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Lions rally for sweep of Denison
Jun 19, 2013 | 71 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

DURANT - After spotting Denison an early 6-0 lead the Durant High summer squad came roaring back for a doubleheader sweep Tuesday night at the Durant Multi-Sports Complex.

The Lions plated 11 unanswered runs in an 11-6 opening win and then held on for a 7-6 triumph in the nightcap.

Durant will be in action at home again on Thursday facing Colbert in a 4 p.m. twinbill.

Early control problems by starting hurler Brandon Robison dug the hosts a big hole but the southpaw fought through it and hurled four consecutive scoreless frames to allow the Lions to rally. He allowed five hits, struck out three and walked five.

Spencer Tidwell worked two stanzas of one-hit relief to record the pitching save.

The Durant offense responded quickly to the deficit by pushing across six runs of its own in the bottom of the first inning. Seth White and Alex Brooks each had singles while Riley Hendrix and Dakota Finley contributed two-run singles and Robison chipped in a RBI hit.

Durant claimed the lead for good in the third when White drew a leadoff walk and Cooper Webb singled ahead of an Alex Brooks three-run homer.

The hosts then picked up a single tally in the fourth on a Kolby Blake run-scoring single and another in the sixth as Brody Morgan doubled and scored on a Brandon Maynard hit.

Brooks and Maynard led the hitting brigade with two hits apiece.

In the nightcap Maynard fired two innings allowing one unearned run in his first start of the summer. Austin Joines then tossed the final three stanzas, yielding five unearned runs, but managed to preserve the victory with a final strikeout with the tying and go-ahead runs in scoring position.

Durant’s offense notched an early run on a Brooks RBI double and then added two more runs in the second following singles from Joines and Robison with a Finley triple.

The Lions then picked up four more runs in the third inning, which proved to be just enough. Webb’s two-run triple provided the decisive blow.

Upcoming games:

Thursday: League squad vs. Rattan, 10 a.m. doubleheader At Atoka Sports Complex and Travel squad vs. Colbert, 4 p.m. doubleheader At Durant Multi-Sports Complex.

Saturday: Travel squad at Mineola, Texas, 2 p.m. doubleheader

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Oklahoma corrections head quits amid flaps
Jun 19, 2013 | 547 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma’s prisons chief resigned amid disagreements over whether more state corrections facilities should be run by private companies and whether his agency properly documented money held in reserve, but the governor’s office said Tuesday she did not ask for him to step aside.

Corrections Director Justin Jones announced to his staff Monday that he would quit effective Oct. 1. Prisons agency spokesman Jerry Massie said Jones gave no reason for his departure and the agency head did not return a telephone call seeking comment Tuesday. A spokesman for Gov. Mary Fallin issued a statement saying she had not asked Jones to quit but said she would not be available for an interview.

“The governor appreciates Director Jones’ many years of service to the state of Oklahoma,” Fallin spokesman Aaron Cooper wrote in an email.

The head of an organization representing corrections workers said Tuesday that he believed Jones was pressured out of a job Jones has held since 2005.

“We met with Justin last week. He told us his days were numbered,” said Sean Wallace, the executive director of Oklahoma Corrections Professionals. He said Jones told the group that Gov. Mary Fallin’s office had stopped accepting his telephone calls.

“There’s just been a steady drumbeat,” Wallace said. He said Jones told the group: “Whenever the governor wants me to resign, you just tell her to let me know.”

Wallace said he believes conflict between Jones and elected state officials over the use of private prisons to house state inmates led to Jones’ resignation. He said some state lawmakers want to increase the rate private prisons are paid for housing state inmates but are opposed to boosting pay for state corrections workers.

Jones told the Tulsa World on Monday that he questioned who should run state prisons.

“You know, just because it is legal doesn’t make it ethically and morally right for shareholders to make a profit off of incarceration of our fellow citizens,” Jones said. “I guess with my Christian upbringing, there has always been a conflict with that.”

In recent months, state administrators had posed questions about agency funds. Jones’ department sought a $6.4 million supplemental appropriation for the current fiscal year but also reported that it had $22 million in its revolving funds. The administration had said it didn’t know about the revolving funds but the Corrections Department said it had regularly advised the state of what it had in various accounts.

Jones, 57, said he doesn’t plan to retire and will look for another job.

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Oklahoma executes inmate for couple’s 2000 deaths
by TIM TALLEY
Associated Press
Jun 19, 2013 | 743 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print

McALESTER, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma executed a 36-year-old man on Tuesday for taking part in the brutal killing of a ranching couple 13 years ago.

