A Stroud woman facing a child neglect charge has pleaded guilty and handed a brief sentence with most all of the time suspended.
Jessica Shadawn Jordan, 29, and Jack Keith Wofford, 31, were formally charged in Lincoln County District Court Sep. 20 with child neglect.
On Oct. 10, Wofford pleaded guilty and was sentenced. Jordan had waived further hearings in the case.
On Nov. 7, appearing before District Judge John Canavan, Jordan pleaded not guilty. The judge set her for the disposition docket on Nov. 28.
On that date, appearing for her arraignment before Judge Canavan, she pleaded guilty as the result of a plea bargain. Both Jordan and the state waived a presentence investigation.
The Court found her guilty has charged and the judge sentenced her to 10 years in the Department of Corrections with all the time suspended except for the first 80 days. She received credit for time served.
Jordan was assessed a $100 fine, a $100 VCA and court costs and ordered to pay 991 fees. She is to obtain a drug and alcohol assessment and complete all recommended follow up treatment. She is to enroll and complete parenting classes.
Jordan was placed on supervised probation with the Oklahoma Court Services and is to report to the Probation Office and Court Clerk’s Office upon release from custody.
She and Wofford were arrested after an infant was found in the back seat of a car in the parking lot of a grocery store.
On Oct. 10, Judge Canavan received a plea from Wofford, the state and defendant waived a pre-sentence investigation and the judge found him guilty as charged.
The judged sentenced Wofford to10 years in the Department of Corrections with all time suspended except for the first 90 days, Wofford was fined $100, assessed a $100 VCA fine, ordered to pay court costs and is to receive credit for time served from Sep. 13 this year.
Wofford and Jordan were accused of committing the crime of child neglect as persons responsible for the health, safety or welfare of E.W. by failing to provide adequate shelter and/or supervision to E.W., who was two months old at the time, by leaving E.W. in a vehicle that was not running in a parking lot for over 15 minutes, resulting in heat-related injuries.
Stroud Police Officer Christian Wade Martin states in a probable cause affidavit that he was dispatched just before 3 p.m. on Sep. 13 to a grocery store at 1399 W. Main Street in Stroud in Lincoln County in reference to a baby being left inside a vehicle within the parking lot.
Martin said once he arrived, he made contact with the reporting party, Jackie McClendon, who pointed through a back passenger window at a very small infant. The baby was screaming, Martin said, and he could it as he exited his patrol unit.
The officer reported he quickly unlocked the vehicle through the open front passenger window once he noticed nobody was around. He states he unbuckled the baby from the car seat and held her. The back of the baby’s head was soaked with sweat from being inside the car, Martin noted.
The baby stopped screaming immediately upon Martin’s holding her.
Stroud Officer Charles Mash attempted to locate the baby’s guardian inside the store while Martin was getting her out of the car.
Mash requested store employees to make an announcement over the loud speaker for the parents to come forward and a female reportedly reached out to him and he asked if the baby was hers to which she stated, “Yeah, we just ran in real quick.”
Mash advised her an officer needed to speak with her and her husband outside. Jordan tried to grab the baby from Martin claiming, “We weren’t in there that long,” which told him they knew they had left the baby inside the vehicle.
Wofford at first gave the officer the wrong identification because he had warrants out for his arrest.
The Department of Human Services was contacted for a joint response, Martin said, and he and Mash decided to also contact EMS to check on the baby. Chandler EMS transported the infant to the Stroud Emergency Room.
Once at the ER, the doctor advised she was transferring the baby to OU Children’s Hospital by helicopter due to the baby’s heart rate dropping and fluid on her lungs.
A Pottawatomie County DHS supervisor advised she would send a worker to Martin’s location and he also contacted Lincoln County Assistant District Attorney Lori McConnell to inform her of the case.
Martin said later DHS conducted a home visit and determined the children would be removed from the residence and around 8 p.m. both Wofford and Jordan were arrested at the Stroud Police Department and transferred to the Lincoln County Jail.