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| Jailer Accused of Dealing to Inmate |
| By The Enid News |
| Published: 01/02/2006 |
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A Garfield County Detention Facility jailer was charged last week with supplying drugs to an Oklahoma inmate. Julie Ann Day, 49, was charged with delivery of a controlled substance, conspiracy to take drugs into a jail and a misdemeanor count of unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia. Day faces two years to life in prison on the charge of delivery and one to five years and/or a fine of $100 to $1,000 on the conspiracy charge. She also faces a fine of up to $1,000 and up to a year in prison, or both, on the misdemeanor charge. A substance, which tested positive for marijuana, was confiscated from an inmate's cell at the detention facility last week, according to court documents. Recorded conversations between Day and the inmate implied Day delivered marijuana to the inmate, according to the affidavit. A search warrant for Day's home was obtained last week, and Garfield County sheriff deputies found four straws, consistent with the use of a controlled substance, according to the affidavit. Two of the straws had a white-powder residue on them, according to an affidavit. Deputies also found three plastic bags, consistent with how controlled substances are packaged. Day was placed under arrest on suspicion of possession of drug paraphernalia and later booked at the county jail, according to court documents. Day signed a rights waiver card and agreed to speak with deputies. Day told deputies she had met a woman within the past two week she only knew as Kim, and Kim gave her an envelope to deliver to the inmate, the affidavit states. Day told deputies she believed there to be marijuana in the envelope because at one point she had smelled the inmate smoking marijuana and had warned him he was going to get in trouble, according to the affidavit. |
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