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A building that was once the home of a Chickasha-based newspaper - a building now owned by the city of Chickasha - may be sold by the city. The city council will discuss the possible sale of the old Chickasha Star Newspaper building, which is downtown in the 100 block of South 4th Street. In background information provided to council members ahead tonight"s meeting, officials say the building was acquired for demolition three years ago, but there were concerns because the building is located in the downtown historic preservation district. Current estimates are that it would cost over $600,000 to rehabilitate the building. Officials say it appeared the city pursued a request for proposals and public auction for the building, but there was no interest at the time. A company called the Great Plains Land and Cattle Company has offered a bid of $15,000 for the site.

The panel will consider allowing Unit Petroleum Company to drill on city-owned property at Lake Chickasha. A surface damage agreement and a request to purchase water from the lake for the drilling operation are expected to be approved. The site is in Section 21 of Township 8 North, Range 9 West in Caddo County. The council is also to recognize Laura Miller as the city"s Employee of the Month. Miller is the city"s court clerk, who has worked in several areas of city government for 20 years. The council meets at 6:30 tonight at city hall.

It took a while to make the news, but Marathon Petroleum Corporation reports a large producing well near Lindsay. The well was producing nearly 2,100 barrels of oil and more than 1,600 metric cubic feet of natural gas per day. While south of Lindsay, the well is located in the Springer Play in Stephens County in Section 10 of Township 2 North, Range 4 West. The website www.okenergytoday.com says Marathon filed the completion report nearly five months after the initial production of the rig known as Papa Pump. The report indicated the driller used more than 260 thousand barrels of fluid and nearly 13 million pounds of proppant to bring the well in.

Owners and/or managers of downtown businesses which are part of the Chickasha Main Street Association will be meeting tomorrow night. The group wants to share information about the proposed new developments in downtown. The meeting is open to all downtown businesses, and membership to the association is not required. The meeting will be at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday at the Chamber of Commerce.

The next few years continue to look good for Continental Resources, according to chairman and CEO Harold Hamm. As many of you know, Contintental is one of the big players in the SCOOP and STACK oil and gas plays in Oklahoma, which run from the Kingfisher area through Chickasha and into the southern part of the state. The website www.okenergytoday.com reports Hamm told participants of an earnings call this week that the company’s 2019 first quarter net income was $187 million, which resulted in 50 cents per diluted share. Adjusted net income was more than $216 million, or 58 cents per diluted share. Continental"s net cash from all of its operating activities for the first quarter was more than $721 million. First quarter production was about 16 percent ahead of the same time last year, averaging more than 330,000 barrels of oil-equivalent per day. The number includes Continental"s work in the Bakken play in North Dakota. In the Springboard project for the SCOOP region, Hamm said production is ahead of what was forecast. For the month of April, production in the area was averaging 14,000 barrels of oil per day.

A truck fire east of Chickasha last night forced officials to shut down traffic for about an hour. The fire was at the Tabler Y, at the junction of US Highway 62 and State Highway 39. Officials had to re-route traffic around the fire for about an hour. The highway patrol responded to the call about 11:00 p.m. Friday. The initial report from the trooper who was called out to investigate indicated it was an unknown type of flatbed vehicle loaded with a fracking unit. It was not clear if anyone was injured or how the fire started.

Here"s what we"re talking about this weekend. Chase O"Brien and Bud Andrus with the Chickasha Antique Auto Club will be on the KOOL Konversation, talking about the group"s spring swap meet next weekend. On Real Estate Today with John Mosley, we"ll talk to former State Representative Joe Dorman, now the director of the Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy. We have links to these programs under the Community tab on this website.

