*580 ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR WRIT OF PROHIBITION AND/OR MANDAMUS, AND DISSOLVING STAY OF PROCEEDINGS
Thе Petitioner, Michael B. Selsor, has filed an application to assume original jurisdiction and a petition for writ of prohibition and/or mandamus asking this Court to strike the Bill of Particulars and prohibit the District Court of Tulsa County from сonducting a jury trial which exposes Petitioner to the death penalty, or to the possibility of life without parole, in Case No. CF 75-2181. Initially, this Court stayed proceedings in that case and directed a response from thе Respondent or his designated representative. Selsor v. Turnbull, No. P 97-911 (Okl.Cr. July 3, 1997) (not for publication). A response. has been filed on behalf of the Respondent by the Attorney General for the State of Oklahoma.
In Case No. CF 75-2181, Petitioner was convicted of Murder in the First Degree and was sentenced to Death. On appeal, Peti
*581
tioner’s conviction was affirmed, but his death sentence was modified to life imprisonment due to the unconstitutionality of Oklаhoma's death penalty statute, 21 O.S.Supp. 1973, § 701.3.
Selsor v. State,
In this proceeding, Petitioner again relies on
Riggs v. Branch,
The State’s response includes preliminary allegations that Petitioner has not filed sufficiеnt records and transcripts in support of his petition. The State also argues Petitioner has the remedy of a direct appeal to raise the current issues, if he is convicted and sentenced to death оn re-trial. However, this Court must recognize that Petitioner’s Judgment and Sentence in Tulsa County District Court Case No. CF 75-2181 has been vacated and the ease remanded for re-trial.
Selsor v. Kaiser,
In the substantive portions of its response, the State first tries to distinguish Riggs by claiming it addressed both the statutory сhanges to the elements of First Degree Murder and the statutory changes to the punishment prescribed therefor, whereas this proceeding only involves statutory changes to the punishment prescribed. However, statutory changes to the elements of Murder in the First Degree were not at issue in Riggs, 2 and are not at issue in this *582 proceeding. 3 Therefore, Riggs cannot be distinguished on that basis. The State’s response also contends the brief ex post facto analysis presented in Riggs was soon revealed to be inaccurate. With this cоntention we agree.
Riggs
was decided during the chaos caused when the United States Supreme Court overturned the death penalty statutes of several states, and during the scramble by those states to ensure there were constitutional penalty provisions in place for the offense of Murder in the First Degree.
Riggs,
After this Court attempted to construe federal
ex post facto
law in
Riggs,
the United States Supreme Court directly addressed the issue of whether the
ex post facto
clause prohibited the application, of newly enacted statutes for imposing the death рenalty, to defendants whose crimes were committed prior to the enactment of the new statutes.
Dobbert v. Florida,
In different contexts, this Court has adopted and applied the reasoning and analysis of
Dobbert. Cartwright v. State,
Contrary to Petitioner’s arguments, there was a death penalty statute in effect in 1975, and on the date his crime was committed, in the form of 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3. Contrary to this Court’s analysis in
Riggs,
the newly enacted death penalty statutes did not change the burden of proof to the detriment of Riggs and other defendants, as compared to the burdеn of proof under Section 701.3. Under Section 701.3, the only available sentence was death. Under newly enacted death penalty statutes, the sentencing options increased in favor of a defendant to inсlude not only death but also the possibility of life imprisonment, and now life without parole. 21 O.S.Supp.1976, §§ 701.9 and 701.10; 21 O.S.1991, § 701.9, and Supp.1996, § 701.10. Under Section 701.3, the State was only required to prove the elements of the crime of First Degree Murder. Once those elements were proven, the State had no further burden of proof because the death penalty was required. Under newly enacted death penalty statutes, the State not only must prove the same elements of the crime of First Degree Murder, but also must prove aggravating circumstances before the death penalty can be imposed.
Id.
Therefore, newly enacted death penalty statutes (1) did nоt increase the elements of the offense of First
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Degree Murder, (2) did not increase but in fact decreased the conditions and quantum of punishment, and (3) did not decrease but in fact increased the quantity and degree of proof necessary to establish guilt, and are not
ex post facto. Dobbert, supra; Cartwright, supra.
The
ex post facto
analysis and the holdings thereunder in
Riggs v. Branch,
Ex post facto
analysis only applies to legislative enactments, however, changes in the law by judicial construction, such as overturning
Riggs,
implicates the Due Process Clause and requires consideration of
ex post facto
principles.
Cartwright,
Petitioner s equal protection claim can be easily and summarily disposed of. Petitioner is simply no longer similarly situated to those defendants subject to Oklahoma’s unconstitutional death penalty statute, 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3, or to those defendants whose sentences were modified in accordance with
Riggs.
Petitioner’s Judgment and Sentence has been vacated and he stands before this Court, similarly situated to defendants awaiting trial under current murder and death penalty statutes.
Dobbert,
Finally, we reject Petitioner’s claim that to subject him to the death рenalty, because his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated, flies in the face of due process. Petitioner has not supported this claim with citation to any authority. Rule 3.5(C)(4),
Rules, supra.
Moreover, if a defendant has not been acquitted of the death penalty and his conviction and sentence are reversed on appeal or collateral proceedings, the slate is wiped clеan and a defendant may be subjected to any punishment authorized by law, including death.
Salazar v. State,
IT IS THEREFORE THE ORDER OF THIS COURT that the petition for writ of prohibition and/or mandamus should be, and is herеby, DENIED. The stay of proceedings in Case No. CF 75-2181 previously imposed by this Court should be, and is hereby, DISSOLVED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
.
Riggs
was used in Petitioner's appeal from his original Judgment and Sentence to modify his sentence of Death to a term of Life imprisonment.
Selsor,
. The issue underlying
Riggs
was whether a death sentence returned pursuant to a law, such as 21 O.S.Supp.1973, § 701.3, which imposed a mandatory death penalty either for a broad category of homicidal offenses, or even for a nаrrower definition of first-degree murder that limited the categories of killings, constitutes cruel and unusual punishment within the meaning of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Woodson v. North Carolina,
. This proceeding is limited only to those cases, such as Petitioner’s, where the elements of Murder in the First Degree were and are satisfied under both Section 701.1 as it then existed, and under Section 701.10 which was subsequently enacted.
