Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Steve Kunzweiler

United States Attorney From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Steve Kunzweiler is the current Tulsa County District Attorney.[1] He has worked on shows for the Forensic Files, See No Evil and 60 Minutes.[2] He is on the Oklahoma District Attorneys Council.

Quick facts Tulsa County District Attorney, Preceded by ...
Remove ads

Career

Summarize
Perspective

News

Steve Kunzweiler was first elected in November 2014.[3] In 2014, Kunzweiler challenged his opponent Fred Jordan's candidacy "in the Aug. 26 Republican primary runoff." Kunzweiler was "chief of the Tulsa County district attorney's criminal division. Kunzweiler argued that Jordan isn't eligible to serve as DA because of a pay increase approved by the Legislature earlier this year."[4] In 2018, Kunzweiler ran against Jenny Proehl-Day, who was running on a social justice platform and claimed Kunzweiler "denies that there's any racial bias in the system."[5] Kunnzweiler was elected for his second term.[6] He worked under the former DA, Tim Harris, the longest serving DA in Tulsa History.[7] Harris did not seek reelection and announced his run in 2017 for U.S. Congress District 1.[8] In 2018, Kunzweiler was the prosecutor during the Bever family murders trial.[9] In 2016, "he filed felony first degree manslaughter charges against" Betty Shelby.[10] By 2018, he had "charged three police officers with shootings — Tulsa County Sheriff's Office reserve deputy Robert Bates, Shelby and Shannon Kepler (an off-duty officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teen in 2015) — earning convictions on both Bates and Kepler."[11]

In 2020, Kunzweiler declined charges toward Black Lives Matter protestors in Tulsa who painted the street with the words "Black Lives Matter, "referring the case back to the Tulsa city attorney's office."[12] In 2021, Kunzweiler refused to charge the man who drove into BLM protestors, paralyzing a man, Ryan Knight, who "fell from an interstate overpass as the truck pulling a horse trailer drove through the group of protesters on Interstate 244. The 32-year-old was paralyzed from the waist down."[13] He "stopped short of endorsing proposals for harsher penalties for protestors or blanket immunity for drivers."[14] Also in 2020, Kunzweiler defended Harris's work when Harris was accused in the 2020 NBC Dateline investigative episode of allegedly coercing one of two formerly convicted Black Tulsa brothers into confessions.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] Atchison's lawyer Joseph Norwood, pointed out that "If Harris and Kunzweiler questioned the credibility of the lone witness against Atchison, the case should have been dismissed." Judge Sharon Holmes overturned Atchison's sentence.[25]

In 2021, Kunzweiler said that the ruling on McGirt "isn't just a criminal matter but can also affect businesses."[26] Kunzweiler and First Assistant District Attorney Erik Grayless were to blame for "a public censure from the Oklahoma Bar Association after admitting during a professional tribunal last year that interns she supervised represented the agency in numerous criminal cases without being properly licensed" that happened in 2021.[27]

In 2019, Kunzweiler organized a DA breakfast "where they could all come together for the first time ever" to later "feel comfortable to pick up the phone and call one of the district attorneys if they have a question about proposed legislation" that would affect their work.[28] District Attorneys including Steve Kunzweiler have criticized the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board, who want the board to be more conservative in their considerations for parole and commutation, despite the Republican Governor Kevin Stitt having expressed full confidence. In an article written by Tulsa World, the DAs were said to be taking an increasingly more political role that has "to some degree weakened" the board's influence.[29] Dark money conservative attack ads targeting Stitt as not tough enough on crime started airing in 2021.[30] The state of Oklahoma has the third highest incarceration rate in 2021 and its 2018 numbers show it incarcerates the most women per capita.[31][32]

In 2024, he was invited by Kevin Hern as his guest to attend President Joe Biden's State of the Union.[33][34] He was invited because of his correlation to fentanyl overdoses, blaming immigration happening through the U.S. and Mexico border.[35]

Kunzweiler has supported the cross-deputization of police officers with tribal police to avoid confusion about who has jurisdiction.[36]

Controversies

In June 2022, after the fall of Roe, a representative of No Forced Birth OK have called Kunzweiler "no friend to the Black community, the Indigenous community, to the gay community, to any community except white straight men."[37] On failure to protect laws, Kunzweiler said he viewed himself as a father punishing his daughters and that '"prosecutor's job was to 'teach people the morals they either never learned or they somehow forgot.'"[38] He has explained female incarceration "using a metaphor about spanking."[39]