May 3rd, 1999 is one of those days you talk about where you were and what you were doing. There was a huge tornado outbreak throughout Oklahoma, when deadly twisters careened through rural and urban areas alike. One of the largest tornadoes on record came to life right here in central and southwest Oklahoma. It became an F5 tornado, estimated to be about two miles wide and spinning about 300 miles per hour. It left a trail of devastation from near Apache, to Chickasha, into Bridge Creek, and then to Moore, Del City and beyond. Forty people lost their lives and dozens more were injured. More than $1 billion in damage occurred. The tornado really started to build after destroying a home west of Chickasha, then it tracked northeast to the Chickasha airport where it damaged a couple of hangars. It continued growing when it hit Bridge Creek where it wiped out much of that community, then violently turned its attention to Moore and the Oklahoma City area.

A Chickasha man is hospitalized after the pickup he was riding in ran off the road and into a ditch. 84-year old Bennie Busby suffered head injuries in the crash which happened west of Amber Thursday afternoon. Busby was taken to an Oklahoma City hospital where he was last in serious condition. The accident happened about 3 miles west of Amber near the intersection of CR 1280 and CS 2840. The driver of the pickup, 65-year old Melinda Martin of Pocasset - and an un-named 15-year old boy also riding in the truck - were not hurt. The highway patrol reported that something distracted Martin, causing her to run off the road. All three in the pickup were wearing their seatbelts.

There are a lot of things to do in the region this weekend. Chickasha is hosting an Open Streets program, Lindsay has its Founders Day, Elgin"s has its annual Crawds and Rods event, and Anadarko has a Cinco de Mayo celebration. The Chickasha Area YMCA and several partnering groups will let you play in the street in downtown Chickasha tomorrow. It"s the third year for the event, designed to encourage families to get out and play together. All the activities will be around the Rock Island Depot, and will run from about 10 o"clock until 1 o"clock tomorrow. In Lindsay, Founders Day activities include a rodeo tonight and tomorrow night, and numerous activities downtown tomorrow. Arts and craft vendors, the Marlow Gunfighters will be causing trouble, and there will be serenades from the Ole Troubadours. There"s a parade at 4 o"clock tomorrow afternoon. In Elgin, boiled crawdads and fast cars will be highlighted with the annual celebration for the Elgin Volunteer Fire Department tomorrow. Sunday afternoon and evening, Anadarko will have a Cinco de Mayo block party, downtown from 4 to 8 p.m.

In Stephens County, authorities are looking for a man who was swept away in flood waters from last night"s storms. The man was riding an ATV checking things on his pasture east of Comanche and was lost in floodwaters into Mud Creek near State Highway 53 and Johnson"s Corner. The Stephens County Sheriff’s Office, Comanche Fire Department, and Duncan fire and police were preparing to intensify their search for the man this morning.

April was a multi-million dollar month for new construction in the City of Chickasha. The city"s Community Development Department approved nearly $3.4 million in new building projects last month. Topping the list of commercial projects was a permit for the new Domino"s gas station and convenience store that is under construction at 4th and Missouri. That"s a $2.5 million project. Also, a building permit was issued to local contractors to renovate buildings in the downtown area for a micro-brewery. It"s a $300,000 project for a 4,700 sq. ft. operation in the 100 block of Chickasha Avenue, across from the Chickasha Hotel. In other commercial development, McDonald"s at 4th and Grand was approved for a more than $300,000 remodel project. Work on that project is not expected to start until this fall. In residential construction, Home Creations got the go-ahead to build another single family home in the Sleepy Hollow addition, valued at just under $115,000. New construction in Chickasha through April has topped $4 million.

The FBI is now in charge of the investigation of a bank robbery that took place in Chickasha yesterday. The suspect is not yet in custody. It was about 9:15 a.m. Tuesday, just minutes after Community Bank of Oklahoma at 13th and Grand opened for business. A man walked in, said he had a gun and demanded money. After getting an undisclosed amount of cash, the man walked south of the bank and into a local neighborhood. The suspect is a white male perhaps in his 50s. He"s about 5"8" inches tall with a slight build. He has scruffy, salt-and-pepper facial hair and was wearing a black bandana, a gray sweatshirt, a gray jean jacket with some kind of logos, blue jeans, and tan work boots. You can see photos of the suspect on our Facebook page and on the Chickasha Police Department"s Facebook page. The Oklahoma Bankers Association is offering a $2,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the suspect. Individuals with information can contact the Federal Bureau of investigation via e-mail at: tips.fbi.gov

A deaf senior citizen missing from Chickasha has been located. Chickasha police have canceled a Silver Alert for 85-year old Hershal "Lee" Barrett which was issued about noon Monday. It was believed Barrett left town late last week in his Chevy Corvette and was possibly headed to California. He was stopped by police in Amarillo, Texas either Friday or Saturday before the Silver Alert was issued. A Chickasha police dispatcher this morning said that the Silver Alert was canceled but there was no information regarding when or where he was found.

