(Stillwater, Okla.) — A Perkins woman, who reportedly was naked with blood running down her face when she knocked on a neighbor’s door, has been jailed on $5,000 bail with an order to appear in court on Oct. 5 on charges of indecent exposure and public intoxication.

At the time of the Sept. 4 incident, Deana Joann Faulkner, 39, who previously in Yale, was free on bond on charges of trespassing at a Yale man’s house after being forbidden and also public intoxication, both on April 9.

Perkins Police Lt. Jason Galt was sent at 11:12 p.m. on Sept. 4 to 120 N. Park Drive on a report of a naked woman with blood running down her face knocking on a neighbor’s door, according to his affidavit.

Faulkner “had requested help, but did not want the police to be called,” the affidavit said.

Two minutes later when Galt, with Perkins Police Sgt. Kyle Howard, arrived at a mobile home community, a naked woman who was extremely intoxicated but did not have blood on her face, was sitting in the front passenger seat of a vehicle in front of 120 N. Park Drive, the affidavit said.

She was unable to provide much information other than a man resided at the residence, the affidavit said.

“Through the open door, I observed a glass table that had been flipped over and other items lying on the floor that could have been signs of a struggle,” the Perkins police lieutenant wrote in his affidavit.

While Galt was speaking to Faulkner, “Sgt. Howard went to the rear of the mobile home and located an open door,” through which he could see a man lying on a bedroom floor unresponsive, the affidavit said.

Since the man was known to have a history of heart problems, Galt had an ambulance and Perkins fire department personnel sent to the home, the affidavit said.

Life-Net ambulance staff arrived and assessed the man, who appeared heavily intoxicated and said “nothing physical occurred,” the affidavit said.

After Faulkner was given a blanket to cover herself, Galt asked her “multiple times if she had been assaulted,” the affidavit said.

She said that she and the man “had split an 18-pack of beer and she had taken two Klonopin,” the rest of which the man put down the drain, the affidavit alleged.

Faulkner, who had a swollen right ankle, minor cuts on her left leg and swelling in the area of her shin, said that she fell inside the residence when the man turned the lights off, the affidavit said.

Perkins Assistant Fire Chief Bill Hunt arrived and “noted the injuries were consistent with a fall,” the affidavit said.

Faulkner was evaluated by Life-Net medics, treated for her ankle injury and provided with an ice pack, the affidavit said.

Faulkner said she did not want to be transported to the hospital, but en route to the jail said that she did, before changing her mind and “she just wanted to go straight to jail,” the affidavit alleged.

“The entirety of this incident/arrest was recorded on my Taser Axon body camera,” Galt wrote in his affidavit.

Five months before that incident, Faulkner, who was then living in Yale, was arrested by Yale Police Officer Stephen Lombard in the 400 block of W. Boston in Yale for allegedly refusing to leave a man’s property after being told to leave and being intoxicated in public, an affidavit alleged.

“When Faulkner stood up, she was unsteady on her feet and very belligerent and started telling me ‘take me to f…… jail – they will take care of me,’” the Yale officer alleged in his affidavit.

“When I put Faulkner in my unit, she said she needed to go to the hospital because she had a kidney infection and I had to take her to the hospital if she said for me to take her,” the Yale officer alleged in his affidavit.

“I told Faulkner she was going to jail and nowhere else and if they decided she needed to go to the hospital, they would make sure she went.

“Faulkner cussed about everything under the sun all the way to the jail,” the Yale officer alleged in his affidavit.

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