The Oklahoman

Attorney's boots seized in triple slaying investigat­ion

- By Nolan Clay Staff writer nclay@oklahoman.com

Investigat­ors have seized black boots from the home of an Oklahoma City attorney suspected of involvemen­t in a triple slaying near Beggs, new court records show.

The attorney, Keegan H arr oz ,36, denies wrongdoing.

Investigat­ors went back to her home Oct. 8 after discoverin­g a photo on a cellphone of Harroz wearing black boots, according to the search warrant records. One investigat­or told a judge in an affidavit that the tread pattern visible in the photo is similar to a shoe print found at the crime scene. Investigat­ors had observed the black boots in a closet during a search of her home Sept. 13.

Investigat­ors also seized as evidence one pair of men's Keen all- terrain sandals to compare to another shoe print from the crime scene, according to the records filed Wednesday. Investigat­ors believe the sandals belong to the attorney' s live-in boyfriend, Barry Titus.

Investigat­ors revealed in search warrant affidavits last month they suspect the lovers were the two masked killers seen on a surveillan­ce recording approachin­g a residence near Beggs around 3 a.m. Sept. 7.

Shot to death inside the residence were Tiffany Eichor, 43, and her parents, Jack Chandler, 65, and Evelynn Kaye Chandler, 69.

Investigat­ors have focused on Harroz because she is both in a relationsh­ip with Titus and representi­ng him in criminal cases.

Titus, 37, is accused in one pending felony case of beating and strangling Eichor in 2017, a couple of months after they began dating. Eichor got an emergency protective order against him in June, saying “I have great concern f or my safety.”

Neither Harroz nor Titus has been charged in the deaths.

Harroz has been charged, though, in Okmul gee County District Court with intimidati­ng a witness. She is accused in that felony case of trying to frame Eichor with fake dope in January.

Both Harroz and Titus have been charged in Oklahoma City federal court over their purchase in August of a rifle.

A federal agent reported in an affidavit that the attorney's brother, Jacoby Kelley, turned the rifle over to police in Texas on Sept. 13 stating “he was given the firearm to hold, it was not his firearm and the firearm may have been used in a triple homicide in Oklahoma.”

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