Criminal justice group contests severity of Oklahoma’s failure-to-protect law

The Associated Press - September 30, 2018 8:54 am

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) – A criminal justice group plans to ask the Oklahoma Legislature to a change state law that can lead to longer prison sentences for battered women who don’t report child abuse than for the abusers themselves.
Every state has laws meant to protect children, but critics say Oklahoma’s failure-to-protect law is particularly harsh in that it carries a possible life prison sentence and doesn’t make exceptions for frightened mothers who are also being abused.
Lawyers say that was the case with Tondalao Hall, who is 12 years into a 30-year prison term for not telling the authorities that her boyfriend was abusing her kids. The boyfriend was sentenced in 2006 to probation and the two years in jail he had already served while awaiting trial.
Oklahoma’s Pardon and Parole Board recently declined to reduce the sentences of Hall and three other women with similar stories.
The group Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform says it plans to seek changes in the laws to protect abused mothers.

 

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...