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Oklahoma Supreme Court bars OIDS from representing noncapital resentencing under Survivors Act; grants writ
Summary
The state high court assumed original jurisdiction and granted a writ of prohibition preventing a district judge from ordering the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System to represent an indigent defendant seeking resentencing under the Survivors Act, holding the statute does not authorize OIDS for noncapital post‑conviction relief.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court on Sept. 30, 2025 assumed original jurisdiction and granted the extraordinary and declaratory relief sought by the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System (OIDS), ruling that a district court may not order OIDS to represent an indigent person seeking resentencing under the Survivors Act when the underlying offenses are noncapital.
In an opinion issued by the court, the justices wrote, "Original jurisdiction is assumed, and we grant the extraordinary and declaratory relief sought by petitioner." The court concluded that resentencing under the Survivors Act is a form of post‑conviction relief and that the Indigent Defense Act expressly prohibits OIDS from representing indigent persons in noncapital post‑conviction proceedings.
The dispute arose after the district court appointed OIDS to represent Joshua Albright, who had…
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