The funeral for the Minco teenager who died in a traffic accident this past weekend is pending. 17-year old Logan Dobson was a passenger in a pickup involved in a crash that happened on U.S. Highway 81 north of Chickasha Sunday night. At last report, the highway patrol said the accident is still under investigation. The Minco Millenium posted a photo of the Minco High School sophomore on Facebook last night. Everyone at Minco schools were asked to wear blue today in honor of Logan.

Mineral rights owners who would like information on how to take advantage of them have an opportunity to learn how. A free mineral rights and royalty owner seminar will be held next month. It will be led by David Sikes, a Chickasha resident who is a certified mineral manager who is past president of the National Association of Royalty Owners (NARO). He currently serves as the president of the NARO Foundation, and is the third generation of his family to work in the energy industry. The program is only for about 90 minutes, and will be held on Thursday, May 30th on the Chickasha campus of the Canadian Valley Technology Center, starting at 6 p.m. While there is no cost to attend officials ask that you register in advance by calling CV Tech, 405-222-7552.

A deadly crash north of Chickasha last night claims the life of a Minco teenager. The accident happened about 7:45 p.m. Sunday at U.S. Highway 81 and County Street 1320, which is about a mile north of the Chickasha Airport. The trooper on the scene said the crash involved a pickup and a van and that the accident is still under investigation. The unidentified teenager who died was 17 years old. The Highway Patrol did not release his name. The agency has a policy of not identifying anyone under the age of 18. Minco School Superintendent Kevin Sims says the teen was a sophomore at Minco High School. The young man was a passenger in the pickup which was driven by 21-year old Aaron Lee Murray, also of Minco. Murray was taken to Grady Memorial Hospital where he was treated for head and trunk injuries and released. The driver of the van was identified as 56-year old Rebecca Cook of Blanchard. She suffered external trunk injuries and was also treated and released from Grady Memorial. At Minco schools today, Sims said grief counselors and the local ministerial alliance will be on hand to help students and staff try and cope with the loss.

A Chickasha man is OK after a strange boating accident in eastern Oklahoma this weekend. 53-year old Grady Harrell was operating his bass boat on Sardis Lake Saturday morning near Porum in Muskogee County, when the boat started to take on water. Harrell beached the boat and called for help to tow the damaged vessel. But while in tow, the bass boat capsized and got stuck on a stump. Harrell was able to swim safely to the vessel that was towing him. He did have a flotation device with him and was not injured.

The Chickasha Chamber of Commerce has a new president and chief executive officer. Cassandra Ersland was recently hired by the Chamber Board of Directors. She takes the post from Cody Mosley, who has been serving as interim president after previous chamber president Mark Rathe stepped down. Mosley keeps his post as the administrator of the Chickasha Economic Development Council. Ersland previously served as Director of Development at USAO and also worked in marketing, as well as political and non-profit fund-raising in Dallas, Denver, and Oklahoma City. She"s a Chickasha native and holds a journalism degree from OU with an emphasis on marketing and advertising.

Former OU and Dallas Cowboy football coach Barry Switzer will be back in Chickasha this week, promoting the new digital scoreboards that one of his companies is installing at the Chickasha Sports Complex. The scoreboards are being installed at no cost to the city. Switzer"s company called Youth Scoreboards has already installed six new digital scoreboards at the complex with several more planned. Area businesses interested in placing ads on the scoreboards are encouraged to stop by and ask questions and get information about how the marketing plan will work. This come-and-go reception will be Thursday, May 2nd from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the Regents Room on the USAO campus.

