Judge denies sentence reduction for former Tulsa officer

Beverly Bryant - December 14, 2017 1:29 pm

TULSA, Okla. (AP) – A federal judge has ruled that a former Oklahoma police officer who is serving a 10-year prison sentence following his 2011 conviction in a police corruption trial isn’t entitled to a reduced term.

The Tulsa World reports that U.S. District Judge John Dowdell rejected a request for release from former Tulsa Police Cpl. Harold R. Wells on Wednesday. Wells filed his motion in May 2015.

In the request, Wells argued that a testimony he gave during an evidentiary hearing in 2012 helped free a man found to be wrongly convicted. But Dowdell said the federal government didn’t seek a modification to Wells’ sentence, a requirement for him to be able to consider the request.

Wells is scheduled for release in February 2020. He’s being held in a federal facility in Minnesota.

 

Latest Stories

Biden heads into a make-or-break stretch for his imperiled presidential campaign

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Thursday opened a critical stretch in his effort to salvage his imperiled reelection campaign, facing...

MAN SHOT BY DISPENSARY EMPLOYEE DURING ATTEMPTED BURGLARY, TULSA POLICE SAY

TULSA, Okla. – A man is injured after being shot at a shopping center overnight in Tulsa,...

Tunnel to Towers Pays Off Family Home of Edmond Officer Killed in Crash

EDMOND, OKLA. (KOKH) — In honor of Independence Day, Tunnel to Towers delivered 35 mortgage-free homes to...