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  • A former Claremore businessman is sentenced to 30 months in prison for tax evasion, and the Oilton Police Department in Creek County releases footage of a conflict between a police officer and an elderly man.
  • Full results from Nex Benedict's autopsy are released, and the city of Tulsa formally opposes a bill that would shield poultry companies from lawsuits.
  • The state releases Nex Benedict's full autopsy report, concerns over Tulsa's USPS center moving reach city hall, a bill that would allow people to be charged with battery against an unborn child moves through the State Legislature, and a BMX exhibit is coming to Tulsa's science museum.
  • One of Tulsa's most prolific mayors dies, city councilors put council raises before voters, opponents to a state minimum wage increase ask the Oklahoma Supreme Court to consider their position, and a judge has strong words for state officials calling for more time between death row executions.
  • Tulsa voters prepare to choose who will take 3 TPS school board seats, the 1921 Race Massacre survivors will be heard by the state supreme court tomorrow, Epic Charter Schools' concealment scheme saga continues, avian flu has been detected in cattle populations in nearby states and a regional airport is getting a renovation.
  • Results are in for Tuesday's area elections, a U.S. Senator from Oklahoma wants the USPS center in Tulsa to stay, a Tulsa teen is missing, a TPS board member talks about what he heard voters were focused on during Tuesday's races and a Tulsa boxer with big dreams prepares for his first professional fight.
  • Results for the Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education election are in, and concern over State Superintendent Ryan Walters was a driving factor in how some cast their votes. Survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre bring their case before the Oklahoma Supreme Court. The state attorney general fights a taxpayer-funded religious charter school opening. Oklahoma prepares for the solar eclipse next week.
  • Survivors of the 1921 Race Massacre make their case to the state's supreme court, voters head to the polls for TPS elections, a major state supreme court decision favors the legislature, the case of the nation's first religious charter school is heard and Oklahoma will see a total eclipse next week.
  • Tulsa braces for severe weather, Ryan Walters accuses the left and the media of peddling a political agenda through Nex Benedict's death, Tulsa Public Schools holds three school board elections, Enid voters consider whether to remove a city commissioner with white supremacist ties, and the Oklahoma City Thunder clinches its first playoff berth in four years.
  • Voters head to the polls to decide the fate of three Tulsa Public Schools board seats, the reparations lawsuit for survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre goes before the Oklahoma Supreme Court, the county health department looks forward to a conference to address racist stigmas in health care, and a major player in Epic Charter Schools' alleged racketeering scheme testifies.
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