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The tornado touched down along the southwest side of Chickasha as a narrow cone shaped tornado, initially causing EF0 damage to roofs, trees, and fences. Continuing northeastward across the south side of town, the tornado reached EF2 strength as it struck a mobile home park, killing one person at that location. A car wash, automotive shop, gas station, and car dealership were damaged nearby. Several apartment buildings and a strip mall sustained major structural damage as the tornado exited town.US 62 east of town. After crossing the highway, the tornado began to rapidly grow in size and intensity, reaching EF3 strength as homes lost their exterior walls and trees were debarked nearby. Several metal buildings and homes were destroyed at EF2 to EF3 strength along the south side of Friend Road. The tornado crossed the road and became large and wedge-shaped, reaching EF4 intensity, scouring the ground to bare soil, debarking trees, and leveling homes, one of which was reduced to a bare slab (though this home was nailed rather than bolted to its foundation). Several vehicles were thrown hundreds of yards nearby, including an SUV that was carried 300 yards and crumpled into a ball.

During the evening of May 24th, this narrow but violent EF4 tornado caused major damage in rural parts of Grady and McClain Counties at the same time another violent tornado from a separate supercell storm was devastating areas in and around Chickasha and Blanchard.

Overall, the tornado was on the ground for 23 miles (37 km). 61 people were injured, though no fatalities occurred. Despite the presence of multiple well-built, anchor-bolted homes being swept completely away along the path, the tornado was not rated EF5 due to several contextual discrepancies and minor anchoring flaws. A high-end EF4 rating was applied as a result. Despite this, much like the Chickasha–Blanchard tornado, the EF4 rating is disputed,

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¶2 At trial, James L. Lewis testified to the following facts. He rented a sleeping room at 1209 Colorado, Chickasha, Oklahoma, from the deceased, Mrs. Edna Shaw, and had boarded there for a period of two or three weeks until the disappearance and death of Mrs. Shaw on February 2, 1973. On February 2nd, he had returned home from work around 6:30 or 7:00 p.m. and ate dinner with Edna Shaw between 7:30 and 8:00 p.m. He left the apartment around 8:15 or 8:30 to go visit a friend, Kathryn Defur. The front door of the apartment did not lock from the inside and he had padlocked the door from the outside and had taken the key with him in order not to awaken Mrs. Shaw when he returned. He returned to the residence around 10:30 p.m., unlocked the padlock and upon entering, noticed that the television and Mrs. Shaw were gone. The television normally sat beside the front door of the apartment. Lewis paid no attention to the fact that the TV and Mrs. Shaw were gone, and went to bed. He was awakened around 5:00 the next morning by the phone ringing. He answered the phone and the call was for Mrs. Shaw, and he stated that Mrs. Shaw was not there. He then went to the kitchen and made himself a cup of coffee and noticed something unusual on the floor in the kitchen, but thought it was mud. Approximately 15 minutes later Mrs. Shaw"s employer called and Lewis told the employer that Mrs. Shaw was not there, hung up the phone, and returned to the kitchen and made another cup of coffee. When he went to the ice box to get lunch meat in order to make himself a sandwich, he discovered Mrs. Shaw"s eyeglasses laying upside down in front of the ice box. Because it was dark in the kitchen, he used his cigarette lighter to look closer and discovered what he had thought to be mud was in fact blood. The blood was all over the floor and covered some paper sack and "stuff" in the corner. He then called Mrs. Shaw"s employer to get the phone number of Mrs. Shaw"s sister, whom he next called concerning the whereabouts of Edna Shaw. The sister informed Lewis that Edna was not there, so Lewis decided he should call the police, which he did.

¶7 Georgene Carmen Walker testified that on February 2, 1973, she resided at 1209 Colorado in Chickasha, Oklahoma, in an apartment directly above Edna Shaw, and on that night, at approximately 9:00 p.m., she heard a man"s voice and Edna"s voice, talking loudly and Edna was using obscene language. Approximately 10 or 15 minutes later, she heard doors slamming downstairs, then something heavy being dragged, and a car motor running beneath the bedroom window, which is by Mrs. Shaw"s living room.

