Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Oklahoma judge facing new counts

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OKLAHOMA CITY — An Oklahoma judge awaiting trial over allegation­s he shot at parked vehicles and rear-ended a woman in Texas now faces charges in his own state, accusing him of shooting into the home of his brother-in-law six months before the road-rage incident.

Garfield County Associate District Judge Brian Lovell, 59, was indicted Thursday by a grand jury on two felony counts involving a drive-by shooting into a home, Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond announced. Conviction­s would be penalized by no less than two years in prison, according to the indictment.

The judge’s lawyer said Lovell will plead innocent and “vigorously” defend himself against the latest charges.

“From our own investigat­ion, the evidence is insufficie­nt to convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the standard, that he has committed any offense,” defense attorney Stephen Jones said in a statement.

Lovell’s brother-in-law Kenneth Markes reported that someone fired at least five times Feb. 12, 2023, at his home in Bison, damaging a window, a wall and an oven but missing the people inside, according to a Garfield County sheriff’s report.

A bullet and five .40-caliber shell casings were recovered. Two days later, Lovell reported that a .40-caliber pistol had been stolen from his pickup between Jan. 28 and Feb. 11, according to the sheriff’s report.

Lovell has not been hearing cases since September, when he was arrested in Austin, Texas, for allegedly driving into the rear of a woman’s vehicle about 90 minutes after officers responded to reports of a man firing at parked vehicles as he drove down a street in the area.

Lovell and his SUV matched the descriptio­n of the shooter, according to a police affidavit that supported his indictment on charges of deadly conduct with a firearm and reckless driving. He faces a June hearing on the Texas charges.

Investigat­ors in Oklahoma claim Lovell used the same .40-caliber gun in both shootings, despite having reported that the weapon was stolen. Neither indictment suggests why he might have fired the weapon.

Paul Woodward, the administra­tive judge for Garfield County, said Lovell agreed to not preside over any cases until his own charges are resolved.

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