Oklahoma
A month after Nex Benedict’s death: Crisis calls, anti-LGBTQ+ both on the rise in Oklahoma
Nex Benedict remembered with demonstration in front of Owasso High
Members of the Owasso community, including current and former Owasso High School students, gather for peaceful demonstration in honor of Nex Benedict.
National and local LGBTQ+ advocates spoke this week about Nex Benedict’s death and the anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric surrounding the tragedy, one month after a reported altercation involving the 16-year-old.
Advocates blamed Oklahoma state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters for fueling hateful sentiments toward Oklahoma’s LGBTQ+ community, and called for an explanation from the Oklahoma State Department of Education and Owasso Public Schools.
Oklahoma City native Sara Cunningham, the founder of Free Mom Hugs, said the state government is ripping protections from the LGBTQ+ community, but vowed to continue efforts to combat these attempts.
“If you don’t hear the cry of the oppressed, then you are not listening,” Cunningham said.
What happened to Nex Benedict?
Benedict was a 16-year-old Owasso High School student who died in February after sustaining injuries in an altercation on school grounds. Medical examiners are still completing their investigation into what caused the death of Benedict, but police said Feb. 21 that an autopsy determined Nex did not die as a result of trauma.
News of the high school sophomore’s death has generated widespread attention, in part because of the student’s gender-expansive identity and claims of bullying that led up to the fight.
Critics blame Nex Benedict’s death on anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric from Ryan Walters, ‘Libs of TikTok’
Critics and LGBTQ+ advocates argue negativity amplified by Walters and right-wing social media accounts has fed aggression toward LGBTQ+ individuals.
Chasten Buttigieg, an LGBTQ+ advocate and spouse of U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, said Walters is failing to keep students like Benedict safe in schools by hiring anti-LGBTQ+ people to prominent positions, such as Chaya Raichik, the creator of right-wing social media account “Libs of TikTok.”
In January, Raichik was named to an Oklahoma library media advisory committee by Walters.
“You’re bringing in somebody who’s famous for riling up people on the internet, who traffics in arrangement engagement, as I like to call it, and you’re putting them in a position of power specifically related to the education of young children,” Chasten said.
Raichik is not qualified to be on the advisory committee, Chasten said, adding that he wants to see qualified people in Oklahoma education who care about the state’s students.
Oklahoma consistently ranks low in terms of education, recently ranking second to last. Chasten said this is what Walters should be focusing on.
“Every kid deserves a classroom where it is OK to be themselves, to focus on their learning and know that the adults in power have their backs,” Chasten said. “Nex was robbed of that opportunity, and the state superintendent should be extremely embarrassed.”
Ryan Walters, ‘Libs of TikTok’ respond to criticism
In response to criticism from LGBTQ+ advocates blaming Benedict’s death on Walters’ rhetoric, state Education Department spokesperson Dan Isett said Walters is heartbroken by Benedict’s death, and that the “radical left” is using the situation in a “political game.”
“What we have seen is the radical left and their allies in the liberal media taking partial information, distorting it, and exploiting the death of a young Oklahoman to play a desperate political game,” Isett said. “It is another example of the extreme gender ideology the left wants to push on our schools.”
Raichik has denied on social media the claims suggesting she played a role in Benedict’s death.
HRC launches separate Owasso High investigation, citing lack of trust in Walters, state Department of Education
Last week, Owasso High School confirmed the U.S. Department of Education will launch a civil rights investigation into the district.
The investigation will look into allegations that Owasso Public Schools failed to adequately address reports of sex-based harassment.
During the Thursday news conference, Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said the HRC doesn’t have faith in Walters to investigate Owasso High School, and the organization is seeking an explanation of what happened on Feb. 7, and what led up to it.
Robinson said the organization also is seeking answers as to how the school district and its administration handle anti-LGBTQ+ harassment.
The group also is asking the U.S. Department of Education to investigate the state Education Department’s role in Benedict’s death.
“Nex had a whole life left to live and it’s no coincidence that what happened to them happened in the state where elected officials and adults like Superintendent Ryan Walters have repeatedly villainized trans kids,” Robinson said.
In a statement from an Owasso Public Schools spokesperson, the spokesperson said the safety and security of the district’s students is its top priority, adding that it’s committed to fostering a safe and inclusive environment for everyone.
