Oklahoma sets execution dates for 25 death row inmates through end of 2024. - Infamous Something Awful child murderer Kevin Ray Underwood gets something to think about.

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.

Oklahoma will resume executions on Aug. 25 and carry out lethal injections in stages through the end of 2024 under a schedule made public Friday morning.

The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals set 25 execution dates for convicted murderers who have exhausted appeals of their convictions and sentences.

First up in August is James Coddington who beat a friend to death with a claw hammer in 1997. His attorney said in a statement Friday he "embodies the principle of redemption."

"Prison staff have given him accolades for his problem-free record and commitment to serving the prison community and engaging in academic study over his 15 years on death row. James is the most deeply and sincerely remorseful client I have ever represented,” attorney Emma Rolls said.

Second up in September is Richard Glossip, who was within an hour of being executed in 2015 when a doctor realized the wrong drug had been delivered.

His innocence claim has drawn widespread support, notably from actress Susan Sarandon who won an Academy Award in 1996 for her portrayal of death penalty opponent Sister Helen Prejean in "Dead Man Walking."

He also has found support at the state Legislature. State Rep. Kevin McDugle, R-Broken Arrow, said June 15 that a new "independent investigation confirmed, in my mind, that we do have an innocent man on death row.”

Oklahoma Attorney General John O'Connor asked for the dates after 28 inmates lost their federal lawsuit challenging the lethal injection protocol. Two of those inmates have not exhausted their appeals and a third may be too mentally impaired to be executed.

Another 15 also still have appeals pending.

Executions are carried out at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester on Thursdays. Two inmates were put to death there last year and two more this year.

After the first execution phase was set Friday, the attorney general said the family members of murder victims have waited decades for justice.

"They are courageous and inspiring in their continued expressions of love for the ones they lost," O'Connor said. "My office stands beside them as they take this next step in the journey that the murderers forced upon them.

"Oklahomans overwhelmingly voted in 2016 to preserve the death penalty as a consequence for the most heinous murders. I’m certain that justice and safety for all of us drove that vote."

Inmates still can seek clemency before the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board. The governor gets the final say, but only if the board recommends a sentence reduction. Gov. Kevin Stitt in November commuted the death sentence of Julius Jones about four hours before his execution was to begin.

Inmates also still could get execution stays while they appeal their lawsuit loss. An Oklahoma City federal judge dismissed the lawsuit June 6 after ruling the state's lethal injection protocol does not violate the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

Glossip Friday morning raised a new challenge to his conviction based on the investigative report's findings. Others could be spared if they are found to be no longer mentally competent.

Corrections officials had asked that the executions be at least four weeks apart. The attorney general had asked the appeals court to set as many as possible that way.

The parole board asked for a schedule that allowed it to have only one clemency hearing a month, during its regular meeting.

The judges on the Court of Criminal Appeals explained in an order they were dividing the execution dates into phases so they can respond to unforeseen contingencies in the future.

"These execution dates are (obviously) subject to change due to unforeseen delays or other circumstances that may arise," they wrote. "This Court will adjust the execution schedule as needed to ensure that executions progress in a timely and orderly manner.

"An open month will separate each phase ... to accommodate rescheduling if needed."

Most of the 25 inmates "are ... vulnerable individuals who suffer from severe mental illness and experienced horrific trauma and deprivation throughout their childhoods," their attorneys said.

"Many also are brain-damaged, several are floridly psychotic, and at least one is a person with intellectual disability. Their cases reveal other deep flaws in Oklahoma’s capital punishment system, including racial bias, prosecutorial misconduct, and arbitrariness."

