Oklahoma judge grants bond to Richard Glossip after nearly three decades on death row

By Ethan Cole on
 May 16, 2026

An Oklahoma judge on Thursday ordered Richard Glossip released on $500,000 bond while he awaits retrial for a 1997 killing, ending what may be one of the longest stretches of wrongful incarceration in modern American death-penalty history, if his defense team's claims hold up before a jury.

Judge Natalie Mai set the bond and required Glossip to remain in Oklahoma and wear an electronic monitoring device. The ruling came months after the U.S. Supreme Court threw out Glossip's murder conviction, finding that state prosecutors had allowed their key witness to deliver testimony they knew was false.

Glossip has spent roughly 29 years behind bars. He survived nine execution dates. He ate what he was told would be his last meal, three separate times. Now, for the first time since the late 1990s, he is set to walk out of custody, though the state of Oklahoma says it fully intends to convict him again.

A case built on a confessed killer's word

The facts of the underlying crime are not in dispute: in 1997, maintenance worker Justin Sneed beat motel owner Barry Van Treese to death. Prosecutors said Glossip, who worked as Van Treese's employee, ordered the killing in a murder-for-hire scheme. Sneed agreed to plead guilty and testify against Glossip. In exchange, Sneed received a life sentence rather than death.

A jury found Glossip guilty in 1998 and sentenced him to die. That conviction was later overturned on appeal due to ineffective counsel. He was retried in 2004, convicted again, and sentenced to death a second time.

For more than two decades, Glossip insisted the state denied him due process, that prosecutors withheld evidence and knowingly let the jury hear false testimony from Sneed, the only person who directly tied Glossip to the murder plot.

Last year, the Supreme Court agreed. Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote the majority opinion ordering a new trial and halting Glossip's execution. Justice Amy Coney Barrett concurred in part and dissented in part. Justice Clarence Thomas wrote a dissent, joined by Justice Samuel Alito. Justice Neil Gorsuch did not participate.

AP News reported that the high court found prosecutors violated Glossip's right to a fair trial by allowing Sneed to give testimony they knew was false, a finding that goes to the heart of prosecutorial integrity in capital cases.

The attorney general's unusual position

What makes this case especially striking is the posture of Oklahoma's own top law enforcement officer. Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican, supported Glossip's bid to overturn the conviction. He concluded Glossip's trial was "unfair and unreliable," a remarkable concession from the state's chief prosecutor.

Yet Drummond has also maintained that he does not believe Glossip is innocent. His office announced that Oklahoma intends to retry Glossip for murder, but will not seek the death penalty this time. The reason: Sneed, the confessed killer, is already serving life without parole. Seeking death for the man prosecutors say ordered the crime while the man who carried it out lives would be difficult to justify.

Shauna Peters, a spokesperson for Drummond's office, made the state's position clear on Thursday, as The Hill reported:

"While we disagree with the court's decision, we remain focused on retrying this case and securing a third conviction of Richard Glossip for the murder of Barry Van Treese."

Peters added a pointed reminder about who will ultimately decide Glossip's fate:

"Ultimately, the question of the defendant's guilt or innocence will once again be decided by a jury of Oklahoma citizens, not a judge."

That line carries weight. It signals that the attorney general's office views Judge Mai's bond ruling as a procedural setback, not a verdict on the merits. The state still believes it can prove its case, even after the Supreme Court found serious prosecutorial misconduct in the prior proceedings.

Judge Mai's reasoning

In her order, Judge Mai said she examined the "ample" record in the case and concluded she could not deny bail. Her language was measured but firm. She expressed confidence that both sides would do their jobs going forward:

"The Court fully expects that the State will rigorously prosecute its case going forward and the defense will provide robust and effective representation for Glossip."

She also offered a note that read less like a legal ruling and more like a plea for resolution:

"The Court hopes that a new trial, free of error, will provide all interested parties, and the citizens of Oklahoma, the closure they deserve."

That phrase, "free of error", is a quiet indictment of what came before. The Supreme Court found that the state's prosecution was marred by false testimony that prosecutors failed to correct. A judge now presiding over the retrial is, in effect, acknowledging the damage done by that failure and signaling that the next proceeding must be conducted cleanly.

Defense team sees vindication

Glossip's attorney, Don Knight, framed the bond ruling as a repudiation of the state's case. Fox News reported Knight's statement that the judge "rejected the State's claim that there is a strong case for guilt."

Knight's full statement captured the weight of what his client has endured:

"For the first time in 29 years of being incarcerated for a crime he did not commit, during which he faced nine execution dates and ate three last meals, Mr. Glossip now has the chance to taste freedom while his defense team continues to pursue justice on his behalf against a system that the United States Supreme Court has found to be guilty of serious misconduct by state prosecutors."

Knight also said Glossip "is deeply grateful to the many thousands of people who have expressed support for him over the years and now looks forward to the day when he is exonerated and truly free from this decades-long nightmare."

The New York Post reported that Glossip's wife, Lea, also responded to the ruling. "Both Richard and I are grateful for the court's decision," she said.

What the case exposes

Whatever one believes about Glossip's guilt or innocence, and reasonable people can disagree, the procedural history of this case is a cautionary tale about prosecutorial power and the consequences of its misuse.

A man was convicted and sentenced to die based largely on the testimony of a confessed killer who received a plea deal. That testimony, the Supreme Court found, included falsehoods that prosecutors knew about and failed to correct. The state's own attorney general later called the trial "unfair and unreliable." And yet it took nearly three decades, nine execution dates, and a Supreme Court intervention to get Glossip a new trial.

Conservatives who believe in law and order should be the first to demand that the law operate honestly. A conviction obtained through false testimony is not justice, it is a corruption of the system that undermines public trust in every legitimate prosecution. The death penalty, in particular, demands the highest standard of procedural integrity. When the state asks a jury to impose the ultimate punishment, it must do so with clean hands.

The case also raises hard questions about the reliability of testimony from cooperating witnesses who face their own severe penalties. Sneed confessed to the killing, received life instead of death, and became the prosecution's star witness. That arrangement creates obvious incentive problems, incentive problems that, in this case, apparently led to testimony the Supreme Court found was false.

Accountability in the criminal justice system should not be a partisan issue. High-profile capital cases across the country continue to test whether courts and prosecutors can maintain the standards the public expects.

What comes next

Glossip's release on bond does not end this story. The state of Oklahoma has made clear it will pursue a third trial. The attorney general's office wants another conviction. The defense wants full exoneration.

No retrial date has been set. The bond conditions, $500,000, electronic monitoring, confinement to Oklahoma, suggest the court takes the case seriously and does not consider Glossip a flight risk but wants him tethered to the jurisdiction.

The central question remains unanswered: Did Richard Glossip order the killing of Barry Van Treese? A jury will decide. But this time, the state will have to make its case without the false testimony that propped up the first two convictions, and without the threat of the death chamber hanging over the proceedings.

Twenty-nine years, nine execution dates, and three last meals. If the system worked the way it was supposed to, none of that should have been necessary to get a fair trial.

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