Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Oklahoma Governor Calls For Resignation Of Officials Caught On Tape Threatening To Kill Journalists

Kevin Stitt
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Governor Kevin Stitt calls for resignation of four local officials after they were recorded threatening Chris and Bruce Willingham and complaining about not being able to hang Black people.

UPDATE: 4/19/23: Governor Stitt's office has announced the resignation of McCurtain County Commissioner Mark Jennings.

Oklahoma Republican Governor Kevin Stitt has demanded the resignations of four McCurtain County officials after a local newspaper revealed a disturbing audio recording.


The McCurtain Gazette-News released portions of the recording that captured county officials Kevin Clardy, Alicia Manning, and Mark Jennings discussing journalists Bruce and Chris Willingham. In the recording, Jennings also made racist remarks about Black people.

The recording also appears to capture Jennings claiming he knows "two or three hit men" and "where two deep holes are dug." Governor Stitt expressed his dismay over the "horrid comments" and emphasized that "there is simply no place for such hateful rhetoric in the state of Oklahoma."

The Associated Press could not immediately verify the authenticity of the recording, and none of the four officials have returned calls or emails from The Associated Press seeking comment. However, more than 100 people gathered outside the McCurtain County Courthouse, calling for the sheriff and other county officials to resign.

The audio of their remarks is included below.

www.youtube.com

According to Bruce Willingham, the proprietor of the McCurtain Gazette-News, he placed a voice-activated recorder inside the room following a county commissioner's meeting on March 6.

He had a suspicion that the group was conducting county business after the meeting's conclusion in breach of the state's Open Meeting Act. Chris Willingham, Bruce Willingham's son, works as a reporter at the newspaper.

The FBI and Oklahoma Attorney General's Office are investigating the incident, and the local newspaper has filed a lawsuit against the sheriff's office, seeking body camera footage and other records related to the death of Bobby Barrick, a Broken Bow, Oklahoma, man who died at a hospital in March 2022 after McCurtain County deputies shot him with a stun gun.

The recorded conversation has shocked many, including Joey Senat, a journalism professor at Oklahoma State University, who said the comments made in the recording seemed "deplorable."

Senat added:

"I was shocked as I assume most people were, not only about the comments about journalists but the racist comments regarding African Americans. Joking doesn't excuse that."

Others have taken to social media to express their outrage.








McCurtain County is located in southeast Oklahoma, bordering Arkansas and Texas.

It is sometimes called "Little Dixie" due to the influence in the area from White Southerners who migrated there after the Confederacy lost the Civil War.

Republican Oklahoma state Representative Eddy Dempsey, who represents the area in the Oklahoma House, echoed Governor Stitt's call for the four people involved in the conversation to resign.

Dempsey said the area does not "need this kind of recognition."

More from Trending

Dax Shepard; Kristen Bell; Cher
Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

Cher Brutally Dunks On Kristen Bell's Marriage To Dax Shepard Right To His Face In Hilarious Video

We've all looked at a couple and thought, "what the heck does she see in him?" at one time or another.

And if the couples that make you scratch your head includes actors Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell, you are definitely not alone—even Cher doesn't get it!

Keep ReadingShow less
Laura Loomer; Tucker Carlson
Win McNamee/Getty Images; Tucker Carlson Network

Laura Loomer Demands Comment From White House Over Tucker Carlson's Bonkers 'Globo Homo' Theory About Venezuela

The United States military, working on orders from the administration of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump, sank the first alleged drug-carrying vessel from Venezuela on September 2, 2025. Tensions continued to mount between the two sovereign nations in the aftermath.

Pundits across the political spectrum speculated on Trump's possible motives and endgame.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kristi Noem; Hilton hotel
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

MAGA Rages After Homeland Security Claims Hilton Canceled Hotel Reservations For ICE Agents

MAGA fans are furious after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) called out Hilton Hotels & Resorts on social media this week after the hotel chain allegedly canceled reservations for ICE agents at a location near Minneapolis.

DHS accused the hotel chain of launching a “coordinated campaign” to cancel reservations after ICE agents attempted to book rooms using government email addresses and discounted federal rates. The allegation surfaced as the Trump administration reportedly began deploying thousands of agents to the Minneapolis area.

Keep ReadingShow less
workers outside emergency room entrance
Dre Nieto on Unsplash

Emergency Room Workers Share Things They Wish Patients Would Stop Coming In For

Called emergency rooms (ER), emergency departments (ED), or trauma centers, hospitals usually have a place where ambulances bring people. Most of those places also allow people to bring themselves there.

But not everyone who walks into an ER or arrives by ambulance needs to be there.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jamie Kaler; Donald Trump
@jamiekaler/TikTok; Alex Wong/Getty Images

'Will & Grace' Actor Brutally Drags Trump's Venezuela Takeover With Mock Regime Change In His Own Neighborhood

As the world now knows, on the morning of Saturday, January, 3, 2026, under the direction of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump and his Secretary of "War" Pete Hegseth, the United States military invaded the sovereign nation of Venezuela using 150 aircraft to abduct Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores.

The nation, along with international allies and adversaries, have been weighing in on the action and the Trump administration's attempts to justify it. Trump, Hegseth, and their mouthpieces claim the uninvited intervention in another sovereign nation's internal affairs was about justice and drug trafficking while the international community and Trump's opposition in the U.S. say it was about oil.

Keep ReadingShow less