Scheduled for execution are:
  • James Coddington on Aug. 25 for murdering a friend, Albert Troy Hale, 73, in Choctaw during a cocaine binge and robbery spree in 1997. He is 50.
  • Richard Glossip on Sept. 22 for the 1997 beating death of his boss, Oklahoma City motel owner Barry Van Treese. He is 59. A motel maintenance man confessed, saying Glossip offered to pay him $10,000 to do it to keep from being fired.
  • Benjamin Cole on Oct. 20 for killing his infant daughter in 2002 in Claremore because she wouldn't stop crying. He is 57.
  • Richard Fairchild on Nov. 17 for fatally beating his girlfriend's 3-year-old son in Del City in 1993. He is 62.
  • John Hanson on Dec. 15 for fatally shooting a woman in 1999 after kidnapping her from a Tulsa mall during a carjacking. He is 58.
  • Scott Eizember on Jan. 12, 2023, for bludgeoning an elderly man to death in 2003 after breaking into the victim's home in Depew to spy on an ex-girlfriend. He is 61.
  • Jemaine Cannon on March 9, 2023, for fatally stabbing his girlfriend at her Tulsa apartment in 1995 after escaping from a state Corrections Department work center. He is 50.
  • Anthony Castillo Sanchez on April 6, 2023, for murdering University of Oklahoma ballerina Juli Busken in Norman in 1996 after raping her. He is 43.
  • Phillip Hancock on May 4, 2023 for fatally shooting two men in Oklahoma City in 2001. He is 58.
  • James Ryder on June 1, 2023, for bludgeoning a 70-year-old woman to death in 1999 at her Pittsburg County home over a property dispute. He is 60.
  • Michael Dewayne Smith on July 6, 2023, for two fatal shootings in Oklahoma City in 2002. He is 40.
  • Wade Lay on Aug. 3, 2023, for fatally shooting a Tulsa bank guard during an attempted robbery in 2004. He is 61. His execution will be called off if a jury in May finds him mentally incompetent.
  • Richard Rojem on Oct. 5, 2023, for murdering a 7-year-old girl in 1984 after kidnapping her from an Elk City apartment and raping her. He is 64.
  • Emmanuel Littlejohn on Nov. 2, 2023, for fatally shooting an Oklahoma City convenience store owner during a robbery in 1992. He is 50.
  • Kevin Underwood on Dec. 7, 2023, for killing a 10-year-old Purcell girl in 2006 because of his cannibalistic fantasies. He is 42.
  • Wendell Grissom on Jan. 11, 2024, for a 2005 fatal shooting at a rural Blaine County home during a burglary. He is 53.
  • Tremane Wood on Feb. 8, 2024, for fatally stabbing a migrant farm worker from Montana during a robbery at an Oklahoma City motel on Jan. 1, 2002. He is 42.
  • Kendrick Simpson on March 7, 2024, for killing two men in a drive-by shooting in 2006 in Oklahoma City after a confrontation at a nightclub. He is 41.
  • Raymond Johnson on May 2, 2024, for killing his girlfriend and their infant daughter in 2007 in Tulsa. He is 48.
  • Carlos Cuesta-Rodriguez on June 6, 2024, for fatally shooting his wife in 2003 in Oklahoma City. He is 66.
  • James Pavatt on July 11, 2024, for the 2001 fatal shooting of his lover's estranged husband in Oklahoma City. He is 68. The girlfriend, Brenda Andrew, also was sentenced to death for her role in the murder.
  • Clarance Goode Jr. on Aug. 8, 2024, for a triple murder in Owasso in 2005. One victim was a 10-year-old girl. He is 46.
  • Ronson Kyle Bush on Sept. 5, 2024, for fatally shooting a friend in 2008 in Grady County. He is 45.
  • Alfred Brian Mitchell on Oct. 3, 2024, for bludgeoning to death a counselor at an Oklahoma City recreation center in 1991. He is 49.
  • Marlon Harmon on Dec. 5, 2024, for killing an Oklahoma City convenience store owner in 2004 during a robbery. He is 41.
 
It shouldn't take the justice system nearly 2 decades to execute this child cannibal, for fuck sakes.
Don't even get me started on the fag NGO's that bitch and complain about how the execution methods used are "cruel and inhumane". Savages who commit these crimes deserve the most painfull death imaginable, and this dude is rotting in hell.
 
It shouldn't take the justice system nearly 2 decades to execute this child cannibal, for fuck sakes.
Don't even get me started on the fag NGO's that bitch and complain about how the execution methods used are "cruel and inhumane". Savages who commit these crimes deserve the most painfull death imaginable, and this dude is rotting in hell.
People still cry about that shit? Do they not think the victims didn't experience cruel and unusual punishment? I'm living in fucking clown world.
 
Texas only stopped doing it because one asshole ordered a whole fleet of food and then proceeded to eat none of it.
Before his execution, Brewer ordered a large and extensive last meal that prompted the end of last meal requests in Texas. The meal included two chicken fried steaks with gravy and sliced onions; a triple-patty bacon cheeseburger; a cheese omelet with ground beef, tomatoes, onions, bell peppers and jalapeños; a bowl of fried okra with ketchup; one pound of barbecued meat with half a loaf of white bread; three fully loaded fajitas; a meat-lover's pizza; one pint of Blue Bell vanilla ice cream; a slab of peanut-butter fudge with crushed peanuts on top; and three root beers. When the meal was presented, he told officials that he was not hungry and as a result he did not eat any of it. The meal was discarded, prompting State Senator John Whitmire to ask Texas prison officials to end the 87-year-old tradition of giving last meals to condemned inmates. The prison agency's executive director responded by stating that the practice had been terminated effective immediately.[46]
What a waste of food (:_(
 
What he did to that poor baby was beyond evil, may his name be forgotten.
I see where you're coming from, but I don't want his name forgotten, or other like him for one simple reason: When people claim that true evil doesn't exist in this world because all things are relative, I want to be able to point to this human piece of excrement and other like him as proof that genuine evil exists and it's not a matter of perspective.
 
"Happy Birthday, man! Guess what?"

But this always leaves me baffled:
Underwood’s attorneys had argued that he deserved to be spared the death penalty because of his long history of abuse and serious mental health issues that included autism, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bipolar and panic disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, schizotypal personality disorder and various deviant sexual paraphilias.
The fact that he killed a girl and tried to eat her alone is in itself already proof of mental health issues. Many psychological diagnoses are descriptive of behavior, without the (criminal) behavior, no diagnosis.
Why reduce the punishment then because of vague "mental health issues"? That would just meant that many crimes, that are in itself already grounds enough for a diagnosis, would practically become unprosecutable.

