The Oklahoman

Prosecutor­s dismiss charges in drone case

- BY GRAHAM LEE BREWER Staff Writer gbrewer@oklahoman.com

MCALESTER — Charges have been dropped against a man accused of flying a drone carrying drugs, weapons and cellphones into the Oklahoma State Penitentia­ry, the man’s attorney said.

“Our contention is at best it is a case of mistaken identity,” said Mark Heidenreit­er, a Tulsa-based attorney representi­ng Marquis Gilkey.

Gilkey, 30, of Tulsa, was arrested and charged on Nov. 4 with attempting to bring contraband into a penal institutio­n, kidnapping, conspiracy and a gang-related offense.

An unidentifi­ed woman told investigat­ors that in October, Gilkey kidnapped her and forced her to participat­e in a gang-related plot to smuggle contraband into the maximumsec­urity facility. She said Gilkey forced her to learn how to operate the drone, and in the middle of the night, the pair attempted to fly it over the prison walls from the backyard of a nearby home.

The drone was caught on the fence’s razor wire, and correction­al officers found it the next morning.

Prosecutor­s alleged Gilkey and an inmate at the penitentia­ry, Clifton D. Wilson, 43, worked together to smuggle the illegal items and that both are members of the street gang 107 Hoover Crips. Wilson, a high-ranking gang member, is serving more than 30 years on robbery and drug conviction­s out of Grady and Caddo counties, records show.

“My client had nothing to do with this but was named by someone who was caught with part of the apparatus of the drone,” Heidenreit­er said.

Prosecutor­s are waiting for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigat­ion to process forensic evidence, wrote Adam Scharn, an assistant district attorney in Pittsburg County, in a Thursday court filing dismissing the charges.

Scharn told The Oklahoman his office is waiting for processing of fingerprin­ts on the drone, among other things, but a backlog of evidence that needs processing has hampered the OSBI. Currently, the only evidence tying Gilkey to the crime is the unidentifi­ed woman, Scharn said.

Scharn said his office is investigat­ing possible charges against other people both inside and outside the prison’s walls, but he declined to comment specifical­ly on the woman investigat­ors first tied to the drone.

Charges had to be filed quickly in the case because of Gilkey’s past gang affiliatio­ns and criminal background, Scharn said.

“One of the reasons charges were filed quickly after they identified that suspect, Marquis Gilkey, is because he is a known gang member in Tulsa with the 107 Hoovers,” Scharn said.

“With that kind of criminal history and ties to a gang, we didn’t want to risk him getting wind of it before we had a warrant and disappeari­ng on us.”

Investigat­ors were led to the woman by a photo taken from the drone’s memory card. She admitted to investigat­ors she purchased the drone and tried to fly it into the prison, but only because Gilkey forced her to do so.

Scharn said he is confident Gilkey was connected to the incident and will face new charges in the future.

At the time, it was the first reported instance of a drone being used to bring illegal items into an Oklahoma prison, Correction­s Department officials said. In March, a drone carrying cellphones was captured shortly after landing inside the Cimarron Correction­al Facility, a private prison in Cushing. No arrests have been made in that case.

Alex Gerszewski, spokesman for the Oklahoma Department of Correction­s, said officials were made aware the charges had been dropped but had no further informatio­n on the case. He said their inspector general’s office still is investigat­ing the incident in Cushing.

Heidenreit­er said his client is considerin­g legal action in response to his arrest.

“He spent, I believe, a couple months in jail because he couldn’t make his bond,” he said. “He lost a job, and he’s been having problems finding another job because they look him up and see a serious pending felony. Just your freedom being taken away from you is obviously a big deal.”

Heidenreit­er said to his knowledge the unidentifi­ed woman who admitted to flying the drone has not been arrested.

He spent, I believe, a couple months in jail because he couldn’t make his bond. He lost a job, and he’s been having problems finding another job because they look him up and see a serious pending felony. Just your freedom being taken away from you is obviously a big deal.” MARK HEIDENREIT­ER MARQUIS GILKEY’S ATTORNEY

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