logo
Oklahoma executes a man who was transferred from federal custody by Trump officials

Oklahoma executes a man who was transferred from federal custody by Trump officials

CTV News12-06-2025
This March 4, 2025, photo provided by the Oklahoma Department of Corrections shows John Fitzgerald Hanson. (Oklahoma Department of Corrections via AP,File)
McALESTER, Okla. — Oklahoma executed a man Thursday whose transfer to state custody was expedited by the Trump administration.
John Fitzgerald Hanson, 61, received a three-drug lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester and was pronounced dead at 10:11 a.m., prison officials said. Hanson was sentenced to die after he was convicted of carjacking, kidnapping and killing a Tulsa woman in 1999.
'Peace to everyone,' Hanson said while strapped to a gurney inside the prison's death chamber.
The execution began at 10:01 a.m. After the lethal drugs began to flow, a doctor entered the death chamber at 10:06 a.m. and declared him unconscious.
Hanson, whose name in some federal court records is George John Hanson, had been serving a life sentence in federal prison in Louisiana for several unrelated federal convictions. Federal officials transferred him to Oklahoma custody in March to follow through on President Donald Trump's sweeping executive order to more actively support the death penalty.
Hanson's attorneys argued in a last-minute appeal that he did not receive a fair clemency hearing last month, claiming that one of the board members who denied him clemency was biased because he worked for the Tulsa County District Attorney's Office when Hanson was prosecuted. A district court judge this week issued a temporary stay halting the execution, but that was later vacated.
Prosecutors alleged Hanson and accomplice, Victor Miller, kidnapped Mary Bowles from a Tulsa shopping mall. Prosecutors alleged the pair drove Bowles to a gravel pit near Owasso, where Miller shot and killed property owner Jerald Thurman. The two then drove Bowles a short distance away, where Hanson shot and killed Bowles, according to prosecutors. Miller received a no-parole life prison sentence for his role in the crimes.
Thurman's son, Jacob Thurman, witnessed Thursday's execution and said it was the culmination of 'the longest nightmare of our lives.'
'All families lose in this situation,' he said. 'No one's a winner.'
Bowles' niece, Sara Mooney, expressed frustration at the litigation over Hanson's death sentence that dragged on for decades, calling it an 'expensive and ridiculous exercise.'
'Capital punishment is not an effective form of justice when it takes 26 years,' she said.
During last month's clemency hearing, Hanson expressed remorse for his involvement in the crimes and apologized to the victims' families.
'I'm not an evil person,' Hanson said via a video link from the prison. 'I was caught in a situation I couldn't control. I can't change the past, but I would if I could.'
Hanson's attorneys acknowledged he participated in the kidnapping and carjacking, but said there was no definitive evidence that he shot and killed Bowles. They painted Hanson as a troubled youth with autism and who was controlled and manipulated by the domineering Miller.
Both Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond and his predecessor, John O'Connor, had sought Hanson's transfer during President Joe Biden's administration, but the U.S. Bureau of Prisons denied it, saying the transfer was not in the public interest.
Sean Murphy, The Associated Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

American sprinter Kerley provisionally suspended for whereabouts failures
American sprinter Kerley provisionally suspended for whereabouts failures

CBC

time24 minutes ago

  • CBC

American sprinter Kerley provisionally suspended for whereabouts failures

Olympic 100-metre silver and bronze medallist Fred Kerley has been provisionally suspended by the Athletics Integrity Unit for whereabouts failures, the organization said on Tuesday. American Kerley, the 100m world champion in 2022, plans to contest the allegation that he violated anti-doping rules. "He strongly believes that one or more of his alleged missed tests should be set aside either because he was not negligent or because the Doping Control Officer did not do what was reasonable under the circumstances to locate him at his designated location," an attorney for Kerley said in a statement posted on his X account. He withdrew from the U.S. track and field trials late last month, writing on social media that he was: "Taking some time out to get back on track." "The 100m should be a straight sprint. 2025 has presented many hurdles," he wrote on X. "Thanks to all my supporters."

Judge tosses convictions in 2002 killing of NBA star Chris Paul's grandfather
Judge tosses convictions in 2002 killing of NBA star Chris Paul's grandfather

