Pubdate: Fri, 06 Jul 2001 Source: Stillwater News Press (OK) Copyright: 2001 Stillwater News Press Contact: http://www.stwnewspress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/789 Author: Tara Roberson STILLWATER WOMAN TO STAND TRIAL ON DRUG CHARGES Shirley Elaine Cloyd, 39, Stillwater, has been bound over for trial on seven of nine counts, including shooting with intent to kill, filed by the Payne County District Attorney's Office after a shootout with the District Nine Drug Task Force in March. According to testimony, agents arrived at Cloyd's home around 7 a.m. March 23 to execute a search warrant for methamphetamine, items used in the manufacture of methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia and items depicting residency. Agents, operating on a no-knock warrant, entered Cloyd's residence east of Stillwater and were allegedly fired upon by Cloyd. Under direct examination by Payne County Assistant District Attorney Jack Bowyer, Guthrie Police Officer and Task Force Agent Mark Bruning told Special District Judge Phillip Corley he was the leader of the entry team and the first officer through the door of the residence. He said the officers began yelling "police, search warrant" as they entered the residence and continued to make the announcement as they began securing the mobile home. "I started into the north bedroom and saw feet on the bed," he said. "I yelled 'police, search warrant' again as I entered the room and saw a female pointing a pistol at me." Bruning said he backed part of the way out of the room and yelled "gun" as Cloyd began firing. He returned fire as he backed completely out of the room and began gathering other officers and ordering them to leave the residence. Defense Attorney Royce Hobbs asked Brun-ing several questions about police procedure, firearms training and the specifics of the incident. Hobbs asked how the officers were dressed when they entered the residence and why they did not have credentials on chains around their necks. Bruning told him and the court that the items around his neck would be a danger and that he was wearing a Drug Enforcement Administration-issued vest with the word "POLICE" in 4-inch white letters across the chest and back and a raid helmet. Hobbs suggested that maybe the letters were obscured by the officer's shooting posture. Guthrie Police Crime Investigations Division Lieutenant Rex Brown told the court he accompanied the Drug Task Force on the raid and was the fifth officer on the entry team. He said his job was to secure the opposite end of the trailer from Bruning and turned around when he heard the first shot. "The first shot didn't sound like a Glock," he said. "I saw Mark backing the other members of the team out of the residence and decided I was already committed to the area I was in and took cover." He said after the other officers left the trailer he told the person in the bedroom "we are police officers, throw the weapon out and come out." He said after yelling the instructions three times, a female yelled "I'm finished shooting" and came out of the room. "I told her to lay on the floor," he said. "When she started to lay on the floor near the gun she had thrown out, I told her to lay down in the kitchen or I would be forced to shoot. She said 'you already shot me you son of a bitch'." Brown said this was the first raid in his 19-year career where shots were actually fired. Robert Horn, an investigator from the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, testified about the OSBI investigation of the officer-related shooting. Horn said OSBI agents found three weapons in the bedroom of the trailer. They found a .357 magnum revolver with five spent shell casings, an empty gun on the bed and an unloaded .38 Colt police-positive revolver under a pillow. On cross-examination, Hobbs picked apart the investigation by the OSBI. Horn told him they were able to determine information about the event from the trajectory of the bullets and the sizes of the bullet holes in the walls. Horn said they could not determine from physical evidence who shot first, but that interviews showed it was Cloyd. Hobbs asked if the members of the raid team and Cloyd had undergone parafin tests to see who had fired a weapon. Hobbs also asked if all the officers' weapons had been checked and ammunition counted. Horn said Bruning's weapon was taken into custody and they determined nine rounds had been fired, but none of the other weapons were checked. He said the parafin tests hadn't been done because he thought they were unreliable. Hobbs questioned whether the investigation by the OSBI was really unbiased. "So you got there and the officers told you what happened and you believed them?" Hobbs said. Horn said yes. District Nine DTF Agent Dale Higgins testified that he was the officer responsible for logging all the drug-related evidence taken at the scene. Agents confiscated methamphetamine, several precursor substances used to manufacture methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia. Higgins said when agents entered the trailer to execute the search warrant after the shooting he saw two hand grenades on the night table in the bedroom where Cloyd had been. He said he exited the trailer, cleared out the other agents and contacted the Oklahoma Highway Patrol Bomb Squad. OHP Trooper James Wilson, a member of the Bomb Squad, said the two devices were called hoax devices - devices that contained all the components and had the appearances of real explosives minus the actual explosive material. Hobbs asked if the grenades could be considered decorative items. Corley bound Cloyd over for trial on shooting with intent to kill, possession of a substance with the intent to manufacture a controlled dangerous substance, possession of a firearm while committing a felony, unlawful possession of a controlled drug with the intent to distribute, possession of a controlled dangerous substance without a tax stamp affixed, possession of simulated explosive devices and possession of drug paraphernalia. Corley threw out the charge of maintaining a place resorted to by users of controlled drugs and the possession of a precursor substance without a license. Cloyd returns to court Friday for a preliminary hearing on a August 2000 charge of distribution of a controlled substance and to set a date for the trial court docket. Cloyd is being held in the Payne Count Jail on $560,000 bond. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth