Lessie Benningfield Randle, Viola Fletcher and Hughes Van Ellis Sr., the final three recognized survivors of the 1921 Tulsa race bloodbath, have continued their pursuit of justice.  

They’ve appealed to the Oklahoma Supreme Courtroom, urging a swift reversal of Tulsa County District Choose Caroline Wall’s controversial dismissal of their lawsuit. 

At a press convention held on the Oklahoma Supreme Courtroom, the authorized workforce representing the survivor expressed confidence within the probability of the courtroom overturning Choose Wall’s ruling. 

“The info of this case align with the long-standing property-based limitations of Oklahoma’s public nuisance statute,” mentioned Damario Solomon-Simmons, the lead lawyer for the survivors and founding father of Justice for Greenwood. 

“The District Courtroom’s imposition of a heightened pleading customary on the survivors is unprecedented in Oklahoma’s authorized historical past,” Solomon-Simmons continued.  

“Our purchasers have sufficiently pleaded a public nuisance declare, as outlined by the Oklahoma Supreme Courtroom in its landmark determination on Johnson & Johnson in November 2021.” 

Randle, 107, Fletcher, 108, and Van Ellis, 102, are the remaining survivors of the horrific bloodbath, which destroyed the thriving Greenwood District in Tulsa and brought on the lack of numerous lives and property, has lengthy been missed, and the survivors have been denied justice. 

Their authorized workforce contends that Choose Wall’s ruling imposes an unjust and burdensome requirement on events alleging public nuisance claims.  

The courtroom mandated that the survivors present a selected abatement treatment to deal with the difficulty earlier than any discovery, trial, or legal responsibility dedication happens.  

The survivor’s co-counsel Randall Adams, a Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP litigation accomplice, mentioned this uncommon pleading customary lacks any basis in Oklahoma’s discover pleading code or prior case regulation. 

Additional, he mentioned the District Courtroom allowed the defendants to violate an settlement made in open courtroom, promising to not file new motions to dismiss the survivors’ unjust enrichment claims.  

Regardless of the settlement, the defendants filed a second movement to dismiss the unjust enrichment claims, and to the dismay of the survivors’ authorized workforce, the District Courtroom granted these baseless motions. 

“It’s crucial to acknowledge that permitting Choose Wall’s determination to face can have extreme implications for people and companies throughout Oklahoma in search of to uphold their authorized rights,” Solomon-Simmons emphasised.  

He claimed {that a} favorable determination by the Oklahoma Supreme Courtroom would “uphold the values of justice and equity for all state residents and resolve the complaints of those that had suffered due to the Tulsa race bloodbath.”