The Case for Clarance Goode: Innocence in Plain Sight

The Case for Clarance Goode: Innocence in Plain Sight 2025-10-31T14:53:49-06:00

The Case for Clarance Goode
The Case for Clarance Goode

The Case for Clarance Goode’s Innocence: A Systemic Failure in Plain Sight

A Triple Murder and a Rush to Judgment

In August 2005 three people…Mitch Thompson, Tara Burchett-Thompson, and 10-year-old Kayla (Kyla) Burchett…were found shot to death inside a small home in rural Oklahoma. The scene was brutal…the kind that leaves a community grasping for meaning and someone to blame. Within days, investigators zeroed in on Clarance Rozell Goode Jr.…a young man with few resources and a reputation that made him an easy target. By fall, he was charged with three counts of first-degree murder and facing the death penalty. His co-defendant Ronald “Bunny” Thompson, Mitch’s cousin, quickly turned state’s witness in exchange for leniency, and prosecutors declared the case solved. But what appeared to be a swift resolution was in truth a collapse of justice. Beneath the surface of official certainty lay a web of deceit, suppressed evidence, and manipulated testimony that would ultimately send an innocent man to death row.

The Case for Clarance Goode: A Systemic Failure of Justice

The case stands as a profound failure of the criminal justice system. A careful examination of the evidence…particularly newly discovered materials that prosecutors withheld from the defense…reveals serious questions about Goode’s guilt and exposes a pattern of misconduct that denied him a fair trial. The constitutional violations are so egregious they undermine any confidence in the verdict itself. What emerges from the recently disclosed documents is not merely a story of procedural error but a deliberate orchestration by law enforcement and prosecutors to conceal exculpatory evidence…manipulate witness testimony…and secure a conviction against a potentially innocent man.

The Foundation of Injustice: Two Compromised Witnesses

At the heart of Goode’s wrongful conviction lies a disturbing reality: the State’s case depended entirely on two deeply compromised witnesses whose credibility should have been destroyed at trial. Ronald “Bunny” Thompson, Mitch’s cousin and a male co-defendant who turned state’s witness, was the only eyewitness to testify. His cousin, Christina “Michelle” Chastain, provided crucial corroborating testimony. Both had overwhelming motives to lie and both gave multiple conflicting versions of events to law enforcement. Yet prosecutors systematically suppressed evidence that would have exposed their unreliability, while law enforcement manipulated the investigation to shield these witnesses from scrutiny. The jury was explicitly instructed that Bunny’s testimony alone could not convict Goode unless corroborated and that if they found Chastain to be an accomplice, her testimony likewise required corroboration. These instructions recognized the inherent unreliability of such witnesses. Yet the State proceeded to build its entire case on precisely these two individuals while simultaneously hiding evidence that would have revealed them as calculated liars with their own murderous motives. The prosecution’s willingness to stake three death sentences on such compromised testimony speaks to either reckless indifference or deliberate malice…neither of which has any place in the administration of justice.

The Case for Clarance Goode: Concealed Confession and Suppressed Evidence

The withheld evidence is staggering in its significance. Most critically, prosecutors concealed that Bunny had confessed to his wife, Brandy Thompson, that he entered the victims’ home with the premeditated intention to kill J.R. Hoffman…one of the intended targets. This confession directly contradicts Bunny’s trial testimony, where he portrayed himself as an unwitting, unwilling participant coerced by his co-defendants. When defense counsel asked Bunny directly whether he went to the house intending to shoot Hoffman, he unequivocally denied it, stating “No sir” when asked if he wanted to get even with Hoffman. This was perjury, and prosecutors knew it. The context makes Bunny’s motive crystal clear. On July 26, 2005…exactly one month before the murders…Bunny had been brutally beaten by Mitch Thompson with a metal baseball bat at Hoffman’s instigation. The assault was so severe that Bunny suffered a broken rib, was hospitalized, and publicly humiliated. He had every reason to seek revenge. Brandy’s suppressed statement reveals that Bunny openly planned retaliation against Hoffman long before the killings.

