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Oklahoma’s Richard Glossip freed on bond after 30 years on death row

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Oklahoma’s Richard Glossip freed on bond after 30 years on death row

A judge set a $500,000 bond in the 1997 murder case headed for retrial after a supreme court decisionSign up for the Breaking News US newsletter emailAn <a href="https://www.theguardian.

Richard Glossip is pictured on 19 February 2021 in this photo provided by the Oklahoma department of corrections shows.

Photograph: AP View image in fullscreen Richard Glossip is pictured on 19 February 2021 in this photo provided by the Oklahoma department of corrections shows.

Photograph: AP Oklahoma’s Richard Glossip freed on bond after 30 years on death row A judge set a $500,000 bond in the 1997 murder case headed for retrial after a supreme court decision Sign up for the Breaking News US newsletter email An Oklahoma judge on Thursday allowed Richard Glossip, a former death row prisoner, to be released on bond after almost 30 years behind bars, as he awaits a retrial over a 1997 killing that put him on the brink of execution three separate times.

The decision clears the way for Glossip, 63, to leave prison for the first time since his arrest nearly three decades ago. Last year, the US supreme court threw out his conviction. His longstanding claims of innocence have drawn support from Kim Kardashian and other prominent figures.

Natalie Mai, the judge, issued an order setting bond at $500,000. Glossip must wear an electronic monitoring device and will not be allowed to travel outside Oklahoma . He also must not contact any witnesses in the case or consume any drugs or alcohol.

Glossip had been sentenced to death over the 1997 killing in Oklahoma City of his former boss, motel owner Barry Van Treese, in what prosecutors have alleged was a murder-for-hire scheme.

The supreme court ruled last year that prosecutors’ decision to allow a key witness to give testimony they knew to be false violated Glossip’s constitutional right to a fair trial.

Glossip has remained behind bars after the Oklahoma attorney general, Gentner Drummond, announced the state would seek to retry him on a murder charge but not pursue the death penalty again.

“The court fully expects that the state will rigorously prosecute its case going forward and the defense will provide robust representation for Glossip,” the judge wrote in the order. “The court hopes that a new trial, free of error, will provide all interested parties and the citizens of Oklahoma, the closure they deserve.” During his time on death row, courts in Oklahoma set nine different execution dates for Glossip, and he came so close to being put to death that he ate three separate last meals. In 2015, he was even held in a cell next to Oklahoma’s execution chamber, waiting to be strapped to a gurney and die by lethal injection.

But the scheduled time for his execution came and went. Behind the walls of the Oklahoma state penitentiary, prison officials were scrambling after learning one of the lethal drugs they received to carry out the procedure didn’t match the execution protocols . The drug mix-up ultimately led to a nearly seven-year moratorium on executions in Oklahoma.

His attorney, Donald Knight, issued a statement expressing gratitude toward Mai, the judge, and saying his client “looks forward to the day when he is exonerated”, as he has long proclaimed his innocence.

“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 said.

Glossip’s case attracted international attention after Susan Sarandon – the actor who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of the death penalty opponent Sister Helen Prejean’s fight to save a man on Louisiana’s death row in the 1995 movie Dead Man Walking – took up his cause in real life. Glossip’s case was also featured in the 2017 documentary film, Killing Richard Glossip.

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