James Lewis DeRosa was killed by lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, becoming the state’s second inmate executed this year.

At a clemency hearing last month, DeRosa took responsibility for his role in the Oct. 2, 2000, stabbing deaths of Curtis and Gloria Plummer, for whom he had previously done some ranch work. He also apologized to their family.

Strapped to the gurney in the penitentiary’s death chamber, though, he had nothing to say before the fatal mixture of drugs was pumped into his veins.

“Mr. DeRosa, would you like to make a last statement?” Warden Anita Trammell asked.

“No, ma’am,” DeRosa replied.

DeRosa took three heavy breaths before his face turned ashen and he stopped breathing.

According to prosecutors, DeRosa had worked on the Plummers’ ranch in the Le Flore County community of Poteau, and on the day of the killings, he and accomplice John Eric Castleberry went there under the pretense of looking for work.

DeRosa and Castleberry persuaded the couple to let them into their home and then attacked them, stabbing the couple over and over and slashing both their necks, prosecutors said. They made off with $73 and the couple’s pickup truck, which was found abandoned at a nearby lake.

Castleberry, 33, testified against DeRosa as part of a deal with prosecutors in which he received a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

At his clemency hearing before the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board last month, DeRosa spoke via a video link from prison about how he had found religion and turned his life around behind bars. He urged the board to recommend to Gov. Mary Fallin that she commute his sentence to life in prison so that he could be a positive influence on his fellow inmates. He also apologized to the victims’ loved ones and owned up to what he had done.

“I can’t express how truly sorry I am for the pain I’ve caused the Plummer family,” DeRosa said. “I take full responsibility for their deaths. If not for me, they wouldn’t have died that night.”

The family wasn’t swayed, and the board voted 3-2 to not recommend he be pulled off of death row.

After the execution, the Plummers’ daughter, Janet Tolbert, said the execution wasn’t about DeRosa.

“This is about Curtis and Gloria Plummer. The family of Curtis and Gloria are pleased that justice has been served,” said Tolbert, who was wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with a picture of her parents’ faces.

Tolbert said she wasn’t surprised that DeRosa didn’t express remorse in the death chamber, because she said he didn’t do so in court. She said the clinical and peaceful way DeRosa died belies the horrifically violent manner in which her parents were killed.

“It was horrible,” she said. “They suffered a horrendous death. They missed out on so much.”

In a letter to the parole board, Tolbert wrote that she still has nightmares about finding her parents dead.

“I saw my 70- and 73-year-old parents laying in pools of blood that went through the carpet to the cement foundation, with both of their throats slashed from ear-to-ear and stab wounds all over their 70-year-old bodies,” Tolbert said.

DeRosa was the second Oklahoma inmate executed this year. Another inmate, 39-year-old Brian Darrell Davis, is scheduled to die next Tuesday, after Fallin rejected the parole board’s recommendation to commute his sentence to life. Another inmate, Anthony Rozelle Banks, 60, is slated for execution in September.

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Tornado insurance claims near 71,000 in Okla.
Jun 19, 2013 | 375 views | 0 0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Nearly 71,000 insurance claims have been filed since violent tornadoes ripped through central Oklahoma last month, with payments already topping an estimated $560 million, the Oklahoma Insurance Department reported Tuesday.

“These numbers are more proof of the dramatic impact the tornadoes had on our state,” Oklahoma Insurance Commissioner John Doak said. “Thousands of Oklahomans are now in the process of rebuilding their lives. Insurance can help them do that and I am glad to see that so many of the victims were insured.”

Doak said the agency will hold weekly forums so residents affected by the storms can ask questions and receive assistance with insurance-related issues. Department experts will discuss how to file a claim, what to do if a claim is denied, how to file a complaint and how to spot fraud, among other concerns.

“The claims process can be complicated. My office is ready to assist consumers in any way possible,” Doak said.

Two of last month’s tornadoes were top-of-the-scale EF5s. One of those tornadoes hit Moore on May 20 with winds reaching 210 mph, and the other hit El Reno 11 days later with winds of 295 mph. Dozens of people were killed and hundreds more were injured.

The storms also damaged or destroyed thousands of homes and businesses.

Earlier this month, Doak announced that anti-fraud investigators would be patrolling tornado disaster areas searching for people who were looking to take advantage of storm victims. He said investigators are also verifying the licenses, permits and insurance of people and companies soliciting business from recovering storm victims.

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