(Stillwater) — In a case investigated by the state narcotics bureau, a former Perkins woman — who now lives in Cushing — has pleaded guilty to attempting to manufacture methamphetamine in February at her then-residence in Perkins.
Suzanne Renee Hill, 39, who has used the surnames of Endrina and James, also admitted possessing methamphetamine and a police scanner during the commission of a felony in February. At a Sept. 18 court appearance, she also pleaded guilty to possessing marijuana in May, court records show.
She remains free on $10,000 bail pending her sentencing on Nov. 9 before District Judge Donald Worthington.
Hill was arrested on Feb. 17 in Perkins at her then-residence along with Erik Quizon Estencion, 30, and her husband, Anthony Wayne Endrina, 40, who has also been known as Victor Castro and Victor Celso, court records show.
Bench warrants have been issued for the re-arrest of both men, who failed to appear in court on Aug. 7 after they were released on bond, court records show.
When a search warrant was served at the trio’s residence in the 1100 block of E. 92nd Street in Perkins on Feb. 17, state drug agents “found equipment and chemicals consistent with manufacturing methamphetamine,” Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drug Control Agent Rosa Reyes wrote in an affidavit.
OBN agents also found a pistol and a double-barrelled shotgun that had been observed by Reyes during a Feb. 12 drug transaction at the residence, the affidavit alleged. Drug paraphernalia and a police scanner were also found at the residence, the affidavit alleged.
Hill and Estencion subsequently admitted that they had purchased pseudoephedrine from stores in Stillwater, the affidavit alleged.
Hill’s husband, Endrina, was initially jailed on $200,000 bail, which was lowered to $100,000 following a preliminary hearing and then reduced again to $50,000 in May, when was freed on bond pending a September trial — which has been cancelled since he has disappeared, court records show.
Whlle she was working undercover, OBN agent Reyes purchased four grams of methamphetamine from Endrina for $300 at his then-residence in Perkins on Feb. 12, an affidavit alleged.
“During the drug transaction, Endrina talked about how he was either cooking methamphetamine to sell or to use,” Reyes alleged in an affidavit.
Afterwards, Endrina walked her and an informant outside and pulled out a double-barrelled shotgun from his vehicle, Reyes’ affidavit alleged.
“OBN agents provided surveillance during the drug transaction,” according to Reyes’ affidavit.
Endrina has felony convictions from Clark County, Nevada, for attempted possession of stolen property in 1995, for which he was given a three-year sentence, and for attempted theft in 2006, for which he was given a 48-month sentence, according to court documents.
Following his Perkins arrest, Endrina was charged in Payne County with distributing methamphetamine, possessing the drug and possessing drug paraphernalia, along with two counts of possessing firearms after a felony conviction, court records show.
Estencion was charged in Payne County with possessing pseudoephedrine with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine between Feb. 12 and Feb. 17 at his then-residence in Perkins, to which he pleaded guilty in May, court records show.
Since he has disappeared, Estencion, who listed a Cushing address when he was freed on a personal recognizance bond in April, has not been sentenced on the felony, which carries a maximum penalty of a life prison term, court records show.
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