Freeling resigned in 1922 to focus on the Red River litigation. He practiced law in Oklahoma City after his retirement. In 1924, Freeling ran in the
1924 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, but lost the primary. He would later represent the mastermind of the
Osage Indian murders,
William K. Hale, in his murder trial in 1926. He died on April 18, 1937, in Oklahoma City, where he was later buried. He never married, had no children, and was survived by a sister in
Italy. ==References==