The spokesperson said all reported bullying accusations are investigated by administrators and reviewed by the district’s director of safety and security.
According to the spokesperson, Owasso High School students go to an assembly at the beginning of each school year where they’re introduced to their school resource officers and district’s director of safety and security and review the school district’s handbook with school leaders.
Crisis calls increased after Nex Benedict’s death
Lance Preston, founder and executive director of the Rainbow Youth Project, said after Benedict’s death, the organization’s crisis call center received 1,000 contacts from Oklahoma in February, and the large majority of those occurred after Benedict’s death was reported in the news. He said 87% of those callers reported bullying in Oklahoma schools.
Preston said typically, the call center receives an average of 350 contacts from Oklahoma each month.
In March 2023, it received 63 Oklahoma calls. That number shot up to 406 the following July, and 453 in August amid anti-LGBTQ+ policies and rhetoric from elected officials, Preston said.
The Rainbow Youth Project has been assisting three other students at Owasso High School who reported incidences of bullying starting last September.
After Benedict’s death, several former and current Owasso students told The Oklahoman they recognized their own experiences in Benedict’s story. They described instances of repeated bullying and harassment over their gender identities and sexualities and said they often felt administrators failed to appropriately intervene.
So far this year, the hotline has received 3,331 calls, and 81% of those highlight bullying across the country as a key factor behind the caller’s emotional distress, Preston said.
“These kids are hurting, not only from Nex Benedict’s tragic death, but they’re hurting from the political rhetoric that Ryan Walters continues to spew even after (Benedict’s) death,” Preston said.
Advocacy group tracks anti-LGBTQ+ incidents after Nex Benedict’s death
Although the exact details of the fight are unclear, Benedict’s family and friends have said Benedict was routinely bullied because of their gender identity.
The FBI’s 2022 crime report showed that anti-LGBTQ+ hate crime reports increased from the previous year, with a 13.8% hump in reports based on sexual orientation and a 32.9% increase in reported hate crimes based on gender identity.
Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation began sorting reported anti-LGBTQ+ incidences in Oklahoma after Benedict’s death. The organizations data reports 18 incidents since September 2022.
Nex Benedict’s Choctaw heritage points to broader crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous people
Benedict was of Choctaw heritage, and Nicole McAfee, executive director of Freedom Oklahoma, said policy isolation of those who are trans or 2-Spirit isn’t new. They added that it’s not that different from Indigenous, 2-Spirit and queer youth who often didn’t survive forced removal and placement into residential boarding schools, which caused a loss of language for gender expansiveness and queerness.
“But, we remember and we’ve unearthed old language and develop new language and documented our own histories, and still, too many people in Oklahoma see 2SLGBTQ+ folks as something they can take apart so they can understand how to socialize us away from queerness or tried to wipe us from existence once again,” McAfee said.
McAfee said Benedict was an Indigenous person who died on Indigenous land, which speaks to the larger missing and murdered Indigenous relatives crisis.
It also speaks to the McGirt v. Oklahoma decision and whether there should be federal and tribal agencies engaged in the investigation into Benedict’s death, McAfee said.
Anti-LGBTQ+ bills crowd Oklahoma Legislature
At the beginning of Oklahoma’s 2024 legislative session, over 50 bills targeting members of the LGBTQ+ community were filed during the 2024 legislative session in Oklahoma, and about a handful advanced from committee.
These bills target public school activities and curriculum related to LGBTQ+ topics, speech and expression and would allow certain religious exemptions.
Robinson said she’s seen the impact that anti-LGBTQ+ bills have had on families.
“I’ve made too many phone calls to parents who have lost a child to hatred,” Robinson said. “I’ve tried to comfort children who have been traumatized by bullies and bigots — many of those bullies being adult elected officials.”
McAfee said Oklahoma politicians are political posturing and advancing laws and policies that create a hostile environment among the state’s vulnerable residents.
At the same time, state politicians are either ignoring the death of Benedict and pretending LGBTQ+ Oklahomans are some sort of myth, McAfee said, or they’re clarifying their disgust for the state’s queer community.
They said Oklahoma leaders and enforcers of the status quo are trying to make the state unsafe for LGBTQ+ youth, but queer advocates will dismantle every obstacle to protect them.