What's the logic supposed to be here? Where do you find a mentally healthy pedophile cannibal?

Texas only stopped doing it because one asshole ordered a whole fleet of food and then proceeded to eat none of it.
Did you ever have a hard time eating something because you were anxious? I wouldn't even say the guy did it on purpose, I think an imminent execution can do stuff to you. What's asshole-ish is removing something that has been a long standing tradition, imo important for cultural and spiritual reasons, because one guy didn't finish his meal and now some petty old asshole punishes someone else for it.
 
You know, that’s a really good point. Fuck him either way though.
I see where you're coming from, but I don't want his name forgotten, or other like him for one simple reason: When people claim that true evil doesn't exist in this world because all things are relative, I want to be able to point to this human piece of excrement and other like him as proof that genuine evil exists and it's not a matter of perspective.
 
What a waste of food (:_(
I really wonder why they: went along with this in the first place and why they did not allow COs to take the rest home? By the way, the guy who put an end to this tradition, John Whitmire, is not only the current major of Houston. He is also a massive dick in general, who went against having AC in prisons. It's not him having to pay for the lawsuits brought by the families of people who had been cooked alive in Texas" prisons. We are not talking about the discomfort you feel when you have to sleep in you underware in a hot room. We are talking about temperatures that can cause you cardiovascular system to shut down.

As for the guy who was revenge-murdered by the state on his birthsday-His whole crime screams "I am a lunatic, put me in an asylum". Oklahoma is a dark place when it comes to mental health (in general, as a country, our health care system is pretty much fucked up, expensive and ineffective. Unless you want a rotdog or rotpocket installed,of course). May he and his victim, and the victim's family find peace. And may every state ditch this moronic virtue-signalling asap.
 
Last edited:
"Happy Birthday, man! Guess what?"

But this always leaves me baffled:

The fact that he killed a girl and tried to eat her alone is in itself already proof of mental health issues. Many psychological diagnoses are descriptive of behavior, without the (criminal) behavior, no diagnosis.
Why reduce the punishment then because of vague "mental health issues"? That would just meant that many crimes, that are in itself already grounds enough for a diagnosis, would practically become unprosecutable.

What's the logic supposed to be here? Where do you find a mentally healthy pedophile cannibal?


Did you ever have a hard time eating something because you were anxious? I wouldn't even say the guy did it on purpose, I think an imminent execution can do stuff to you. What's asshole-ish is removing something that has been a long standing tradition, imo important for cultural and spiritual reasons, because one guy didn't finish his meal and now some petty old asshole punishes someone else for it.
If you're innocent and always contesting you're innocent until you get to the point of having to order a last meal, THEN I'd see your point. But ordering an excessive amount of food and barely eating it, I can say fuck off and blame that jag for ruining it for everyone else, because an excessive amount of food for a last meal seems malicious.

I feel like I wouldn't be able to eat a bite because I know I was innocent. My take
 
His confession is one of the most disgusting things I have ever read. The execution was far too lenient. The poor girl just wanted to see his pet rat.
Have you ever read De Sade? (Granted, he shitwrote a whole book just to piss of the censors, pure fantasy, he was actually a...humanitarian).

I agree-way too lenient. He still had an average of 24 years of life in him and believe me, it would have been HELL in GP. Now he doesn't have to suffer anymore. Heck, he'll even be remembered as s.o who was executed. Probably more than his victim.
 
The fact that he killed a girl and tried to eat her alone is in itself already proof of mental health issues. Many psychological diagnoses are descriptive of behavior, without the (criminal) behavior, no diagnosis.
Why reduce the punishment then because of vague "mental health issues"? That would just meant that many crimes, that are in itself already grounds enough for a diagnosis, would practically become unprosecutable.

What's the logic supposed to be here? Where do you find a mentally healthy pedophile cannibal?

Albert Fish-likes should get a fast pass to execution. Literally nothing of value is being lost here.

Don't a lot of criminals try to pull the "muh mentals" card? You have to be completely incompetent for it to cut you any slack.
 
Have you ever read De Sade?
I don't think The 120 Days of Sodom has anything on the sheer, gut-wrenching horror of his confession. I don't want to post excerpts or look it up again, but I still remember at one point she was screaming that she was sorry, like it was her fault.

We should bring back scaphism for monsters like Kevin.
 
We should bring back scaphism for monsters like Kevin.

I don't advocate for torture.

Trying to work out some debt that can be paid in pain and torture is a fast way to blacken your soul with sadism, and the height of arrogance to think yourself so knowing. Ultimate and perfect judgement is awaiting them on the other side, after all. Also, nothing you can do to their body in this fallen world will ever measure to the Justice waiting for them, and torture just stains you with sin.

If someone needs to be permanently removed from society, you have a Christian duty to do it as cleanly and quickly as you are able. Subjecting a person to hellish torture and rape is barbaric and beneath the dignity of any civil man or healthy society. A length of rope or a bullet will accomplish all that needs doing, with honor and civility.
 
Last edited:
Back