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§22-1001.1.


§22-1001.1.
   
   A. The execution of the judgment in cases where sentence of death is
   imposed shall be ordered by the Court of Criminal Appeals to be
   carried out thirty (30) days after the defendant fails to meet any of
   the following time conditions:
   
   1. If a defendant does not file a petition for writ of certiorari in
   the United States Supreme Court within ninety (90) days from the
   issuance of the mandate in the original state direct appeal unless a
   first application for post-conviction relief is pending;
   
   2. If a defendant does not file an original application for
   post-conviction relief in the Court of Criminal Appeals within ninety
   (90) days from the filing of the appellee's brief on direct appeal or,
   if a reply brief is filed, ninety (90) days from the filing of that
   reply brief, or a petition in error to the Court of Criminal Appeals
   after remand within thirty (30) days from entry of judgment by the
   district court disposing of the application for post-conviction
   relief;
   
   3. If a defendant does not file a writ of certiorari to the United
   States Supreme Court within ninety (90) days from a denial of state
   post-conviction relief by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals;
   
   4. If a defendant does not file the first petition for a federal writ
   of habeas corpus within sixty (60) days from a denial of his
   certiorari petition or from a decision by the United States Supreme
   Court from post-conviction relief;
   
   5. If a defendant does not file an appeal in the United States Court
   of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit from a denial of a federal writ of
   habeas corpus within seventy (70) days; or
   
   6. If a defendant does not file a petition for writ of certiorari with
   the United States Supreme Court from a denial of the appeal of the
   federal writ of habeas corpus within ninety (90) days.
   
   B. The filing of a petition for rehearing in any federal court shall
   not serve to stay the execution dates or the time restraints set forth
   in the above section unless the defendant makes the showing set forth
   in subsection C of this section. The provisions of subsection A do not
   apply to second or subsequent petitions or appeals filed in any court.
   The filing of a second or subsequent petition or appeal in any court
   does not prevent the setting of an execution date.
   
   C. When an action challenging the conviction or sentence of death is
   pending before it, the Court of Criminal Appeals may stay an execution
   date, or issue any order which effectively stays an execution date
   only upon a showing by the defendant that there exists a significant
   possibility of reversal of the defendant's conviction, or vacation of
   the defendant's sentence, and that irreparable harm will result if no
   stay is issued.
   
   D. Should a stay of execution be issued by any state or federal court,
   a new execution date shall be set by operation of law sixty (60) days
   after the dissolution of the stay of execution. The new execution date
   shall be set by the Court of Criminal Appeals without necessity of
   application by the state, but the Attorney General, on behalf of the
   state, shall bring to the attention of the Court of Criminal Appeals
   the fact of the dissolution of a stay of execution and suggest the
   appropriateness of the setting of a new execution date.
   

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