(Stillwater, Okla.) — An arrest warrant has been issued for a 27-year-old former Stillwater man accused of breaking open the back door of a Perkins house — while his girlfriend was inside.
Christopher Cole Simmons, who now reportedly lives in Marshall, Texas, has not yet been arrested, court records showed today.
Last month after Simmons was placed on probation for possessing methamphetamine in July, he was charged with having broken into a Perkins house in May, court records show.
If convicted of first-degree burglary, Simmons could be given a prison term of seven to 20 years, court records show.
Perkins Police Investigator Charles Danker wrote in an affidavit filed last week that on May 18 he investigated a break-in at a house in the 100 block of S.E. First Street in Perkins.
“Upon my arrival, there appeared to be nobody at the residence and the front door was secure.
“In the back of the residence, I made contact with a neighbor,” who said she was the one who called police, the Perkins investigator wrote in his affidavit.
The neighbor said “she saw a white male, bald-headed subject wearing a white tank top, blue jeans, and brown boots kick in the back door,” then pull a blonde woman out of it and force her into a silver Jeep Grand Cherokee, the affidavit alleged.
The man got in the driver’s side, backed up almost hitting a fence in the back yard and sped off, the affidavit alleged.
The back door of the house was kicked open and off the door frame, the affidavit said.
The owner arrived and said he and his girlfriend were in Stillwater “when they received a telephone call from Chris (Dub) saying he was on his way to their house,” the affidavit alleged.
The owner said that Simmons’ girlfriend “showed up at his house last night because Chris beat her up,” the affidavit alleged.
The owner’s girlfriend said that Simmons threatened to “kill him for lying to him about his girlfriend staying at the house,” the affidavit alleged.
“I identified Chris (Dub) to be Christopher Cole Simmons,” the investigator wrote in his affidavit.
When the homeowner put his phone on speaker, “I heard the male subject they identified as Chris (Dub) state how do you like your f…… back door, b….., don’t ever f…… lie to me about my girl being there again. You’re lucky you weren’t at home or I’d cut your throat,” the investigator wrote in his affidavit.
“I turned on my AXON body camera to record the conversation,” the investigator wrote in his affidavit.
“Chris stated your ass should’ve been at the house and I would’ve kicked your f…… teeth in,” the affidavit alleged.
“Chris said he asked (the homeowner) if he saw his lady last night, and he was told no, when she was in the next room sleeping. Then the phone lost connection,” the affidavit alleged.
Simmons’ girlfriend called the homeowner’s girlfriend and said “she was walking on Washington Street around the area of 49th Street,” in Stillwater, the affidavit said.
She asked the homeowner’s girlfriend “to come and get her and bring some gas so they can get her car because she is tired of Chris hitting her and she is afraid he is going to kill her,” the affidavit alleged.
The homeowner’s girlfriend, who said she would pick her up, told the investigator that Simmons’s girlfriend would not get a protective order “because she claims to love Chris,” the affidavit alleged.
The homeowner called the Perkins Police Department and said that Simmons’ girlfriend “called back and Chris was yelling in the background and they were still fighting,” the affidavit alleged.
The homeowner, who said “he knows Chris to carry a firearm,” asked that an officer be sent to the area of 44th and Washington Street in Stillwater, the affidavit alleged.
The Perkins investigator, who was unable to contact Simmons, passed on all the information to the Payne County Sheriff’s Office for further investigation, the affidavit said.
Less than two months after that incident, Simmons and two other men, Erik Moku Quizon Estencion, 36, of Gillette, Wyoming, and Cory Isom Raley, 24, of Stillwater, were arrested for possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia after their vehicle was stopped on July 6 by Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Ryan Long on Highway 177, court records show.
All three pleaded guilty to the charges in August, court records show.
Simmons was placed on four years’ probation with an order to have a substance abuse evaluation, follow any recommendations, have random drug tests, comply with the methamphetamine registry, perform 50 hours of community service and pay $700 in fines and assessments.
Estencion was placed on seven years’ probation with similar requirements, court records show.
Raley was placed on five years’ probation, also with similar requirements, court records show.
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