The case of 18-year-old Jesse Mack Butler has ignited anger and accusations of systemic failure after a “sweetheart plea deal” allowed a young man facing what could have been nearly 80 years behind bars to avoid serious prison time.
In early 2024, Butler, then 17 and a student at Stillwater Public Schools, was charged with 11 counts, including rape, attempted rape, rape by instrumentation, sexual battery, forcible oral sodomy, strangulation, and domestic assault/battery by strangulation, KJRH reported.
The allegations spanned two high-school girlfriends, and court documents say one victim was left near death after being choked; another victim alleges she was strangled unconscious and that Butler even bragged he wanted to film the act, according to
Initially charged as an adult, the potential sentence at trial reportedly approached 78 years, according to KOCO News.
In a turn that has provoked outrage, Butler’s case was reclassified under Oklahoma’s “youthful offender” statute, effectively treating offenses committed as a minor with much lighter consequences.
He pleaded “no contest,” meaning he neither admitted guilt nor disputed the charges, under the deal.
While originally facing adult charges, that status change removed the possibility of a full prison sentence. The result: only one year of rehabilitation and community service in lieu of decades behind bars, the New York Post reported.
The O’Colly reported:
Butler’s status was changed to youthful offender after a hearing July 24. A youthful offender status usually grants rehabilitation and less severe punishment than an adult would receive. On Aug. 25, Butler pleaded no contest to the 10 counts and an additional 11th count he received for violating a protective order.
The Office of Juvenile Affairs created a rehabilitation plan and presented it to the judge Monday. The plan included more than 100 hours of community service, a curfew, no social media, daily check-ins and weekly counseling until his 19th birthday. It was approved.
The court sentenced Butler to 78 years Aug. 25, but as long as he complies with his rehabilitation plan, he will not serve any jail time.
Parents of the victims call it a slap in the face.
“It’s a complete injustice to these girls and to future victims, because unfortunately, statistically, it won’t end,” said one mother. “Not only are you giving a slap in the face to these survivors, you are potentially putting other women at risk by not holding him accountable.”
The mom of the second victim called the deal a “joke.”
“It’s not equivalent to what he did to them,” she said. “I told the DA, I don’t want him to get away with this, because I cannot know that another mother is going to have to go through what I went through,” she continued.
State Representative J. J. Humphrey (R-Choctaw) blasted the case in a statement to Fox News: “If that don’t set you on fire, your wood’s wet. You know what I mean? You’ve got a bad deal. That sets me on fire.”
“Does it absolutely smack of political favor that you’re going to erase rapes and sexual crimes so you can give this guy a slap on the wrist?” Humphrey added. “Oklahoma, better pay attention. Wake up.”
Humphrey said he intends to file a petition calling for a grand jury investigation into the Payne County District Attorney’s handling of the case.
WATCH:
Report: Oklahoma teenager Jesse Mack Butler who is 18 years old has avoided what could have been nearly 80 years in prison after being convicted of r*ping and assaulting his two high school girlfriends. Butler received what many people are calling a “sweetheart plea deal” pic.twitter.com/yyBqSCbQxr
— The Calvin Coolidge Project (@TheCalvinCooli1) October 26, 2025
This story originally appeared on TheGateWayPundit
