THE only woman on death row in Oklahoma could snag a lighter sentence after her thong was paraded around in court by “sex-mad ...
15d
The Mirror US on MSNKiller wife's thongs paraded in court - and it could save her from death penaltySupreme Court justices have sent Brenda Andrew's death penalty conviction back to a lower court for reconsideration after concluding prosecutors tried to "dehumanise" her ...
The thong, prosecutors say, was recovered from her luggage. Andrew’s co-defendant, James Pavatt, confessed to Robert Andrew’s murder. He is also on death row. But despite the confession, police ...
The Associated Press on MSN16d
Supreme Court grants new hearing for death row inmate whose case included evidence of her sexual historyThe Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered lower courts to review the case of the only woman on Oklahoma's death row over concerns ...
Oklahoma's only female death row inmate, Brenda Andrew, 61, could get another chance in court due to "sex-shaming" during her trial, per a Tuesday Supreme Court ruling.
Oklahoma death row inmate Brenda Andrew could get another trial after the U.S. Supreme Court stepped in and said she may not have been treated fairly.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday sided with an Oklahoma woman on death row who argued that extensive evidence about her “sex life” rendered her trial unfair, kicking her case back to a lower court for ...
5don MSN
When Brenda Andrew was on trial for murder in 2004 in Oklahoma, a prosecutor named Fern Smith turned to the jury and held up ...
Brenda Andrew was convicted of murder in a 2004 trial where prosecutors presented evidence about her sex life.
Brenda Andrew was convicted of the 2001 murder of her husband, Rob Andrew, an advertising executive and church deacon, who was killed with a shotgun in the garage of his home in Oklahoma City. Brenda ...
16don MSN
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday gave a boost to a female Oklahoma death row inmate who claimed her 2004 conviction for murdering her estranged husband was tainted by what her lawyers called "sexist ...
16don MSN
The U.S. Supreme Court gave a boost on Tuesday to a female Oklahoma death row inmate who claimed her 2004 conviction for murdering her estranged husband was tainted by what her lawyers called "sexist ...
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