(Stillwater, Okla.) — A Yale woman accused of propelling her car three times into a vehicle driven by a Cushing man has been ordered to stand trial on a charge of assault and battery with her car as a dangerous weapon.
Brandy Lee Frazier, 38, remains free on $15,000 bond pending her arraignment in trial court on June 5 before Payne County Associate District Judge Stephen Kistler.
Payne County Sheriff’s Deputy Bobby Miller was sent to Frazier’s residence in rural Yale shortly after 5 p.m. on Jan. 27 on a disturbance call, an affidavit said.
A Cushing man said that he went to the property to retrieve a trailer, the deputy wrote in an affidavit.
“He advised that when he was backing up to the trailer, Brandy Frazier got into her vehicle and rammed his vehicle.
“He advised he then tried to leave and she backed up and rammed his vehicle two more times.
“All three times the vehicle was rammed, he was sitting in the driver’s seat,” the affidavit alleged.
The deputy saw extensive damage to the front of Frazier’s vehicle and damage to the Cushing man’s vehicle, the affidavit said.
Frazier’s husband told the deputy “he witnessed the assault and tried to stop his wife,” the affidavit alleged.
Part of the damage to the Cushing man’s vehicle was on the driver’s side front quarter panel and headlight, the affidavit said.
When the deputy spoke to Frazier, she admitted hitting the Cushing man’s vehicle “because she was upset,” the affidavit alleged.
“She advised she hit it three times and was sorry she did it,” the affidavit alleged.
According to her application for a court-appointed attorney, Frazier is separated from her husband.
She said that she was fired from a Stillwater nursing home due to her felony charge, court records show.
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