News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed
TIMELINE: More storms expected Friday and through Memorial Day weekend (May 23, 2025)
SUMMARY: Friday brings a mild chance of daytime showers and isolated thunderstorms, but more significant storms develop overnight, moving southeast with a moderate severe risk (2 out of 5). Large hail up to golf ball size and wind gusts of 60-70 mph are possible late Friday night into early Saturday. Saturday’s storms also occur mainly overnight with a similar risk level, but tornado threat increases slightly (3-4 out of 10) after 5–6 p.m. Sunday’s storms start earlier in the afternoon with continued risks of large hail, tornadoes, and damaging winds. Memorial Day Monday has the highest rain chance but no severe weather expected.

KOCO 5 Meteorologist Joseph Neubauer says our next risk for severe weather is tonight. Large hail and damaging winds are possible. There are more severe weather risks Saturday and Sunday, bringing a higher tornado threat.
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News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed
Oklahoma’s Pending Purchase of Lawton Prison Brings Hope of Reduced Violence
Felecia Jackson had mixed emotions when she received news that her husband, Eric Jackson, would be transferred from the James Crabtree Correctional Center in Helena to a sprawling private prison in Lawton.
The Lawton Correctional Facility is two hours closer by car to her home in Ardmore, allowing for cheaper and quicker trips to visit. But it was difficult to look past the prison’s violent reputation, with gruesome murders and allegations of subpar medical care frequently making headlines. The Oklahoma Department of Corrections called Lawton the state’s most violent prison as contract negotiations with The GEO Group, a Florida-based company that owns and operates the facility, grew contentious last summer.
Fears of violence have materialized since Eric Jackson arrived in early 2024. The Department of Corrections has investigated multiple homicides at the prison since a one-year contract extension was approved last June, including a case where a prisoner stabbed and partially decapitated his cellmate on March 5. Another prisoner allegedly used a piece of handmade string to murder his cellmate on Dec. 7.
Felecia Jackson said the GEO Group’s private business model, aimed at turning a profit on a per-prisoner per diem it receives from the state, has also been apparent and frustrating. Commissary items are more expensive, fees to use state-approved tablets are inflated and there are fewer programs to keep prisoners occupied, she said.
The GEO Group did not respond to a request for comment about a June 2024 statement vowing to increase program availability and out-of-cell time at the Lawton prison.
“I cannot stand Lawton,” Felecia Jackson said. “I despise that place being a private prison. They think they can just make their own rules and don’t have to follow policy.”
Felecia Jackson and other family members of prisoners at the Lawton facility said they are optimistic about the Department of Corrections’s pending purchase of the 2,600-bed prison, Oklahoma’s largest and only privately operated correctional facility that houses more than 10% of the state prison population.
“I have been a state employee, and I think they have higher standards and more to lose,” said Cherry Love, a Baltimore, Maryland resident whose son has complained of a monthslong wait to see a mental health professional while incarcerated at Lawton.
The House and Senate approved a pair of bills on Thursday to purchase the prison outright for $312 million. Gov. Kevin Stitt, who vetoed a per-diem increase for the Lawton prison last summer and has lauded efforts to close private prisons, said Wednesday he does not plan to veto any appropriations bills. The proposed purchase includes all assets within the facility, including vehicles, medical and kitchen equipment.
The move is poised to rid Oklahoma of private prisons for the first time since 1991, when the Great Plains Correctional Facility in Hinton opened. As recently as 2020, 23% of Oklahoma’s prison population was housed in private prisons, which have long faced criticism for cutting corners on food, staffing and medical care to turn a profit.
House Appropriations and Budget Chair Trey Caldwell, a Republican from Faxon whose district includes the private prison, said frustrations have been brewing on both sides for years. The Department of Corrections has bemoaned the high rate of violence, while The GEO Group claims violent prisoners had their security classification lowered to be eligible for placement at Lawton. He said the tensions have left the company unwilling to negotiate beyond a short-term, transitional contract extension.
Though the state has reduced its prison population by more than 15% over the past five years, Caldwell said most of the reduction has been at minimum security prisons, making vacating Lawton a logistically challenging proposition. The Department of Corrections said other vacant, privately owned prisons in the state, including the North Fork Correctional Facility in Sayre and Diamondback Correctional Facility in Watonga, have significant maintenance or staff recruitment issues.
“I know there are political concerns that private companies shouldn’t be in the prison business, but this piece of legislation is not a political statement,” Caldwell told members of the House Joint Committee on Appropriations and Budget on Monday. “It’s about how we fix a problem to keep our correctional officers safe and make sure we are being humane in our treatment of the people we have incarcerated.”
The Department of Corrections plans to offer state employment to all Lawton employees at or above their current wage, pending a background check, Chief of Public Relations Kay Thompson said. The agency anticipates the prison will begin operating as a state-run facility on Sept. 1.
Thompson said state prison officials plan to evaluate Lawton’s population and separate groups that are the most conflict-prone. She said the strategy has worked well at the Allen Gamble Correctional Facility in Holdenville, which transitioned from a private to a state-run facility in October 2023, and several other prisons, contributing to a 14% reduction in serious inmate assaults from fiscal year 2023 to 2024.
“While violence can still occur due to the nature of the incarcerated population, we make data-driven decisions that have consistently reduced incidents at Allen Gamble and systemwide,” Thompson said in a written statement.
State prison officials will review program offerings at Lawton and make additions as resources allow, Thompson said, but that process could take months.
At James Crabtree, Felecia Jackson said her husband benefited from numerous programs, including an anger management course and a wild horse training opportunity. At Lawton, she said most of the programs are run on state-issued tablets and men are lucky to get one hour of outdoor recreation time per week.
