing Jessica Cain, 17, of Tiki Island, Texas.

She disappeared after leaving a Bennigan’s Restaurant in Clear Lake, Texas, on Aug. 17, 1997. Her vehicle was found abandoned along the interstate. Her remains were found on March 2016 at a dig site in Houston.

Prosecutors alleged at trial that Reece targeted his victims to satisfy his sexual urges. They alleged he lied in his confessions and never revealed his true motive and all the details of each death.

“And so in a terrifying fashion we are left wondering what really happened to Tiffany Johnston at the hands of William Reece,” Assistant District Attorney Ryan Stephenson told the judge Thursday.

“Evil is the best word that I can come up with,” the prosecutor said.

Johnston’s mother, husband and other relatives sat in the jury box for the sentencing Thursday. 

Also in the courtroom were Smither’s parents and Cox’s mother and daughter.

Reece was born in Oklahoma but lived in Texas at the time of the killings. He drove trucks, operated a bulldozer and shoed horses for a living when he wasn’t in prison.

He was charged Tuesday with a new felony: possession of contraband by an inmate.

He is accused of having a smuggled pink cellphone in jail in July.

“We have made great strides to keep contraband out of the jail,” the jail administrator, Greg Williams, said Wednesday. “However, like in all corrections facilities, inmates will continue to seek ways to get ahold of contraband. We need to stay vigilant and alert in our efforts.” 

https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/2021/08/19/oklahoma-killer-william-lewis-reece-sentenced-1997-death-tiffany-johnston/8194761002/

William Reece 2022 Information

William Reece is being held in Texas however he is under a death sentence in Oklahoma

SID Number:    06076393

TDCJ Number:    00831080

Name:    REECE,WILLIAM LEWIS

Race:    W

Gender:    M

Age:    62

Maximum Sentence Date:    2057-10-16       

Current Facility:    COUNTY BENCH WARRANT

Projected Release Date:    2057-10-16

Parole Eligibility Date:    2027-10-16

Inmate Visitation Eligible:   

Zy’Quan Kelley Teen Killer Murders 2 Year Old Girl

Zy’Quan Kelley

Zy’Quan Kelley was seventeen years old when he murdered a two year old girl. According to court documents the teen killer and his brother were babysitting the two year old girl and her brother when Zy’Quan Kelley struck the child several times causing her death. Zy’Quan Kelley would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to thirty years in prison

Zy’Quan Kelley 2023 Information

Zy’Quan Kelley

Gender: Male

Race: Black

Height: 5 ft 7 in Weight: 209 lbs

Hair Color: Black Eye Color: Hazel



OK DOC#: 862801

Birth Date: 6/6/2001


Current Facility: NORTH FORK CORRECTIONAL CENTER, SAYRE

Reception Date: 10/28/2020

Zy’Quan Kelley More News

 Lawton teenager charged in the death of a 2-year-old girl has been sentenced.

Zy’Quan Kelley pleaded guilty to second degree murder and was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Authorities say Kelley was watching the girl with his brother in October 2018.

He was heard yelling at her before his brother said he heard four loud smacks. An autopsy report showed the girl died of blunt force injuries.

https://www.kswo.com/2020/08/31/lawton-teen-sentenced-infant-death/

Zy’Quan Kelley More News

The 21-year-old brother of a teen convicted of second-degree murder for the 2018 death of a toddler left in his care pleaded guilty to enabling the fatal abuse and was sentenced to serve just under two years in prison.

After pleading guilty to enabling child abuse by injury, Marquavis Katez Kelley, 21, of Lawton, was sentenced by Chief District Judge Emmit Tayloe to 10 years with the Department of Corrections with 667 days to serve and eight years and 63 days suspended, as well as two years of DOC supervision and court costs along with a $1,000 fine, records indicate.

Kelley’s plea follows the Aug. 29 judgment and sentence of his brother, Zy’Quan K. Kelley, 19, of Lawton, after pleading guilty to second-degree murder. He was sentenced to serve 30 years in Department of Corrections custody with a $1,000 fine and court costs, records indicate. He will be allowed to apply for sentencing modification and received credit for time served.

Zy’Quan Kelley was charged in December 2018 with first-degree murder as a youthful offender.

Marquavis Kelley also was present at the apartment at the time of the child’s death and was arrested for enabling child abuse. He offered testimony in the case.

The Kelley brothers had been watching the 2-year-old over night. Marquavis Kelley told investigators that he had heard the toddler crying in a bedroom and the voice of Zy’Quan cursing and yelling at the girl to stop crying. Marquavis Kelley said he then heard what sounded like four loud smacks and then noticed the child was not crying anymore, nor was she making any noise. He entered the room and found the toddler to be unresponsive.

The Kelley brothers went into the room to check on the 2-year-old “twice over the next several hours,” court records show. The child remained motionless the whole time.

The next morning the Kelley’s mother came home from work, along with the girl’s mother, Catherine Francis, who was also arrested and charged with enabling child abuse. The boys’ mother went to sleep at 9:45 a.m., at which point the child was still unresponsive and cold.

Authorities were finally called at 10:03 a.m., more than six hours after the initial incident. During that time frame, no medical attention was sought, according to court documents.

According to the Oklahoma Medical Examiner’s report, the cause of death was “blunt force trauma to the head.” The child also suffered numerous injuries across her body.

Francis, who also remains in jail on $100,000 bond, waived her right to a jury trial on Jan. 9. She announced her intention to change a not guilty plea to guilty, records indicate. Due to COVID-19’s closure of the courthouse, her judgment and sentencing were postponed until 1:45 p.m. Oct. 22.

https://parentsecurityonline.com/lawton-man-to-serve-just-under-two-years-for-enabling-toddlers-death-news-childabuse-children-kids/

Zy’Quan Kelley FAQ

Zy’Quan Kelley 2021

Zy’Quan Kelley is currently incarcerated at the North Fork Correctional Center

Zy’Quan Kelley Release Date

Zy’Quan Kelley is eligible for release in 2038