EDMOND —
Information in this column is gathered from city fire incident logs and police incident reports. Persons booked into the city jail are held for up to 10 days. Not every incident leads to a formal charge. If charges are filed, innocence or guilt is determined by a court of law. Until then, defendants are to be presumed innocent.
Edmond Police Department
MONDAY
Jordan Lee Meierhoff, 2809 Echo Trl., was arrested on a felony domestic abuse complaint. Officer James Sheltman.
Kylan Letrail Gilmore, 400 E. Danforth Rd. Apt. 274, was arrested on a felony domestic abuse complaint and on a municipal warrant. Officer Jason Lewellyn.
TUESDAY
Jeffrey Scott Gottsch, 1201 N. Fretz Ave. Apt. 33, was arrested on a public intoxication-municipal complaint. Officer James Sheltman.
Robert Loyd Carroll, 1201 N. Fretz Ave. Apt. 34, was arrested on a public intoxication-municipal complaint. Officer James Sheltman.
Cornelio Lopez-Perez, Oklahoma City, was arrested on traffic citations of no driver’s license in possession and no proof of insurance by operator. Officer Jim O’Neill.
Juan de Dios Urrea, 900 N. Fretz Ave. MBH 31, was arrested on a no driver’s license in possession traffic citation. Officer Chad Brown.
WEDNESDAY
Breyon Xzavier Jones, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was arrested on a possession of marijuana complaint. Officer Joe Rice.
Bryan Paul Ruth, Oklahoma City, was arrested on a felony DUI complaint. Officer Joshua Pratt.
Ildefonso Romero Olivas, Lamont, was arrested on traffic citations of improper left turn and driving under suspension. Officer Paul Sinclair.
Waymond Lee Cooksey, Oklahoma City, was arrested on a public intoxication-municipal complaint. Officer Jonathan Cramer.
THURSDAY
Whitney Lee Byrd, 2408 Santa Fe Cir., was arrested on complaints of under 21 DUI (alcohol), petty larceny and minor in possession of low point beer. Officer Derick Pickard.
Compiled by MARK SCHLACHTENHAUFEN
Local News
9-1 Police & Fire
Emergency Runs
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EF-5 tornado called 'worst in history'
President Barack Obama pledged the federal government’s full support for disaster relief in what is being called one of the most devastating tornadoes in history. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has deployed a team to the state.
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UPDATE: How to donate, find drop-off locations for relief supplies
Below is a listing of where donations may be taken in the Edmond area to help the Moore/Oklahoma tornado victims:
The Edmond Sun is serving as a drop-off location for the downtown Edmond area for the American Red Cross. Supplies only may be dropped off at 123 S. Broadway and residents may use the back door to enter the building. Parking is available behind the building at the Festival Market Place. Donations may be taken to Café Evoke, 103 S. Broadway, from 5-10 p.m. -
ME’s office begins identifying Moore, OKC victims
The Oklahoma Medical Examiner’s Office today began releasing names of those who perished in Monday’s 17-mile long EF-5 tornado in Moore and Oklahoma City.
As of this morning the official death toll remains at 24. Of those dead are 10 children. -
Okla. officials vow not to quit looking until everyone is found
The tornado that killed 24 people and injured at least 100 others in the Moore and Oklahoma City area cut a 17-mile-long path that started in Newcastle and ended at Lake Stanley Draper. Nine of the dead are children.
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UPDATE: How to donate, find drop-off locations for relief supplies
Below is a listing of where donations may be taken in the Edmond area to help the Moore/Oklahoma tornado victims:
• The Edmond Sun is serving as a drop-off location for the downtown Edmond area. Supplies only may be dropped off at 123 S. Broadway and residents may use the backdoor to enter the building. Parking is available behind the building at the Festival Market Place. From 5-10 p.m. donations may be taken to Café Evoke, 103 S. Broadway.
• Edmond North High School is serving as a drop-off location for bottled water through today
• Memorial High School is serving as a drop-off location for food through today.
• Santa Fe High School is serving as a drop-off location for supplies such as work gloves, tools, etc. through today. -
Storm shelter inquiries up; customers take a number
After the horrific tornado set down in Moore Monday afternoon, storm shelter inquiries hit new highs.
Tuesday Ashley Cunningham, office manager for Red Dirt Septic on Waterloo Road in Edmond, and Mark Webb, owner of the Armor Vault Tornado Shelter in Oklahoma City, said their phones have been ringing consistently starting Monday afternoon. -
Edmond detective describes tornado devastation
Like other Oklahomans, Edmond Police Detective Marion Cain was keeping an eye on the weather Monday.
The storm, which produced the tornado began at 2:45 p.m., about 4.4 miles west of Newcastle and its 20-mile long path went through Newcastle, Moore and south Oklahoma City. About 10 minutes after it formed, it was already causing EF4 damage. Maximum winds of the tornado, upgraded to an EF5, were 200-210 mph, according to information released at 2:50 p.m. Tuesday by the National Weather Service. Its estimated maximum width was 1.3 miles. -
Edmond high schools aid Moore, OKC tornado victims
Sometimes good things come from texting.
Monday afternoon, Sydney Richardson, who will be Santa Fe’s student body president next year, was driving home and it was raining. Once home, she talked to her mother, who told her about the tornado in Moore. Then she began seeing the damage on TV.
“It was devastating,” Richardson said. “We watched it all night long. I just felt like we needed to do something immediately.” -
Insurers respond to Moore disaster
Insurers, like other agencies related to the Moore tornado disaster, are assessing the damage.
The Oklahoma Insurance Department has made an emergency declaration, allowing out-of-state adjusters to work storm damaged areas, said agency spokeswoman Calley Herth. It’s too soon to have tabulated damage estimates, Herth said.
“We are working hard to collect any and all numbers, but it’s just too soon at this moment,” she said. -
AG issues charity fraud and schemes alert
Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt Tuesday issued a warning for Oklahomans and donors around the country to beware of charity fraud and scams following the severe storms in Oklahoma.
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