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Kan. reverses decision to parole man who killed trooper in 1978

Jimmie K. Nelms and another man were sentenced to serve two life sentences for the aggravated kidnapping and murder of Trooper Conroy O’Brien following a traffic stop

Kansas Trooper's Killing-Parole

This photo provided by the Kansas Highway Patrol shows Trooper Conroy O’Brien, who was killed in 1978. (Kansas Highway Patrol via AP)

AP

Editor’s note: The Kansas Prisoner Review Board has since rescinded its earlier decision to grant parole to Jimmie K. Nelms, who was convicted in the 1978 killing of a Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper Conroy G. O’Brien. This article, originally published on May 14, has been updated to reflect that change.


By John Hanna
Associated Press

TOPEKA, Kan. — A man convicted of killing a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper in 1978 will remain behind bars after the Kansas Prisoner Review Board rescinded its earlier decision to grant him parole.

Jimmie K. Nelms and another man, both from Tulsa, Oklahoma, were sentenced to serve two life sentences for the aggravated kidnapping and murder of Trooper Conroy O’Brien following a traffic stop on the Kansas Turnpike about 55 miles (89 kilometers) northeast of Wichita. Nelms’ codefendant, Walter Myrick, died in prison in 2009.

In Kansas, killing a law enforcement officer now can be punished by death, with the only other possible sentence in a capital case being life in prison without parole. But in 1978, Kansas had no death penalty, and Nelms was eligible for parole after 30 years in 2008. He sought parole in 2011 and 2021.

The review board initially approved Nelms’ release several weeks after a March 6 hearing. However, on May 19, the Kansas Department of Corrections said the board held a new hearing on May 16 and decided to reverse its previous decision, according to the Wichita Eagle.

“The board, in a new hearing on May 16 with Nelms, rescinded its previous decision to grant parole and decided to deny him release at this time,” the department said in a news release Monday.

A decision becomes public when it’s criticized

The decision didn’t become public until the Kansas State Troopers Association condemned it as “disgraceful and disgusting” in a statement.

“Those who murder law enforcement officers should expect to receive the death penalty, not to be walking free on the streets of KS,” state Attorney General Kris Kobach said in a post on the social platform X.

The Kansas Highway Patrol expressed relief following the reversal of the parole decision.

“We are grateful to the KRB for ultimately choosing justice,” Association President and KHP Technical Trooper Sage Hill told the Wichita Eagle. “Trooper O’Brien gave his life in the line of duty. Granting parole to the man responsible for that murder deeply undermined public trust and the sacrifices of every law enforcement officer. Today, justice was reaffirmed, and we are grateful. Tomorrow, we will begin working to make sure such a close call never happens again.”

A traffic stop turns deadly in 1978

According to court records and news reports, O’Brien stopped Nelms’ car for speeding about 2 miles south of a turnpike service area. Myrick was driving.

As O’Brien wrote a ticket in his patrol car, Nelms approached the driver’s side with a gun, according to authorities. Nelms forced O’Brien to get out of the car and told him to lie down in a ditch. Authorities said Nelms took O’Brien’s gun, struck the trooper with it, and, when O’Brien fell to the ground, shot him twice in the head.

O’Brien was 26 with a pregnant wife. Nelms was 31 and Myrick, 25. A 21-year-old man was also in the car with Nelms and Myrick, but he pleaded guilty to lesser charges and provided crucial testimony against Nelms.

The men fled in Nelms’ car, left the turnpike, and eventually drove north, where another patrol trooper spotted the car about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of where O’Brien died. Nelms’ car and the trooper’s collided in a pasture, and a gun battle ensued.

Nelms denied he was the shooter, but jurors convicted him and Myrick of murder, aggravated kidnapping and other charges during a joint trial.

Nelms served most of his sentence in maximum-security prisons but was transferred to a lower-security facility in 2023. Online Department of Corrections records show four disciplinary reports against him from 1996 to 2017, the last for disobeying orders. Thompson said Nelms works in the prison laundry.

Kansas changes how parole decisions are made

When Nelms sought parole in 2011, decisions were made by a three-member parole board appointed by the governor, subject to state Senate confirmation. That same year, Republican Gov. Sam Brownback issued an executive order abolishing the parole board in favor of a panel of Department of Corrections employees.

Brownback said the move would save the state $500,000 a year, and sentencing laws after 1993 limited parole. Critics worried that the department’s board would release inmates just to avoid prison overcrowding, and Kelly, then a state senator, called the change “a really bad idea.”

Masterson, the current Senate president, backed the change in 2011 but said earlier in May that it “has not functioned as intended” and that he would work for changes to see that the review board members “rightly answer to the people of Kansas.”

Democratic state Rep. Tom Sawyer, who reviewed Nelms’ case as a parole board member from 2009 through June 2011, said the board sometimes rejected parole when corrections officials recommended. Now, he said, the process is “all in-house.”

Police1 Staff News contributed to this report.

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