¶9 Louise Jones testified that on February 2, 1973, she was working at the Green Parrot Tavern in Chickasha, and after identifying the defendant as George Edward Fred, she stated that the defendant was by himself in the tavern from around 6:30 or 7:00 p.m. until approximately 9:00 p.m.

¶10 Rod Rinn"s testimony was that on February 2, 1973, he lived at 1727 Tennessee in Chickasha, and the defendant was his friend. On the night in question the defendant came over to his house between 9:00 and 10:00 p.m., borrowed $5.00, and asked Rinn to help him move a TV from the front seat of his car to the back seat. Rinn stated that defendant told him he had stolen the television; however, he helped defendant move the TV in defendant"s car (a 1965 or 1966 white Dodge or Plymouth), and that the TV was a big, brown console television with the legs screwed off. Defendant borrowed a .22 caliber pistol from him, which defendant loaded and stuck in his pocket, or belt, and left. There was no one with defendant when he came to Rinn"s house, and no one was with him when he left.

¶13 Kenneth Lee Hurst testified that he resided at 1123 S. 15th, Chickasha, Oklahoma, and he and defendant were "pretty good friends." On the morning of February 3, 1973, defendant came to his house, driving his car (a 1966 or 1967 Plymouth or Dodge), which appeared to be unusually clean. Hurst stated that defendant had said he had not slept the night before. On February 5th, defendant had ridden to Oklahoma City with Hurst and Gary Henry, and on this trip there was conversation with regard to the disappearance of Mrs. Shaw. Hurst jokingly asked defendant where he hid the body and defendant did not respond.

¶14 Don Hall, a Baptist Minister in Chickasha, testified that he knew the defendant, having met him on February 5th while on church visitation of a new-comers list from the Public Service, during which time defendant said Mrs. Shaw was missing that the Lord had taken her.

¶15 Ernest Moore, a television appliance dealer in Chickasha, testified that he had sold an Admiral color television set to Mrs. Edna Shaw; Model No. LN5331, Serial No. 14626198 (State"s Exhibit No. 60). He identified the Exhibit as the same set he sold Mrs. Shaw, and stated that in February of 1973, the value of Mrs. Shaw"s set would be approximately $100 to $200.00.

¶16 At this juncture in the trial, the counsel stipulated that if Dr. Clyde Snow, an expert in physical anthropology, were called and sworn as a witness on behalf of the State of Oklahoma, he would testify that on February 14, 1973, he visited a wooded scene approximately 38.8 miles north of Chickasha, located in the southwest corner of Canadian County; that he was directed to this location where he observed the partial remains of a human body, and that he examined these remains at the scene and also after the remains were removed to the State Medical Examiner"s Office in Oklahoma City. From examination and observation, and his training and experience, he estimated this person to be a Caucasoid female between 55 and 70 years, close to five feet, six inches tall, prior to death. His findings were a moderate to severe condition of osteoarthritis; the front teeth were intact but the back teeth were out, and there was a gap between the front teeth.

¶17 Following an in camera Jackson-Denno type hearing regarding the admissibility of certain evidence, the State called Danny Wheeler, a detective for the Chickasha Police Department, who had investigated the disappearance of Mrs. Shaw and the disappearance of the color TV from her residence. Wheeler testified that he was summoned to the Shaw residence at 6:40 a.m. on February 3, 1973. When he arrived at the Shaw apartment, it was generally unruly in the house, with books and other objects laying on the floor. As he went into the kitchen the dishes were still on the kitchen table from a meal. There was a large blood spot on the floor and next to this blood spot there was a pair of eyeglasses laying between the blood spot and the refrigerator. Blood was also on the bottom of the back door and on some steps outside the residence. He further testified that the building at 1209 Colorado is a two-story, wood-framed apartment house with two apartments downstairs and one apartment upstairs, and Mrs. Shaw"s apartment was the south apartment on the ground level. There was no sign of forcible entry into the apartment. He identified a number of exhibits found at Mrs. Shaw"s apartment.

