(Stillwater, Okla.) — An Oilton man – ordered into the state prison boot camp program seven months ago on Pawnee County charges — has been placed on five years’ probation on Payne County charges of attempting to obtain hydrocodone on a forged prescription at Yale Drug and possessing the same drug along with methamphetamine at a bar on Highway 51 east of Stillwater, both in 2014.
Austin Aaron Wood, 21, who remains in the state Department of Corrections custody at the Bill Johnson Drug Offender Work Camp on his Pawnee County charges, appeared in court last week on his Payne County charges, to which he had earlier pleaded guilty.
For attempting to obtain the painkiller, hydrocodone, at Yale Drug on a forged prescription that had been altered from 150 pills in blue ink to 180 pills in black ink, Wood was ordered Friday to perform 50 hours of community service within one year of his release from prison and pay $200 in fees while on a five-year deferred sentence.
In that case, Wood, who has also used the surname Sisco, was prescribed 150 Norco pills, consisting of hydrocodone and acetaminophen, at the Oilton Family Healthcare on March 4, 2014, Yale Police Officer Ken Moore wrote in an affidavit.
When Wood brought two prescriptions to the Yale Drug Store that day, a pharmacist saw that one was written in blue ink and the other was written in black ink, the affidavit said. After the pharmacist contacted the clinic, he was told not to fill the prescription, the affidavit said.
In his second case, two Payne County sheriff’s deputies went to the Blue Diamond bar on Highway 51 east of Stillwater shortly before 10 p.m. on Oct. 24, 2014, to serve a bench warrant on Wood for his failure to appear in court in his forged prescription case, court records show.
“Mr. Wood told me he had pills in his wallet along with a small bag of meth,” Payne County Sheriff’s Deputy David Rose wrote in his affidavit.
One of the pills was a 10 mg hydrocodone, while the other was crushed and unidentifiable, the affidavit said.
In that Payne County drug case, Wood was ordered Friday to undergo random drug testing when he is released from prison, to perform another 50 hours of community service and to pay $700 in fines and assessments while on a five-year deferred sentence.
According to DOC records, Wood has been at the Bill Johnson Drug Offender Work Camp in Alva since May for grand larceny and concealing stolen property in Pawnee County in 2013, for which he was originally given two concurrent five-year deferred sentences that were changed to the Regimented Inmate Discipline (RID) program in April.
Wood has been scheduled to appear in Pawnee County District Court on March 25, 2016, for judicial review before Pawnee County District Judge Jefferson Sellers, court records show.
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