“They need more outlets so that the violence will stop,” she said. “If they have things to do to keep their mind busy, it would keep a lot of them off drugs, give them hope and give them something to work for. DOC has a lot of things like that they can implement at this facility to help.”
While the prison purchase deal is now headed to Stitt’s desk, it wasn’t an easy sell for several lawmakers. Senate Pro Tem Lonnie Paxton, R-Tuttle, said several members of the upper chamber were caught off guard with the request, which was not included in the Department of Corrections’ fiscal 2026 budget request, but that the state lacked alternatives.
“A lot of us were very uncomfortable feeling like we got information at the end and now we have to make a quick decision,” Paxton said. “That is concerning. But I am convinced of the need to make sure those 2,300 prisoners are properly incarcerated. That is not a group you want to furlough.”
Sen. Darcy Jech, R-Kingfisher, was among a bipartisan group of six senators to vote against the prison purchase bill. In a budget committee meeting, he said the Legislature and Department of Corrections should have been weighing solutions much sooner than the end of the legislative session.
“We shouldn’t be given a few weeks to consider this,” he said. “There are other options, other prisons.”
The GEO Group would also have had options had the state elected to move its prisoners out of Lawton. The company’s stock price has nearly doubled since President Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election, with the company inking several deals to reopen former private prisons as immigration detention centers.
This article first appeared on Oklahoma Watch and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post Oklahoma’s Pending Purchase of Lawton Prison Brings Hope of Reduced Violence appeared first on oklahomawatch.org
Oklahoma Watch, at oklahomawatch.org, is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that covers public-policy issues facing the state.
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This content leans center-left as it focuses on the problems associated with privatized prisons, highlighting issues such as violence, inadequate medical care, and profit-driven motives negatively impacting prisoner welfare. It also portrays government intervention—specifically the state’s purchase of a private prison—as a positive, corrective measure. While the reporting includes perspectives from Republicans and provides facts, the framing suggests a critical viewpoint on privatization in the prison system and advocates for more humane treatment, aligning with center-left concerns about social justice and public accountability.
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed
Split Decision Halts Oklahoma’s Plan to Open Religious Charter School
Oklahoma’s top court’s ruling to block a state-funded Catholic charter school will stand after the U.S. Supreme Court deadlocked on the issue.
The unsigned order, issued Thursday, reads simply: “The judgment is affirmed by an equally divided Court.” A 4-4 split was possible because Justice Amy Coney Barrett recused herself from the case.
The school, St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School, named after the patron saint of the Internet, was to be operated by the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa. St. Isidore proposed being Catholic in every aspect, including instruction and operations. St. Isidore applied to be a charter school, privately run but publicly funded.
Attorney General Gentner Drummond challenged the school in court, arguing the state’s sponsorship of the school violates the U.S. Constitution’s Establishment Clause and state statute, which prohibits public schools, including charters, from being affiliated with any particular religious group.
Erin Brewer, an Oklahoma parent who joined a lawsuit challenging St. Isidore, said the tie feels like a win.
“The Supreme Court made the right decision in affirming that religious freedom means that individuals, families, have the right to raise their children, live our values, to pursue our faith, but we should not be forced as taxpayers to fund religious activity,” she said.
The court’s order doesn’t indicate how the justices voted. When the court heard arguments in late April, Chief Justice John Roberts seemed most likely to split with the conservative majority, with pointed questions indicating he hadn’t yet chosen a side.
Split decisions don’t set a precedent, so religious groups can try again with a different case.
“This 4-4 tie is a non-decision,” said Gov. Kevin Stitt, a proponent of the school, in a written statement. “Now we’re in overtime. There will be another case just like this one and Justice Barrett will break the tie. This is far from a settled issue. We are going to keep fighting for parents’ rights to instill their values in their children and against religious discrimination.”
Attorneys for St. Isidore and the charter school board argued that being denied state charter school funding amounted to religious discrimination. They also maintained that charter schools are not public schools, a stance that alarmed charter school advocates across the country.
Drummond celebrated the decision as a victory for religious liberty.
“This ruling ensures that Oklahoma taxpayers will not be forced to fund radical Islamic schools, while protecting the religious rights of families to choose any school they wish for their children,” he said.
Brett Farley, executive director of the Catholic Conference of Oklahoma, said St. Isidore board members are exploring other options for offering a virtual Catholic education to students across the state.
This article first appeared on Oklahoma Watch and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post Split Decision Halts Oklahoma’s Plan to Open Religious Charter School appeared first on oklahomawatch.org
Oklahoma Watch, at oklahomawatch.org, is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that covers public-policy issues facing the state.
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Centrist
The content presents a balanced and factual report on the split U.S. Supreme Court decision regarding Oklahoma’s state-funded Catholic charter school. It includes perspectives from both proponents and opponents of the school, quoting officials and stakeholders from different sides without evident editorializing. The article focuses on legal and procedural elements, maintaining neutrality in tone and coverage, which suggests a centrist political bias aimed at informing rather than persuading readers.
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed
Oklahoma City Thunder close series with Game 7 win at home
SUMMARY: The Oklahoma City Thunder closed their thrilling series against the Denver Nuggets with a Game 7 win at home, advancing to the next round of the NBA playoffs. Fans gathered at Baszler Hole, known as Thunder Hall during playoffs, creating an electric atmosphere full of excitement and hope. Many believe the young Thunder team has what it takes to win it all, feeling confident after last year’s experience. The victory brings them one step closer to an NBA Finals appearance. Next, the Thunder will face the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference playoffs. Fans are eagerly anticipating more intense action ahead.

Oklahoma City Thunder close series with Game 7 win at home
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