Oklahoma Woman Convicted of Manslaughter Seeks Release Under Domestic Violence Law
Tyesha Long, a 26-year-old woman serving a 27-year sentence for manslaughter, could soon be released under a new Oklahoma law designed to give domestic violence survivors a second chance, according to Capital B.
Nearly five years ago, Long fatally shot her ex-boyfriend, Ray Brown, inside a hotel elevator lobby. She has consistently maintained that she acted in self-defense. In 2022, a jury convicted her of manslaughter but rejected prosecutors’ argument that she acted in cold blood.
At her trial, jurors did not hear about Brown’s history of abuse, including evidence that he threatened and assaulted Long and other women. Advocates say this gap underscores the importance of Oklahoma’s Survivors Act, which allows survivors to present evidence of abuse either before sentencing or afterward. If the judge grants her petition, Long’s sentence could be reduced to as little as time served.
Her attorneys argue that Long is a “poster child” for the law. They presented photographs of bruises, text messages showing threats, and accounts of physical violence, including a miscarriage, which Long said was caused by being thrown down stairs.
Supporters say laws like the Survivors Act are essential, especially for Black women, who are disproportionately incarcerated in cases tied to domestic violence and other survival-related offenses. “The criminal justice system has no understanding of gender or trauma,” said Sydney McKinney, executive director of the National Black Women’s Justice Institute.
Long’s team is pushing for her freedom.
“The two versions don’t necessarily match up, and that was something that the state harped on repeatedly,” Long’s attorney, Colleen McCarty told Capital B about the case’s inconsistencies.
McCarty continued to the outlet: “She believed at trial, and she still believes now, that she remembers shooting him in the chest. She knows that’s not what the evidence showed.”
A judge’s ruling in Long’s case is expected by late September. If successful, Long could go home to her family after serving nearly four years in prison.