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staysblazed_xo

♥ ⁴²⁰ queen ♥
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crim...oklahoma-shooting-woman-in-custody/ar-BBPdjQY

OKMULGEE, Okla. — An 18-year-old man was killed and two teenage girls were injured in a shooting Thursday in rural eastern Oklahoma, and a woman believed to be the mother of at least one of the victims is in custody, a sheriff said.

The shooting was reported around 6:30 a.m. at a home in the Nuyaka area, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) southwest of Tulsa. Okmulgee County Sheriff Eddy Rice said at a news conference that the young man was found dead at the scene, one of the girls was in critical condition and the other was stable.

Rice said Amy Leann Hall, 39, who is believed to be the biological mother of at least one of the teenagers, is in custody. She was being held in the Okmulgee County Jail on preliminary charges of one count of first-degree murder and two counts of shooting with intent to kill. Formal charges have not been filed.

It was not clear if Hall has a lawyer.

"We do not have a motive at this time. We're still investigating this," Rice said.

Police have visited the household multiple times, typically for domestic issues, he said.

The sheriff also said authorities don't believe anyone else was involved in the shootings and that there is no threat to the community.

Rice told the Tulsa World that Hall left the home after the shooting and was briefly pursued by officers before being taken into custody.

BBPdV1l.img.jpg
 
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crim...oklahoma-shooting-woman-in-custody/ar-BBPdjQY

OKMULGEE, Okla. — An 18-year-old man was killed and two teenage girls were injured in a shooting Thursday in rural eastern Oklahoma, and a woman believed to be the mother of at least one of the victims is in custody, a sheriff said.

The shooting was reported around 6:30 a.m. at a home in the Nuyaka area, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) southwest of Tulsa. Okmulgee County Sheriff Eddy Rice said at a news conference that the young man was found dead at the scene, one of the girls was in critical condition and the other was stable.

Rice said Amy Leann Hall, 39, who is believed to be the biological mother of at least one of the teenagers, is in custody. She was being held in the Okmulgee County Jail on preliminary charges of one count of first-degree murder and two counts of shooting with intent to kill. Formal charges have not been filed.

It was not clear if Hall has a lawyer.

"We do not have a motive at this time. We're still investigating this," Rice said.

Police have visited the household multiple times, typically for domestic issues, he said.

The sheriff also said authorities don't believe anyone else was involved in the shootings and that there is no threat to the community.

Rice told the Tulsa World that Hall left the home after the shooting and was briefly pursued by officers before being taken into custody.

View attachment 9497
She crazy eyes ..
 
According to online court records, Hall was in the middle of a two-year custody battle with the father of her children.

Last month Hall alleged the man, who had been granted partial custody, sent 'threatening and inappropriate' text messages to their son. She also alleged he would show up at their home 'at all hours of the night.'

In June 2016, the man claimed that Hall was mentally unstable and was psychologically abusive.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...d-2-hurt-Oklahoma-shooting-woman-custody.html
I can see that she is mentally unstable.
 
Hat tip to Buffettgirl.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/1-teen-dead-2-hurt-in-oklahoma-shooting-woman-in-custody
ContentBroker_contentid-f061aa5ea60844a99cc7a7d74355ebf5.png

OKMULGEE, Okla. – An 18-year-old man was killed and two teenage girls were injured in a shooting Thursday in rural eastern Oklahoma, and a woman believed to be the mother of at least one of the victims is in custody, a sheriff said.

The shooting was reported around 6:30 a.m. at a home in the Nuyaka area, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) southwest of Tulsa. Okmulgee County Sheriff Eddy Rice said at a news conference that the young man was found dead at the scene, one of the girls was in critical condition and the other was stable.

Rice said Amy Leann Hall, 38, who is believed to be the biological mother of at least one of the teens, is in custody. She was being held in the Okmulgee County Jail on preliminary charges of one count of first-degree murder and two counts of shooting with intent to kill. Formal charges have not been filed.
[....]
"We do not have a motive at this time. We're still investigating this," Rice said.

Police have visited the household multiple times, typically for domestic issues, he said. Hall had previously pleaded guilty to a minor larceny charge in 2014.

According to online court records, Hall was in the middle of a two-year custody battle with the father of her children. Last month Hall alleged the man, who had been granted partial custody, sent "threatening and inappropriate" text messages to their son. She also alleged he would show up at their home "at all hours of the night."

In June 2016, the man claimed that Hall was mentally unstable and was psychologically abusive.

The sheriff said authorities don't believe anyone else was involved in the shootings and that there is no threat to the community.

Rice told the Tulsa World that Hall left the home after the shooting and was briefly pursued by officers before being taken into custody.

Beggs High School Superintendent Brian Terry told The Associated Press that the victims were siblings and students at the school. Terry said the student who died was a senior, while the critically wounded student is a junior. The third victim is a freshman, he said.
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I've already reported this as a dupe.
 
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Now, Hall is “so sorry for what she (did),” according to Okmulgee County court documents obtained by KJRH.

“Some part of me thought I was saving them” from my ex-husband, Hall told investigators, according to KWTV.

Hall told investigators she had planned to kill her children and herself, KJRH reported.

The evening after the shooting, the Beggs, Oklahoma, community gathered to honor Toliver with a candlelight vigil, the Tulsa World reported. The 18-year-old was a “standout running back on the Beggs football team, leading the offense with 580 yards and five touchdowns in what was his senior season,” the newspaper reported.

