Bizarre example of ‘slut shaming’ in a death penalty decision
April 2025
This is an extraordinary case of ‘slut shaming’ where what a woman was wearing featured as a key part in the evidence against her. The prosecutors even produced into the court proceedings a suitcase of provocative clothing as part of their case. We are asking you to write to the state governor to protest at her sentence.
Please express your delight at the good news that her case has been referred back to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, but raise your concerns that she has spent time on death row following a conviction following prejudicial evidence which clearly violated her rights under the 14th Amendment, and which has been and continues to be only too common in the trials of women accused of capital crimes in the United States. Stress your hope that she will be granted a new trial which meets the requisite standards of fairness. Please write to Governor J Kevin Stitt about the case of Brenda Andrew, the only woman on death row in Oklahoma:
Background Information
Brenda Andrew (pictured, the Oklahoman), the only woman on death row in Oklahoma, was sentenced to death in 2004 following her conviction for the murder of her husband. Ms Andrew did not kill her husband – she was said to have lured her husband into the garage under the pretence of starting the pilot light of the furnace – where he was shot by her boyfriend, James Pavatt, who admitted his guilt but said he had acted alone. The Jury, however, concluded that the couple had conspired to collect on a life insurance policy, and both were found guilty.
On 21st January 2025, the US Supreme Court referred Ms Andrew’s case back to the Appellate Court, requesting it to take another look at how the evidence of the Prosecution might have prevented a Jury from giving proper consideration to her arguments of innocence.
Her Defence Lawyers, who did not argue against the evidence presented at her trial, said at the time they were too stunned to do so. This evidence took the form of an attack with accusations of immoral conduct – what has been termed ‘sex’ or ‘slut shaming’. Not only did they call witnesses to give evidence of Ms Andrew’s sexual relationships over the past 20 years, but they also spoke of her ‘provocative clothing’, called her a ‘hoochie*’ and a ‘slut puppy’, and – in his closing evidence, the Prosecutor opened a suitcase and showed the Jury Ms Andrew’s underwear – a thong and a lace bra – saying, ‘The grieving widow packs this in her appropriate act of grief? … a grieving widow doesn’t pack her thong underwear and run off with her boyfriend!’
Elizabeth Bruenig of The Atlantic says attacking women on trial for criminal offences with accusations of immoral conduct has been, and continues to be, common. As recent examples, she cites the cases of Mary Ellen Samuels who was convicted of murder in California in 1994 following the introduction of pornographic letters and a nude photograph, and of Amanda Knox whose demeanour and behaviour were deemed inappropriate following the murder of her fellow student. Men are rarely sentenced to death based on deviation from masculine gender norms, but many female defendants facing capital trials are derided by prosecutors for failures of femininity.
In their ruling, the Supreme Court held that Ms Andrew had properly relied on an earlier Supreme Court case, (Payne v Tennessee – 1991) arguing that the State’s evidence was so prejudicial that it violated her rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals now has to determine whether the Prosecutor’s evidence about Ms Andrew’s sexual behaviour and clothing was so prejudicial that it warrants a new trial. They are to re-examine her prosecution to determine if Judges ‘reviewing this record could disagree with Andrew that the trial court’s mistaken admission of irrelevant evidence was so ‘unduly prejudicial’ as to render her trial ‘fundamentally unfair’.
Statement by Jessica Sutton, Attorney for MS Andrew:
“The prosecution invited the jury to convict and condemn Ms. Andrew to death because she was not a ‘stereotypical’ woman — her clothing was not modest enough, her demeanour was not emotional enough, and she was not chaste enough,”
Statement by Sandra Babcock, Cornell Law Professor and member of the Defence Team:
‘Wielding these gendered tropes to justify a conviction and punishment of death is intolerable and poses a threat to everyone who does not follow rigid gender norms…. With this decision, the U.S. Supreme Court has for the first time signalled that prosecutors may not use, and courts may not admit, prejudicial evidence attacking women’s abilities as mothers and their private sex lives without violating women’s constitutional rights.”
Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Arlene Johnson said the trial was “rife with error” which, “at its most egregious, includes a pattern of introducing evidence that has no purpose other than to hammer home that Brenda Andrew is a bad wife, a bad mother, and a bad woman.”
Judge Robert Bacharach of the Tenth Circuit wrote the prosecution focused “from start to finish on Ms. Andrew’s sex life” and “portrayed Ms. Andrew as a scarlet woman, a modern Jezebel, sparking distrust based on her loose morals…plucking away any realistic chance that the jury would seriously consider her version of events.”
Note: Ms Andrew’s Attorney, Jessica Sutton, has also argued that – as the only woman on Oklahoma’s death row, she may be experiencing disparate negative treatment compared to men and even ‘functional solitary confinement.’
Sources: Death Penalty Information Center; The Atlantic; Oklahoma Watch; AP News
We hope you find time to write to the governor.
Contact details:
The Honorable J Kevin Stitt
Governor of the State of Oklahoma
Oklahoma State Capitol
2300 N. Lincoln Blvd; Suite 212
Oklahoma City
OK 73105
USA.
Emails can be tried at: https://oklahoma.gov/governor/contact/general-information/contact-the-governor.html which gives access to a form.
*Hoochie: derogative term for a woman who has several sexual partners.