Domestic Violence Victims and the April Wilkens case

In 2022, Kunzweiler's office wrote a protest letter against criminalized survivor April Wilkens's application for parole.[40] It is speculated that the board did not grant her a hearing this period at least in part due to the protest letter.[41] Hers was one of the first cases Tim Harris prosecuted as DA, and Harris later accepted campaign contributions after the trail from Terry Carlton's father, Don Carlton, as well as from Kunzweiler's wife.[42][43] The same month as Wilkens was being denied parole by the (at the time) all-male board, they unanimously recommended the Crossbow Killer, Jimmie Stohler, be granted parole in the same meeting.[44] Any DA protest for Stohler's release would have come from Kunzweiler's office. Governor Kevin Stitt approved the board's recommendation for Stohler's parole. Still, he reversed his decision, citing new but undisclosed "information" in what the Tulsa County DA's office had sent him.[45] Stitt reversed his decision after accusations of racism for not also releasing Julius Jones.[46] Three weeks after the Oklahoma Survivor's Act was passed in 2024, legislation introduced by Greg Treat and Jon Echols that would resentence criminalized survivors like April Wilkens,[47] Kunzweiler's office came under scrutiny for creating a waiver that would get abuse victims to waive away their rights under the new law, to the outcry of domestic violence advocates, including the CEO of the YWCA in Oklahoma City.[48][49][50][51][52][53][54]They accused him of "forcing domestic violence victims charged with crimes to give up their rights if they want plea agreements."[55] Kunzweiler defended the form, saying that similar forms are used in other types of cases.[56]

In 2025, April Wilkens's attorneys accused Kunzweiler of dragging out the process to get her a resentencing hearing under the Oklahoma Survivors Act (OSA).[57] Advocates questioned why Wilkens still had no hearing date set.[58][59] She filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, where Wilkens's "defense team calls her incarceration 'unlawful;' an 'unreasonable over-detention' and a 'violation of Wilkens' Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights.'"[60] Though Wilkens was the first to apply for resentencing, she was not the first granted a hearing or released.[61][62][63]The judge, Clifford Smith, granted the Habeas hearing for Wilkens.[64] The hearing will be about her supervised release until she is granted an OSA resentencing hearing date.[65] In response to Judge Smith granting the Habeas hearing, Kunzweiler released a statement to media, claiming Terry Carlton had also taken out protective orders against Wilkens, though Channel 8 KTUL could find no evidence that had happened.[66]

Mental health

Also in early 2022, Kunzweiler's daughter stabbed him. Before her hearing, he called for greater mental healthcare reforms in the state.[67] Doug Drummond, presiding judge for the 14th district, recused the entire district from the case. She was found not guilty by reason of mental illness in 2023. The attorney "representing...Jennifer Kunzweiler, said the not guilty verdict she received...in Tulsa County District Court around charges related to the September stabbing of her father had little to do with her position as a member of a powerful Tulsa family."[68]

LGBTQ+

In 2024, after president Biden released a statement on the death of Nex Benedict, Kunzweilers' office would not comment on their death "until prosecutors have received all reports related to the investigation, including the full findings from the medical examiner."[69] On March 21, 2024, it was announced that no charges would be filed for the fight involving Nex, which was considered "an instance of mutual combat."[70]

Henry Jamerson case

Henry Jamerson, a man sentenced to 34 years who only served 24 and was later exonerated,[71] accused the Tulsa Police and the District Attorneys office of a decades-long coverup scheme in a 2025 lawsuit.[72] Kunzweiler is appealing Jamerson's overturned conviction,[73] even though the woman who accused Jamerson of rape recanted, saying that "police decades ago convinced her to identify Jamerson as her rapist even though she'd never seen him before." She now "formally supported the legal move to get Jamerson off the Oklahoma sex offender registry."[74]

Other lobbying and legislation

In 2023, Kunzweiler spoke out about several bills introduced in the same legislative session, all dealing with lessening the penalties for cockfighting. HB 2530, pushed by Justin Humphrey, died on April 13, 2023, for the second year in a row. Kunzweiler said he was glad cockfighting remained a felony.[75] Mike Osburn co-authored House Bill 1792 with Dave Rader[76] that would lessen the penalties of also dogfighting in the state of Oklahoma, which sparked pushback from animal rights advocates.[77] A third bill authored by Lonnie Paxton, Senate Bill 1006, died in the Senate. It would have also lessened the penalties for cockfighting in the state, similar to House Bill 2530, but died in the same timeframe.[78]

In 2024, Kunzweiler supported Kevin West's HB 3694 bill that would undo 2016 state question voted on by the people. It was also authored by Julie Daniels and John George.[79] It "would revert the minimum value of goods stolen to qualify as a felony larceny back down from $1,000 to just $500." The bill was criticized by Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform Executive Director Damion Shade.[80] This is a SQ 780 rollback that would increase incarceration and essentially set the bar back to where the voters raised it in 2016." A representative of the organization Oklahoma Appleseed called it one of their "Bad Bills."[81]

Remove ads

Personal life

Kunzweiler and his wife, Christine Kunzweiler, have three daughters. In September 2022, a daughter with mental illness stabbed Kunzweiler multiple times but he managed to survive.[82] He is mentioned in the podcast Panic Button: The April Wilkens Case as having confronted a Tulsa social worker about how domestic violence advocates need to get survivors to testify, otherwise they are not really being abused.[83]

Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads