By Patti Weaver

 

  (Stillwater, Okla.) — A 49-year-old Stillwater woman had been free on $100,000 bail until last week when she given an eight-year prison term for trafficking 64 grams of methamphetamine, as part of plea agreement with the prosecution approved in court by District Judge Phillip Corley.
    Chasity Diana Jackson, who has also been known as Chasity Diane Waller, had been arrested at 1 pm on June 4, 2021, at her residence in the 1800 block of S. Lowry when the Stillwater Police Department’s Special Projects Unit served a search warrant, court records show.
    Stillwater Police Investigator Josh Carson wrote in an affidavit, “Chasity told me she understood her rights and we began speaking. Chasity removed a clear baggy containing a crystal substance from her left front pocket and handed it to me.
    “Chasity stated she was indebted to (a man) in prison because of the last search warrant we served at her residence and was selling methamphetamine to pay off the debt. It should be noted the Special Projects Unit served a search warrant at this same address in January (of 2021) and seized approximately $17,000 cash. Chasity told us the cash was proceeds from drug sales.
    “Chasity stated she recently picked up four ounces of methamphetamine in Oklahoma City and sold two of the ounces already. Sixty-four grams of methamphetamine were located along with a set of working digital scales, pre-packaged methamphetamine and packaging material. I also found $3,111 cash hidden in the house. It was obvious Chasity was operating a methamphetamine distribution enterprise.”
    As part of her sentence for trafficking methamphetamine to which she pleaded guilty last week, Jackson was ordered to pay a $1,000 fine, $150 state crime bureau fee and court costs.
    At the time of her arrest in 2021, Jackson was already on 10 years’ probation for transporting a drug with intent to distribute in Payne County on Dec. 12, 2014, in a case investigated by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, court records show. Jackson had 8.7 grams of methamphetamine, 54.3 grams of marijuana, 25 hydrocodone pills, two clonazepam pills, one Oxycodone pill and one Oxycontin pill, court records show.
    On Sept. 22, 2017, Jackson had been given a 10-year suspended sentence on the drug transportation charge, along with two one-year suspended sentences for driving under the influence of intoxicants and possessing drug paraphernalia, as well as a conviction for failing to drive on the right side of the road, court records show.