Richard Glossip, former Oklahoma death row inmate, returns to court for retrial proceedings in 1997 murder case.
Richard Glossip, who spent nearly three decades incarcerated for the 1997 murder of Barry Van Treese, had his conviction overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court due to prosecutors' use of false testimony. He was released on bond and is now attending hearings to determine if his case proceeds to retrial, with the state seeking a murder conviction but not the death penalty.
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Divergence score
2 outlets covered it, splitting into 1 framing camp across 2 bias groups.
1 camp
2 bias groups
The spectrum · how 2 outlets placed this story
LeftCenterRight
AP News
Newsmax
Supportive of action
Neutral
Dismissive
Critical
Alarmist
International angle
The split, in one line
Both outlets report the same procedural facts about Glossip's court appearance, the Supreme Court ruling, and the state's decision to seek retrial without the death penalty, with no meaningful framing differences.
How each outlet covered it
Lightly covered so far
Too few outlets to map a left-right split. Here is each take as it stands.
Sparse coverage · 2 outlets
“Former Oklahoma death row inmate back in court as case proceeds to retrial in 1997 murder case”
“Former Oklahoma death row inmate back in court as case proceeds to retrial in 1997 murder case”
Tracked claims from across the political spectrum
Fact ledger
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