The prosecution never disclosed Brandy’s statement to the defense. It would have proven that Bunny had both motive and premeditation, and that his testimony against Goode was a self-serving fabrication designed to save his own life. Under Brady v. Maryland, the State was constitutionally obligated to disclose this exculpatory evidence. Their failure to do so deprived Goode of the opportunity to impeach Bunny’s credibility and present a complete defense.

A Web of Lies: Chastain’s Contradictions

If Bunny’s testimony was the heart of the State’s case, his cousin Michelle Chastain’s was its lungs…keeping it breathing through false corroboration. The State portrayed Chastain as a concerned family member who merely repeated what she heard. In reality, she was an active participant in the cover-up who changed her story multiple times depending on what prosecutors needed. Newly revealed notes show that Chastain originally told police she did not know who committed the murders. Later, she claimed Bunny confessed to her. Then she changed her story again to say that both Bunny and Goode admitted involvement. Each shift coincided with new pressure from investigators. The prosecution concealed these prior inconsistent statements from the defense. Had the jury known that Chastain’s story evolved under duress and that she too faced potential charges, her credibility would have evaporated.

Even more troubling is the fact that the prosecution knowingly misled the court about Chastain’s motives. Internal memos show that Chastain received leniency in unrelated legal matters after agreeing to testify. This arrangement was never disclosed to the defense or jury. Such concealment violates both the letter and spirit of Giglio v. United States, which requires disclosure of any deal or inducement offered to a government witness.

The Case for Clarance Goode: Police and Prosecutorial Collusion

The misconduct in Goode’s case extended far beyond individual acts of suppression. Law enforcement officers worked hand in glove with prosecutors to construct a narrative that fit their assumptions rather than the evidence. Reports were rewritten to omit exculpatory details. Witnesses were coached to align their statements. Critical physical evidence that could have undermined the State’s timeline simply vanished. Detectives ignored leads implicating others, including one that suggested Bunny himself fired fatal shots. Instead, they doubled down on a version of events that placed Goode as the ringleader, even though no forensic evidence tied him to the crime scene.

The recently uncovered notes also indicate that prosecutors were fully aware of the inconsistencies in Bunny’s statements but decided to “let the jury sort it out” rather than correct perjury. That conscious choice transformed the trial into a charade. When the State becomes complicit in false testimony, the courtroom ceases to be a forum for truth and becomes instead a stage for conviction at any cost.

The Ethical Abyss

The Goode case exposes the ethical abyss at the core of Oklahoma’s capital system. Prosecutors are not supposed to win at all costs. They are supposed to seek justice. When they hide confessions, manipulate witnesses, and silence truth, they betray not only the defendant but the public trust itself. Every concealment in this case served a single purpose…to preserve a conviction that the State could no longer justify if the truth were known.

The cooperating co-defendant ultimately pleaded guilty and received a deal that spared him the death penalty; he cooperated with the State in return for that leniency. That arrangement—paired with the State’s nondisclosure of critical materials—left Goode facing the death penalty while the key government witness avoided capital exposure.

A Call for Justice

The Constitution promises due process. That promise is meaningless when prosecutors can bury evidence, encourage perjury, and secure death sentences on the testimony of proven liars. Clarance Goode’s conviction cannot stand in light of what has come to light. His case demands not only reversal but reflection on how many others sit on death row because the system values finality over truth.

Justice requires more than procedure. It requires courage to confront the wrongs committed in its name. The withheld evidence in Goode’s case does more than suggest reasonable doubt…it screams it. The case for Clarance Goode is clear…and the time has come to listen.

for more information on Clarance Goode click here

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*If you would like to support the Execution Intervention Project (the organization that financially supports Dr. Hood’s work), click here.

 

About The Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood
The Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood is a theologian, writer and activist who has spent years ministering to people on death row. As a spiritual advisor and witness to executions, he speaks out against state violence and calls for a society rooted in justice, mercy and the sacredness of life. You can read more about the author here.
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