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This week Jess starts a new series…Oklahoma’s Death Row Women. And boy does she start out strong…perhaps with the most controversial one of all…

Wanda Jean Allen was born on August 17, 1959, in what is believed to be Oklahoma City, as the second of eight children in a troubled family. Her upbringing was marked by trauma, including severe injuries from a truck accident at age 12 and a stabbing at 14, which left her with significant cognitive impairments. Perhaps due to these challenges, she dropped out of high school at 17, having already faced more adversity than many encounter in a lifetime. Her life took a tragic turn in 1981 when she shot and killed her girlfriend, Dedra Pettus, during a dispute, leading to a plea deal that resulted in a four-year sentence for manslaughter. Seven years later, while in a tumultuous relationship with Gloria Jean Leathers, Allen shot Leathers during another confrontation, resulting in Leathers' death. Allen was subsequently charged with first-degree murder, and despite her claims of self-defense, the jury convicted her, leading to a death sentence.

Following her sentencing, Allen spent 12 years on death row, during which her mental state and the quality of her legal representation were called into question. Advocacy groups like the ACLU argued that she suffered from brain damage and had received inadequate legal support during her trial, which they claimed was influenced by biases related to race, class, and sexual orientation. Despite appeals for clemency, Allen was executed by lethal injection on January 11, 2001. Her final moments were marked by a mix of defiance and remorse, as she expressed forgiveness while acknowledging her past. The complexities of her life and the legal proceedings surrounding her case raise significant questions about the fairness of her trial and the broader implications of the death penalty in Oklahoma, a state with a controversial history of capital punishment.

Sources:

- The Oklahoman