Christopher Barnett – Photo: Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office.
An openly gay Republican who ran for governor of Oklahoma in 2018 has been arrested and held without bail for shooting a process server and then threatening a mass shooting.
Christopher Barnett, 36, faces a charge of assault and battery with a deadly weapon for shooting a process server who came to his door on the evening of July 24.
Audio recordings and multiple videos of the incident, which have since been released to the public and posted on The Tulsa World, show the process server holding up some papers and asking for “Christopher.”
A man behind the door — allegedly Barnett — responds, “I’m sorry, you have the wrong house. Get off my property, or you’re gonna be dead.” The man leans in and asks the person to repeat himself, to which the man responds, “Get off my property, or you’re gonna be dead.”
“OK, I’m just here trying to deliver documents to Christopher,” the process server says. One of the video clips shows him put his hand in his pocket, apparently prompting Barnett to demand he “show his hands,” before telling him again: “Get off the property.”
“OK, I’m leaving, but no necessary threats of acts of violence. It’s all being recorded, OK?” the process server says. Barnett then tells the man, “Get off the property, or you’ll be dead.”
Throughout the exchange, the process server repeatedly tells Barnett he can’t hear what he’s saying and that he should come to the door. The process server then backs away from the door, and stands on the lawn, telling Barnett, “I’ll wait for you out here. OK?” He is then shot in the left elbow, and runs off the property. Police say the injury was non-life threatening.
Barnett was arrested on the assault and battery charged and released. In a post on his Facebook page, which is no longer publicly visible, Barnett defended his actions, writing: “The person I shot last night pulled a gun on me, on my own property. They were told four times to leave the property, they were told they were trespassing. They then pulled a gun and I fired my gun and shot them.”
But Barnett was arrested again the following day on a separate charge of threatening an act of violence for a post on his blog, which he maintains as part of his organization “Transparency for Oklahomans.”
The post in question, titled “How would Chris Barnett take down TU?”, details a “hypothetical” plan for a mass shooting while people exit University of Tulsa football games at halftime.
His second booking photo, after being arrested on July 26, shows him broadly grinning from ear to ear — prompting local ABC affiliate KTUL to ask him why.
“Well I’m smiling because I’ve done nothing wrong,” Barnett said. “I’m smiling because I have a beautiful smile.”
He also defended shooting the process server, saying: “For crying out loud, what crime have we committed? We’re homeowners, we have a right to defend our property when someone’s trespassing and they’re posing a danger to our health an imminent danger, making me fear for my life. I don’t have to retreat, I don’t have to cower.”
After watching the videos and listening to an audio recording of the incident, Special Judge April Seibert ruled on July 29 that Barnett should remain jailed without bail.
On Aug. 1, Barnett pleaded not guilty to the charges against him. He and his defense attorney, Brendan McHugh, have argued that Barnett should be immune from prosecution because the shooting was within the rules of Oklahoma’s “Stand Your Ground” law.
Both men maintain that Barnett was justified in shooting because the process server had a weapon in his possession at the time.
As for the charge of threatening an act of violence, Barnett and his lawyer argue that the post on the mass shooting specifically states that it is a “hypothetical” situation, and is a form of legally protected speech under the First Amendment.
Barnett is next scheduled to appear in court on Aug. 26 for a preliminary hearing.
Prior to these incidents, Barnett was best known for seeking the Republican nomination for governor. He placed eighth out of 10 candidates in the primary, earning 5,223 votes, or 1.16% of all votes cast.
Barnett says he’s “not ashamed” of his actions and believes he will be vindicated of the charges against him.
“I have no regrets, and I’m happy to go all the way to court,” he told KTUL. “I’m happy to get a jury trial and I will exonerate myself. I will be found not guilty if it goes that far, but the district attorney would be a fool to let it go that far.”
Republicans in nine states are calling for the overturn of marriage equality.
In Idaho, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota, lawmakers have introduced resolutions demanding the U.S. Supreme Court reverse its landmark 2015 decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, in which the court struck down all existing state-level same-sex marriage bans.
Last month, the Idaho House of Representatives voted 46-24 to approve one such resolution, asking the nation's highest court to "restore the natural definition of marriage, a union of one man and one woman."
While the resolution is non-binding and doesn't require the Supreme Court to take action, Republican lawmakers see it as a "messaging" bill that expresses their extreme displeasure with same-sex marriage.
The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents passed a resolution banning all drag performances on its 11 university campuses.
The resolution states that the Board of Regents finds that "it is inconsistent" with the university's core values, including respect for others, to allow special event venues on the university's campuses to host drag shows "that involve biological males dressing in women’s clothing, wearing exaggerated female make up and/or exaggerated prosthetics meant to parody the female body type, and that are: open to the public; involve sexualized, vulgar or lewd conduct; and involve conduct that demeans women."
A federal judge blocked Texas A&M University from banning a drag show from being held on any of the university's 11 campuses. The temporary preliminary injunction was issued on March 24 by Judge Lee Rosenthal of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.
As a result, "Draggieland," a student-produced drag event, will go on as planned at the Rudder Theatre on the university's College Station campus this Thursday, March 27.
The pageant -- which has sold out the 750-seat Rudder Theatre every year since 2020 -- features contestants who wear clothing or makeup that often, but does not always, run counter to their gender identity. The contestants also dance and answer questions about what drag and LGBTQ culture means to them.
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