¶18 Detective Wheeler then testified that he first came into contact with defendant at approximately 11:30 a.m. on February 12, 1973, at defendant"s place of employment. He advised defendant of his Miranda rights, and at that time defendant appeared calm and went with the officers to Alexander"s Cafe in Chickasha, where they ate. After eating, the defendant read and signed a Consent to Search form of his house and car. They went to defendant"s house at 1602 1/2 S. 17th Street in Chickasha, where he discovered, in the bedroom, a white shirt, an orange shirt, and a pair of tan shoes which had blood stains on them. Agent Lovett, Sheriff Lee Looper, Detective Bob Snell and defendant then went to the defendant"s car where a tube of muffler cement, which had blood stains on it, was seized. Detective Wheeler identified, by his initials on the lapel, a jacket which was found on February 14th in the creek bed of Boggy Creek, northwest of Minco, Oklahoma. He also identified a photograph of the jacket laying in the creek bed of Boggy Creek.

¶19 Frank Brady, an agent for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, testified that the first time he saw the defendant was on February 12, 1973, at the Bureau headquarters in Oklahoma City, where he advised defendant of his Miranda rights prior to his conversation with defendant, and that defendant appeared to be normal, cooperative and talkative. Brady then inquired of defendant as to his activities on February 2, 1973, and defendant told them that between 7:00 and 7:30 p.m. on that day, he went to the Green Parrot Lounge in Chickasha, shot pool until approximately 9:00 or 9:30, at which time he purchased a six pack of beer and went to his residence. While he was watching television he fell asleep and awoke at approximately 1:30 a.m. When asked if he had been to Rod Rinn"s house in Chickasha and gotten assistance in moving a TV set from the front of his car to the back seat of his car, and also if he had borrowed $5.00 from Rinn at approximately 9:30 p.m. on February 2, 1973, defendant hesitated for a short period of time and then blurted out, as he hit the table in front of him, "I killed her . . ." Later he added that he really did not kill her, but he was responsible for her death.

¶20 Earnest Lovett, an agent for the O.S.B.I. and was the investigating officer in this case, stated that his first contact with defendant was on February 12, 1973, at 11:30 a.m. at defendant"s place of employment in Chickasha. The defendant was escorted by Sheriff Looper and Detective Snell to Lovett"s vehicle and Lovett introduced himself and Detective Snell, at which time he told defendant that the officers were there to investigate the disappearance and possible murder of Edna Shaw and wanted to talk with him regarding any knowledge he might have. Before discussing the case, Lovett advised defendant of his Miranda rights and filled out a Miranda warning card which defendant read and signed. At that time defendant appeared calm and relaxed, and answered the questions directly, clearly and intelligently. Defendant discussed his activities on February 2nd, telling Lovett essentially the same story he had told Agent Brady. He said that he had knowledge of what happened to Mrs. Shaw, that he wanted to cooperate with the officers, the investigation, and prove his innocence; also, he wished to assist the officers in attempting to find out if Mrs. Shaw had been murdered, and if so, who had murdered her. They were at defendant"s place of employment for approximately 35 to 40 minutes and then Detective Snell, Detective Wheeler, the defendant and Lovett went to Alexander"s Cafe for lunch. After lunch they again advised defendant of his constitutional rights and read the defendant the waiver of consent to search his apartment and automobile, which defendant said he understood and signed. They then went to the police department where they got an ink-rolled print from defendant to compare with latent prints which may have been found in the victim"s home. They then proceeded to defendant"s apartment where defendant unlocked the door and admitted the officers. Lovett testified as to the items found in the apartment and car, and further stated that a piece of trunk mat was found and that the trunk appeared to have been washed out hurriedly and was clean. Lovett then proceeded to Oklahoma City to the O.S.B.I. Headquarters where defendant was again advised of his rights. Defendant appeared calm and was answering questions and had not changed any from their first contact earlier that day. Lovett reiterated the story, as testified to by Agent Brady, concerning the television, $5.00, etc. After this interview they returned to Chickasha around 7:00 p.m.

