(Stillwater, Okla.) A Stillwater woman on probation for possessing methamphetamine as a pickup passenger on Highway 51 in 2013 and in the Payne County Jail has been ordered to appear in court Nov. 19 on a charge of possessing the same drug in a pipe at the Cimarron Casino in Perkins in May.
Cindy Ann Parmley, who has also used the surname of Webb, 40, could receive as much as a life prison term if convicted of her methamphetamine charge filed last week.
Perkins Police Officer David Sloan wrote in an affidavit that on May 11 at 12:25 a.m. he accompanied Iowa Tribe Police Officer Chris Tillman who said “he was going to the Cimarron Casino to investigate possible drug activity.”
Cimarron Casino Security Lt. Hunter Edwards said that a glass pipe with a white chalky residue consistent with smoking methamphetamine had been found in the casino, the affidavit said.
“Upon reviewing the surveillance video, I observed a white female later identified as Cindy Parmley dropping on object consistent with the glass pipe that was found,” the Perkins officer alleged in his affidavit.
“The item dropped from Ms. Parmley’s front left pocket while she was retrieving what appeared to be a cell phone,” the affidavit alleged.
“Officer Tillman and I found Ms. Parmley sitting at a slot machine to the west of the north entrance,” the Perkins officer wrote in his affidavit.
When she was told about the surveillance video, “Ms. Parmley stated that she did not have a meth pipe in her shorts. She further stated that the shorts she was wearing were not hers; they were her roommate’s,” the affidavit alleged.
“Ms. Parmley advised me that she was on probation,” the Perkins officer wrote in his affidavit.
“I advised Ms. Parmley a report on the incident would be done and charges for possession of drug paraphernalia would be requested.
“Ms. Parmley was released from the scene and told she was not allowed back at the casino,” the Perkins officer wrote in his affidavit.
According to court records, Parmley had been placed on five years’ probation for methamphetamine possession with intent to distribute under a deferred sentence in February 2014, when she was ordered to serve a 30-day jail term, pay $2,000 in fines and assessments, perform 100 hours of community service, have a substance abuse evaluation and follow-up, undergo random drug tests and following any recommendations in a background report.
In that case, Parmley was arrested by Oklahoma Highway Patrol Trooper Coleman Parker when she was a passenger in a pickup with defective tail lights that was traveling east on Highway 51 about one-quarter mile of Brush Creek, court records show.
“While talking to her, I noticed that she had multiple sores on her arms and that she was acting very erratic and was sweating. She was shaking and was unable to perform the task of lighting her cigarette because she couldn’t sit still. She appeared to be under the influence of drugs,” the trooper wrote in his affidavit.
Payne County Sheriff’s Deputy Paul Fox arrived on scene with his canine who “indicated on the vehicle,” the affidavit said.
During a search, the deputy located a container on the transmission hump that had multiple baggies of a white residue, and a baggy containing a used syringe, the affidavit said.
In a duffle bag on the passenger floor board, the deputy found a glass meth pipe and a syringe, the affidavit said. In the pickup’s middle seat, the deputy found a digital scale, the affidavit said.
Another baggy containing a white crystal substance was found under Parmley’s shoe, the affidavit said.
At the jail, a detention officer found another baggy containing a white crystal substance in her wallet, the affidavit said.
To a female detention officer, Parmley “admitted to having a broken meth pipe in her vagina and stated that she didn’t know what else was in there,” the affidavit said.
From inside Parmley’s vagina, a female officer “retrieved three baggies with a white residue, two baggies with a white crystal substance, two capped syringes and two uncapped and obviously used syringes,” the affidavit said.
The District Attorney’s Office has filed an application seeking to revoke Parmley’s probation in that case on which she is also scheduled to appear in court on Nov. 19.
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