A driver from Shawnee facing a felony count and a misdemeanor charge following a two-vehicle personal injury traffic collision at U.S. 177 and Highway 66 near Wellston has pleaded innocent during her arraignment.
Formal charges of DUI-Great Bodily injury and failure to stop for yield sign were filed July 15, 2024 against Tymber Nannette Hall, 34.
In April of 2025, she waived her preliminary hearing. Appearing for her arraignment before District Judge Sarah Bridge, she pleaded innocent. Judge Bridge set her case for the felony disposition docket at 9 a.m. Aug. 19, 2025.
She also faces a felony count of prisoner placing fluid on government employee.
That case is set for the same time as the other two.
Her bond was set at $3,000. She made her initial appearance July 18. before Special Judge Emily Mueller who ordered her to return to court with an attorney on Sep. 26.
The felony DUI count accuses Hall on July 7, 2024 of causing an accident at U.S. 177 and Highway 66 in which C.A. and S.A. suffered head injuries while the defendant was driving/operating a 2011 Blue Ford Expedition automobile and was under the influence of an intoxicating substance that made her incapable of safely driving a motor vehicle.
The misdemeanor charges her on the same day of failing to obey the instructions of an official traffic control sign/device that said stop at the intersection of U.S. 177 and Highway 66.
Hall also faces another felony, prisoner placing body fluid on government employee. That charge was filed in Lincoln County District Court on July 10, three days after she had been placed in the Lincoln County Jail in Chandler.
Her court appearance on that count was also July 18. Her bond on that charge was set at $3,000.
Her preliminary hearing in that case is also set for 1:30 p.m. Apr. 10.
On that felony she is accused on July 8, 2024 of spitting saliva on Athanasius Penney while he was performing his duties as an employee of the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office.
A couple and their infant son were treated at OU Medical Center for their injuries, Scott said.