¶21 Upon returning to Chickasha, defendant was again advised of his rights (Miranda warnings) which defendant read and signed. Officer Turner then began taking down the statement furnished by defendant, which defendant had initialed on each page and signed at the back. [See Appendix Exhibit 36]. Lovett testified that this was completed around 11:02 p.m. and they went to Lawrence"s Cafe to eat, where defendant appeared calm, and more relaxed. After eating, the defendant returned to the Sheriff"s Office.

¶24 On the way back to Chickasha, defendant took two more tablets of valium. Upon arrival in Chickasha, about 7:00 p.m., they ate dinner at George"s Steakhouse. From there they proceeded to the Sheriff"s Office where defendant again was advised of his rights and the Miranda warning, which he signed. The defendant appeared calm, able to communicate and responsive to the questions.

¶33 Robert Frank Byrd, on direct examination, testified that he was living in Chickasha in January of 1973 and was in a pawn shop in Chickasha on January 29, 1973, attempting to purchase a gun but could not because he had no driver"s license. Defendant was also present at the pawn shop and followed Mr. Byrd outside, asking him what kind of gun he was interested in purchasing. Defendant offered to sell him a .38 police special, which he did not buy. This meeting was his last contact with defendant. On February 2, 1973, Mr. Byrd was in Mercy Hospital in Oklahoma City.

¶52 It is also a well-settled rule that the corpus delicti may be established by direct or circumstantial evidence, or both. Pumpkin v. State, Okl.Cr., 295 P.2d 819 (1956). In Pumpkin v. State, supra, it was also held that the order of proof is generally within the discretion of the trial court and if error is committed in admitting testimony of guilt before the corpus delicti is established, the error is cured when the subsequent testimony sufficiently establishes the corpus delicti. The Court held in Pumpkin v. State, supra, at 823:

I have lived here in Chickasha, Okla. since Oct. 8, 1972. I lived in Welborn Hotel, room # 7. I stayed until Nov. 26, 71. Then I moved to an apt. 1209 Colo. on the North side. I stayed there from Nov. 26 til Jan. 17, 73. I first met Mrs. Edna Shaw when I first moved in. I didn"t see her much while there. I was busy painting the apartment and plastering and putting up curtain. She lived in the South apartment.

I gave him a ride down to in front of the Chickasha hotel. He said he was from New Iberia, La. He said he wasn"t working but that he was just living off what he stole. He said he stole cars, motorcycle, guns, stereo"s, even dope.

The next time I saw him was Thursday night 2-1-73 about 8 P.M. He was walking across the street from the Bus Station toward the Chickasha hotel restaurant. I ask him about the $20.00. He said he didn"t have the money. He said hadn"t been able to rip off anything or sell anything. He & I went back to the car and I gave him back the $20.00 and he gave me back the gun.

When I left the bar I drove to the Chickasha hotel. Andy was there waiting for me. He got in and we went down Choctaw down to 12th and turned South and went to Colo. I showed him 1209 Colorado.

I got on the Turnpike and went North to Okla. City. I drove to Southwestern Ave. and got off the Turnpike. I went North up Western to the second service station North of the Turnpike. A Kerr McGee Ser. Station. I called Mike Johnson at either 632-6037 or 632-6107. I got the phone number from a man named Phillip that I met at the Pub here in Chickasha. He, Phillip had told me that if I ever needed to get rid of anything this Mike Johnson could get rid of it for me. Phillip is w/m under 21, 5"10", 170 lb., red kinky hair and beard and green eyes. He used to work for the city, in the Water Dept. This was in Dec. He uses drugs. He has gone to Houston because of drugs. He has been back one time since he went to Houston. He drives a small green foreign made car, a 70 or 71 model.

