That designation would make the bills dead for this session, but available for consideration next year.

Chairman Scott Biggs called a brief meeting of his House conference committee Thursday evening where House authors of four key reform measures announced they would be signing the bills out as "committee conferees cannot agree."

Gov. Mary Fallin called out a House committee chairman for bottling up criminal justice reform bills Thursday as time ticked down on efforts to enact meaningful reforms.

State Rep. Cory Williams, D-Stillwater, tried to quiz committee members about what they could not agree on, but was cut short by Biggs.

"You're witnessing a dog and pony show, nothing more," Williams said, noting that House leaders could have reassigned the bills to another committee to get them heard.

"At the end of the day, you have one person that is holding up criminal justice reform in the state of Oklahoma despite the will of the people and you have leadership that either agree with him or are failing to lead, one way or the other," Williams said.

"I think the people of Oklahoma deserve to know, specifically, which representatives and which senators don't agree and refuse to let this stuff move forward," Williams said. "Let's just put it on the (House) floor and we'll find out exactly who agrees and who doesn't agree."