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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Judge Susan Worthington Let a Violent Child Predator Jesse Butler Walk… Time For Her To Face The Consequences-WEEK IN REVIEW

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

True Crime Today

News, True Crime, News Commentary

3.3907 Ratings

🗓️ 10 November 2025

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The people of Stillwater, Oklahoma, have had enough.
Hundreds gathered outside the Payne County Courthouse demanding accountability after Judge Susan Worthington allowed a violent sexual predator to avoid prison.
Eighteen-year-old Jesse Butler, charged with eleven felonies including rape, attempted rape, and strangulation, received no prison time under Oklahoma’s Youthful Offender Law.

Despite partial video evidence and one victim requiring neck surgery, Judge Worthington ruled that Butler qualified for rehabilitation instead of incarceration. The potential 78-year sentence vanished, replaced by a single year of supervision, therapy, and a curfew.

The decision ignited outrage across the state.
Tribal victim services, survivors, parents, and students rallied together on the courthouse steps, chanting for justice and calling for Judge Worthington’s removal.
State lawmakers labeled the ruling “unacceptable” and vowed to review how the system failed so catastrophically.

In this episode of Hidden Killers with Tony Brueski, Tony breaks down the story that’s shaken Stillwater to its core — how a judge’s compassion turned into negligence, how leniency for violent predators endangers every community, and why the public’s outrage might finally force real reform.

We’ll examine the judicial system that let this happen, the decades-long ties that bind small-town power networks, and the growing call to close legal loopholes that allow violent offenders to hide behind “youthful offender” status.

This isn’t about politics. It’s about safety.
Because when the system starts protecting predators instead of people, it’s not justice anymore — it’s failure in a robe.

Watch the full breakdown and join the conversation in the comments.
🔔 Subscribe for more real stories of justice, accountability, and the fight to protect the innocent.

#Stillwater #SusanWorthington #JesseButler #HiddenKillers #TrueCrimePodcast #OklahomaJustice #YouthfulOffender #VictimsRights #JudicialAccountability #TrueCrimeNews


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers Week in review.

0:02.4

I look back at the most prolific stories of the week.

0:05.5

This is Hidden Killers with Tony Bruske.

0:08.6

Here now, Tony Bruske.

0:12.6

Surprise when you release an 18-year-old predator onto the streets

0:20.4

with pretty much zero consequences other than a

0:23.9

slap on the wrist like Judge Susan Worthington has done with Jesse Butler in Stillwater,

0:32.1

Oklahoma.

0:33.4

The mutants who pled no contest to the essay of two 16-year-old girls, one who almost died by strangulation while he was assaying her, and he videotaped it.

0:48.3

Turns out the villagers don't like that. They come out in droves to let you know, Susan, that that was a bad decision.

0:57.1

That was not a choice that you probably should have made.

1:00.1

You probably shouldn't have gone for the youthful offender status on this when, you know,

1:05.7

basically the odds of him going out and reoffending are pretty much a reality that they're going to take place,

1:14.3

in my opinion.

1:15.8

And probably the opinion of all the people outside of your courthouse, too.

1:19.2

They didn't come to the courthouse for spectacle.

1:22.7

They came because silence wasn't working anymore.

1:26.3

Parents who begged for answers, students who'd watched from a distance, and finally

1:30.9

decided enough was enough.

1:33.6

Survivors who'd been asked to relive their trauma over and over just to prove it

1:39.8

happened.

1:44.0

And I guess that wasn't enough. Okay. happened.

...

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