“He was a very likable young man,” head football coach David Tenison said at the vigil, according to the Tulsa World. “He had a good heart, good spirit. His smile was infectious. It just infected everyone around him. He made you want to smile.”
https://www.macon.com/news/nation-world/national/article221110175.html
 
A 16-year-old Oklahoma girl has died after being shot in the head by her mother while she slept last week.

Okmulgee County Sheriff's Investigator Duston Todd said in a news release that Kloee Toliver 'succumbed to her injuries' at 8.28pm Tuesday.

Toliver's mother, Amy Hall, admitted to investigators that she shot Kloee early November 1 at their home in Okmulgee.

The 38-year-old Hall also confessed to fatally shooting her 18-year-old son, Kayson Toliver, and attempting to shoot her 14-year-old daughter, but the girl escaped into a bathroom and later took the gun away from her mother.

Kloee was declared brain dead earlier this week, but was kept on life support until her organs could be donated.

Her family said in her death, Kloee helped save the lives of eight people, reported KTUL.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-head-mother-dies-five-days-life-support.html
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Last month Hall alleged the man, who had been granted partial custody, sent 'threatening and inappropriate' text messages to their son. She also alleged he would show up at their home 'at all hours of the night.'
Because he was worried about his children!
 
Authorities say an eastern Oklahoma woman charged with killing two of her teenage children and trying to kill a third has been hospitalized after apparently trying to take her own life in jail.

Okmulgee County authorities say 38-year-old Amy Leann Hall was transported to a Tulsa hospital in serious condition Friday.

Sheriff’s Office spokesman Duston Todd says Hall attempted to take her own life in her jail cell and that authorities are still investigating the circumstances.
 
The case against an Oklahoma mother accused of murdering two of her children is expected to move forward in the coming weeks.

In November, officials with the Okmulgee County Sheriff’s Office say dispatchers received a 911 call from a teenager who was staying the night at his best friend’s home.

He says he and his best friend, 18-year-old Kayson Toliver, were asleep when he heard some noise on Kayson’s side of the bed.

“I woke up to a light on and [Kayson’s] mom on his side of the bed,” he told KJRH. “She told me, ‘Sorry,’ and that’s when she done it.”

When authorities arrived at the scene, they found two teenagers suffering from gunshot wounds and the body of 18-year-old Kayson Toliver.

The case against Hall was put on hold after she tried to commit suicide while in custody.

However, she has since been ruled mentally competent to stand trial, and has since waived her right to a preliminary hearing.

Her arraignment is set for October.
 
Attorneys for an Oklahoma mother accused of murdering two of her children is asking for the case to be dismissed following a recent ruling by the United States Supreme Court.

In November of 2018, officials with the Okmulgee County Sheriff’s Office say dispatchers received a 911 call from a teenager who was staying the night at his best friend’s home.

He says he and his best friend, 18-year-old Kayson Toliver, were asleep when he heard some noise on Kayson’s side of the bed.

“I woke up to a light on and [Kayson’s] mom on his side of the bed,” he told KJRH. “She told me, ‘Sorry,’ and that’s when she done it.”

When authorities arrived at the scene, they found two teenagers suffering from gunshot wounds and the body of 18-year-old Kayson Toliver.

A court affidavit claims the children’s mother, Amy Hall, told the district attorney that she “was so sorry” for what she “had done” and allegedly admitted to trying to kill her three children.

The case against Hall was put on hold after she tried to commit suicide while in custody.

However, she has since been ruled mentally competent to stand trial, and has waived her right to a preliminary hearing.

Now, Hall’s attorney has filed a motion to dismiss the case, arguing that the state “lacks subject-matter jurisdiction to prosecute” Hall.

The documents claim that since the victims were members of a federally recognized tribe and that the alleged crimes occurred within the “boundaries of the Muscogee (Creek) Reservation.”

The argument is based on a recent ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court.

On July 9, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that the Muscogee (Creek) reservation was never disestablished. It’s a ruling that has a big impact on the state’s criminal justice system.

“For anybody that has an Indian card, a CDIB card, a certified degree of Indian blood,” Native American law attorney Robert Gifford told KFOR. “If they are within the Creek Nation, the state of Oklahoma had no jurisdiction over them.”

At this point, a judge has not ruled on the dismissal request.
 
It’s been nearly two years since Amy Hall was arrested and charged with murdering two of her children and attempting to murder a third inside their Beggs home.

Now, the high profile case will not be decided by the community it impacted as it heads to a federal courtroom.

The small community of Beggs may never forget the tragic shooting on Nov. 1, 2018, that took the lives of both Kayson and Khloe Toliver.

Two years later, their murder case involving their accused killer, their mother Amy Hall, is closer to taking form, but not in the county where it happened.

"Amy was indicted on three counts, two of those counts are murder and one of those counts is assault with attempt to commit murder," said U.S. Attorney Brian Kuester.

Kuester has taken over the case after a grand jury indicted Hall in federal court this week.

Hall has been in jail since the shooting, but now her criminal charges could be dropped in Okmulgee County following the recent Supreme Court McGirt ruling.

"You might say it's a new normal for us that the people in my office have accepted," Kuester said.

According to the federal indictment, the two victims were Native American and the crime reportedly took place on tribal land, which means the case now falls under federal jurisdiction.

The house where the shootings happened has since burned down, an attempt to move on from the tragedy.

Now with these federal charges, it's another step in that direction.
 
She really does not look as if she has any Native American blood, so the dad must be the tribal member.
.
According to the federal indictment, the two victims were Native American and the crime reportedly took place on tribal land, which means the case now falls under federal jurisdiction.

The house where the shootings happened has since burned down, an attempt to move on from the tragedy.

Now with these federal charges, it's another step in that direction.
 
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