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

Judge tosses convictions in 2002 killing of NBA star Chris Paul's grandfather

A North Carolina trial judge has thrown out the convictions of four men in the 2002 death of basketball star Chris Paul's grandfather. Now, state attorneys are considering their next moves, including an appeal. Article content Superior Court Judge Robert Broadie vacated and dismissed their convictions late last week following a January hearing in Forsyth County. Article content Article content Nathaniel Arnold Cauthen, Rayshawn Denard Banner, Christopher Levon Bryant and Jermal Matthew Tolliver had been found guilty in trials in 2004 or 2005 for the killing of Nathaniel Jones. The four were all 14 or 15 years old when they and another teen were arrested. Article content Jones, 61, died from a heart attack outside his Winston-Salem home after being tied up, beaten and robbed. Article content A three-judge panel previously had denied the defendants' innocence claims after testimony in a 2022 hearing. Article content But Broadie's order, filed Friday, cited recanted testimony from a key witness, poor legal representation and questionable actions by police, the Winston-Salem Journal reported. DNA profiles also 'further serve to corroborate Defendants' assertions that their confessions were false' and that they 'were not present at the scene of the crime,' the judge wrote. Article content Paul, Jones' grandson, was a standout high school basketball player at the time of the assault and had committed to play at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem. Paul, now 40, is a 12-time NBA All-Star who now plays for the Los Angeles Clippers. Article content Attorney General Jeff Jackson's office, whose lawyers defend criminal cases on appeal, asked the state Court of Appeals on Monday to halt enforcement of Broadie's order 'while we review it and consider next steps,' spokesperson Nazneen Ahmed said. Article content Cauthen and his brother, Banner, were convicted of first-degree murder and are serving life sentences. Bryant, Tolliver and Dorrell Brayboy were convicted of second-degree murder and were released after serving prison time. Brayboy was fatally stabbed outside a Winston-Salem supermarket in 2019. Article content Monday's petition by a state attorney said that, without action, Cauthen and Banner 'will be released back into the community without this Court having an opportunity to hear and determine the State's issues on appeal.' Article content Forsyth County District Attorney Jim O'Neill criticized Broadie's ruling, in particular his dismissals of the cases 'with prejudice,' which could make them harder to appeal. Article content 'I have never seen that happen before in a court of law,' O'Neill said in a statement to the newspaper. 'Most judges welcome scrutiny and appellate review of their decisions.' Article content Christine Mumma, the lawyer for Banner and Cauthen, pushed back on criticism of the judge's ruling. Article content 'If the General Assembly didn't want judges to have the authority to dismiss with prejudice, they wouldn't have given judges that authority,' Mumma wrote in an email. 'They also wouldn't have passed statutes recognizing if charges are dismissed with prejudice, there's no right of appeal.' Mumma is the executive director of the North Carolina Center on Actual Innocence, a nonprofit that helps investigate and litigate claims of innocence. Article content

Desperate parents pleaded with officers to act during Uvalde school shooting, video shows
Desperate parents pleaded with officers to act during Uvalde school shooting, video shows

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Desperate parents pleaded with officers to act during Uvalde school shooting, video shows

In this image from police body cam video provided by the Uvalde County Sheriff's Department, law enforcement agents ready their weapons during the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, on May 24, 2022. (Uvalde County Sheriff's Department via AP) AUSTIN, Texas — Desperate parents begged law enforcement officers to storm an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, in the frantic minutes after a gunman opened fire in one of the deadliest classroom attacks in U.S. history, police body camera video released Tuesday shows. 'Whose class is he in?' one parent can be heard asking. Another comes up and yells, 'Come on man, my daughter is in there!' The heartbreaking videos show the agonizingly slow law enforcement response along with confusion and delays. Authorities failed to confront 18-year-old gunman Salvador Ramos for more than an hour after the attack at Robb Elementary School began on May 24, 2022. Nineteen students and two teachers were killed. The records released Tuesday are the final batch of documents that local authorities withheld during a yearslong legal battle over public access. Family members of the victims were among those pushing for the the records to be released. Several bodycam videos show officers from multiple departments inside the school hallway and standing outside, some suggesting throwing gas in the window or searching for a key to the locked classroom. But it's unclear who is in charge. Within minutes, parents making their way to a fence near the school yell at officers to do something. One parent angrily says, 'Either you go in or I'm going in bro,' adding a few seconds later, 'My kids are in there, bro. ... Please!' In one video, an officer involved in the initial response can be heard saying, 'We can't see him at all' before adding, 'We were at the front and he started shooting.' The officer wearing the bodycam asks: 'He's in a classroom right?' Another officer responds: 'With kids.' Documents released Monday by the school district offer the most detailed look yet at the gunman whose downward spiral began in middle school with a series of suspensions and warnings for harassment and bullying. He dropped out of school just months before the shooting. Sheriff's deputies went to the gunman's home on two consecutive nights just three months before the attack because he was arguing with his mother over Wi-Fi and broken video game equipment after she turned off the internet, county's records released Tuesday reveal. Adriana Reyes said her son never hit her but told deputies she was scared of him and needed help, a report said. Ramos' grandmother picked him up one night, and deputies drove him there the next night. Media organizations, including The Associated Press, sued the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District and Uvalde County in 2022 for the release of their records. A Texas appeals court in July upheld a lower court's ruling that the records must be made public. Last year, city officials in Uvalde released body camera footage and recordings of 911 calls. Nearly 400 officers waited more than 70 minutes before confronting the gunman in a classroom filled with dead and wounded children and teachers. Federal and state investigations later looked into law enforcement training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned whether officers prioritized their own lives over those of children and teachers. At one point during the massacre, officers can be seen tucked in recesses in the hallway as one outside the building says: 'They are taking him out. Stand by.' But the minutes tick past. 'We are waiting,' an officer outside says. Minutes later, a voice can be heard saying over a loudspeaker: 'Please put your firearm down. We don't want anyone else hurt.' Uvalde schools police chief Pete Arredondo and Adrian Gonzales, another former school district officer, are the only two officers who face criminal charges for their actions that day. They both have pleaded not guilty to child endangerment and abandonment and are scheduled for trial later this year. ___ Jim Vertuno And John Seewer, The Associated Press Seewer reported from Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press reporters Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Missouri; Ben Finley in Norfolk, Virginia; Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Arkansas; Claudia Lauer in Philadelphia; and Ed White in Detroit contributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store