Oklahoma
Most Oklahoma voters didn’t cast a ballot during June’s primary election
Just 26%, or about one in four registered Oklahoma voters, cast a ballot in the race, according to an analysis of the results.
In total, 630,085 people weighed in on a state question to gradually increase the minimum wage. It was the only race open to Democrats, Republicans and independents, who weren’t eligible to vote in partisan races.
Democrats have typically opened their closed primaries to include independents, but failed to submit the paperwork for this year’s primaries on time. Some voters expressed frustration with the system on election day.
This year’s polls drew fewer voters than in 2018, the last time there was a similar gubernatorial race without incumbents. The election included a state question to approve medical marijuana, and 44% of registered voters cast ballots.
There are almost 1.3 million registered Republicans in Oklahoma, but the GOP race for governor only garnered about 400,000 ballots. Out of more than 613,000 registered Democrats, only about 172,000 voted in Tuesday’s election.
Even though general elections are usually better attended, Oklahoma’s numbers were also low during the 2024 presidential election. One report from the University of Florida rated Oklahoma’s turnout at the time as the lowest in the nation.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Adds OF Adi Hansen From Southern Idaho
NORMAN — Oklahoma softball’s transfer portal activity may have been fairly slow developing.
But now, as the portal window nears its end, the Sooners have started having success.
Oklahoma added outfielder Adi Hansen, a standout at the College of Southern Idaho for the last two seasons on Thursday.
Hansen’s announcement, made on Instagram, followed shortly after Middle Tennessee outfielder Macie Harter announced her commitment to the Sooners.
Hansen led the Golden Eagles with a .457 batting average in 186 at bats in 2026, with an eye-popping 82 runs scored and a school-record 62 stolen bases on 67 attempts.
Hansen had 17 games with two or more stolen bases this season and twice had four stolen bases in a game.
Hansen had four triples and 21 RBIs, drawing 23 walks.
She earned NJCAA first-team All-America honors, helping her team finish 43-13 with a NJCAA Division I Juco World Series appearance.
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In 2025, as a freshman, Hansen hit .401 with 36 stolen bases and 62 ruyns scored.
Hansen is a Logan, Utah, product.
Hansen and Harter join a group of outfielders that includes Kai Minor in centerfield and Ella Parker in right field.
The Sooners lost Abby Dayton to graduation and Kasidi Pickering to transfer after the season. Pickering will reportedly transfer to Texas Tech.
Oklahoma finished 52-10 last season, missing the Women’s College World Series for the first time since 2015 after falling to Mississippi State in three games in the Norman Super Regional.
The Sooners have a strong incoming recruiting class and return a trio of pitchers — Audrey Lowry, Miali Guachino and Allyssa Parker — as well as experienced hitters Kendall Wells, Gabbie Garcia, Nelly McEnroe-Marinas plus Minor and Ella Parker.
In addition to the departures of Dayton and Pickering, the Sooners also lost pitchers Sydney Berzon and Kierston Deal, first baseman Isabela Emerling, and second baseman Ailana Agbayani to graduation. Outfielder Tia Milloy, pitcher Berkley Zache and utility player Riley Zache also entered the transfer portal.
Oklahoma’s incoming class includes Edmond Santa Fe pitcher Keegan Baker, Lakewood, Calif., infielder Ki’ele Ho-Ching, Mililani, Hawaii, infielder Ori Mailo, Fullerton, Calif., pitcher Malaya Majam-Finch, Katy, Texas, pitcher EK Smith, and Mesa, Ariz., outfilder Payton Westra.
Mailo was with the Sooners this season, redshirting after joining the program a year early.
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma City police investigating early morning shooting
OKLAHOMA CITY (KOKH) — Oklahoma City police are investigating an early morning shooting that left one man injured in northeast Oklahoma City.
Around 3 a.m. on Thursday, emergency crews were called to a reported shooting near Kelley and Wilshire Blvd.
Investigators say the shooting occurred between a couple inside the home, adding that the woman shot the man.
However, police say they are trying to determine if the shooting was accidental.
The victim was rushed to the hospital for treatment.
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The woman has been taken into custody for questioning, but it is unknown if she will face charges just yet.
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