Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
405-521-5774
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For Immediate Release: September 6, 2007
Sen. Jonathan Nichols
Judicial Activism Bans God and Bible from Victim Impact
Statements
State Senator Calls Decision by Court of Criminal Appeals
‘Judicial Activism Run Amuck’
Outrage and disappointment were the reactions of one legislator
in response to the decision by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals
to overturn the death penalty in the Trooper Nikky Joe Green murder
trial.
State Sen. Jonathan
Nichols, R-Norman, blasted the Court’s decision to reverse
the imposition of the death penalty for Green’s killer, Ricky
Ray Malone, in part because Green’s widow referenced God and
the Bible.
“The Court of Criminal Appeals has broken loose like a liberal
cannon on the deck of Oklahoma’s system of justice,”
said Nichols, the co-chair of the Senate’s Appropriations
Subcommittee on Public Safety. “This latest opinion blows
a gaping hole in the heart of Oklahoma’s conservative, but
fair, courts of law and order.”
Citing specific statements by Green’s widow in which she referenced
God and the Bible, three of the five justices on the Court of Criminal
Appeals ruled that “invocation of a religious belief and obligation
in the context of a capital sentencing recommendation is totally
inappropriate.”
“I thought I was reading an opinion written in some bizarre
world where Ted Kennedy was running our courts,” Nichols said.
“Instead, I was reading an opinion that the majority of our
justices wrote while sitting on Oklahoma’s highest court for
criminal appeals.”
The Court concluded that, “while Malone might have had only
a slim chance of avoiding a death sentence in his original trial,
the religious and duty-based plea of the victim’s wife that
Malone be shown ‘no mercy’ squelched whatever slim chance
he had.”
“I can’t believe that the majority opinion actually
reversed a death penalty in part because the widow of a murdered
Oklahoma State Trooper spoke about God and the Bible,” Nichols
said, “Do these justices expect her to sit there void of any
emotion in some attempt not to offend the murderer of her husband
and one of Oklahoma’s finest Troopers?”
Two of the Justices disagreed with the majority of the Court’s
decision. In his dissenting opinion, Presiding Judge Gary Lumpkin
stated that he “found nothing inappropriate about references
in victim impact evidence to God and the Bible. It seems as though
courts have become overly phobic of any references to God or the
Bible.”
“The Court of Criminal Appeals effectively turned to the widow
of Trooper Green and punished her for invoking God’s name
and referencing the Bible,” Nichols said. “Now the Court
orders her to relive the nightmare of another sentencing stage,
but this time – no God, no Bible and no tears.”
Nichols believes that the Court’s ruling to ban religious
invocations in victim impact statements was unnecessary and over-reaching.
“The Court went out of its way to unnecessarily consider this
non-issue of whether to ban God and the Bible from victim impact
statements,” Nichols said. “This is another case of
judicial activism running amuck.”
Nichols also believes that the Court’s language proscribing
religious invocations will create a chilling effect where victims
will not be allowed to reference God, and he also fears “the
Court has created a new basis for over turning death penalties.”
“As I recall there was one other time a person related to
this case cried out and invoked God’s name,” Nichols
said. “It was Trooper Green, while he pled for his life and
for his children, just before this murderer shot him dead.”
For more information, contact:
Senator Nichol's Office: (405) 521-5535

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