Another mental exam ordered for Oklahoma beheading suspect
NORMAN, Okla. — A judge in Oklahoma refused Wednesday to accept a guilty plea from a man accused of beheading a co-worker at a food processing plant in 2014, instead ordering another mental evaluation.
Cleveland County District Judge Lori Walkley said she wouldn’t accept the plea from Alton Nolen, who has said he wants the death penalty for the attack at Vaughan Foods in Moore, because Nolen is not mentally competent enough. He will go to the state mental hospital for more tests.
Nolen is charged with first-degree murder in the beheading of Colleen Hufford, 54, at the plant shortly after he was suspended from the company for making racial remarks. He was also accused of stabbing and wounding another co-worker before a company executive shot him.
“They’re entitled to justice,” Walkley said of the victims and their families. “While it may not be swift, it will be sure.”