When I got up the next morning at about 6:45 A.M. 2-3-73 my car was parked where I allways parked on the North side of my house on Virginia Street. I went out and looked at the car. It had mud on the fender on the windshield on the sides of the tires. It was red colichic mud. There was grass and mud underneath the car. There was mud in the floor board on the gas pedal. There was no mud on Passenger side or in the rear seat. There was no blood on the floor board of the car. There was blood on the rear bumper of the car on the right side and there was blood below the bumper on the right side.

I don"t know if the blood was on the car when he took it at 11:45 P.M. 2-2-73 but the mud was not on the car at that time. I took my car to the car wash. I noticed it only had about 1/8 of a tank of gas at that time. Knowing the car like I do I would judge he had driven at least a hundred miles or more from the time I loaned him the car until he brought it back and parked it.

I first met Andy at 81 Pawn Shop on South 4th Street here in Chickasha. I later made a deal with him to sell him a 38 Special I had borrowed from Rod Rinn. I met him Jan. 29, 1973.

I met Andy Sites again on Feb. the 1st 73. At this time he and I made plans to steal a T.V. from Edna Shaw who lived at 1209 Colo. here in Chickasha. I knew she had the Color T.V. because I had formerly lived at the same address in the North apartment. She lived in the South apartment. I have visited with her in the apartment. I had seen the Color T.V. then.

I didn"t tell him where Mrs. Shaw lived on the First of Feb. 73. I met him about 9 P.M. Feb. 2nd 73 at the Corner near the Chickasha hotel. I had been at the Green Parrott from about 7 P.M. to near 9 P.M. I had lost $15.00 playing Pool there. I also left my dark green marine cap there that night. I picked Andy up in my car. We drove up to near Edna Shaws house.

I drove down Choctaw turned south down 12th across Chickasha and Kansas Ave into Colorado. I pulled into 1209 driveway which is on the East Side of the house. I pulled up near the rear (South) door of Mrs. Shaws apartment. The rear of my car was about even with back door of her hourse. About four or five steps from the back steps. Andy layed down in the front seat of the car. I got out and left the keys in the ignition. I went to the South door.

I didn"t want to take a stolen T.V. back to Chickasha so I sold it to him for fifty bucks. He paid me with two twenties and a ten. I drove to the next ser. station South of there and got change for the $10.00 bill. I got a package of cigarettes and a coke. The attendant was busy and I had to wait about 10 minutes.

I left and came back to Chickasha on the Turnpike like I went up. I got back home about 11:40 or 11:45 P.M. Andy was still there at my house watching T.V. He still had on my shoes. His Tennis shoes were still in my car.

I gave him $25.00, he said "Damn do you know how much one of those cost new" and I said well don"t you know how we got it. He said we have got to do something with what we have got in the Trunk. He ask me if I had a gas can. I had a big 5 gal. can that was painted blue and had white lettering on it. It said "Ovaline" on it. I got the can. We put it in the front seat of the car and left. I drove to the gas station, Tally Wag 71 (12:00 A.M.) on 8th and Choctaw. I got out and went inside and gave the lady a $1.00 for Ethyl gasoline. I went back to the Pump and ran a dollars worth of gas in the 5 gal. can. Put the can in the front seat beside Andy and the lug wrench. I drove West on hiway 81 over the overpass and turned North on 81 up by Minco. I turned West on 152 and back North on hiway 37. I turned off hiway 37 like I told you before on the dirt road and drove down into a low place near some trees.

He came back without the gas can or the lug wrench. He drove back to Chickasha. I was too shocked to even talk. He stopped by a bridge; the 1st or 2nd bridge after we got back on hiway 37. He threw away some rags the trunk floor mat and an old piece of newspaper. Maybe the coat he was wearing. This was approx. 2:30 P.M. I drove from there on in. Went back to my house. We both drank a can of beer. He ask me if I would give him a ride and I took him back to the Chickasha hotel. He said he had to talk to Lou Boudreau. I dropped him off at the hotel about 3 A.M. on 2-3-73 (Sat. morning). That"s the last time I saw Andy. I went home. I cleaned the car out and washed it the next morning.