That just makes me really curious what is in the state's evidence.
That just makes me really curious what is in the state's evidence.
It would be at least all the details, including the massively inflated invoices, lots of testimony from at the one guy inside Swadley's who was the whistleblower and now testifying for the prosecution.
Now, it's just: "The State alleges Swadley forged invoices", etc.
But seeing documents in black and white and reading testimony under oath from someone who worked at Swadley's would not allow Brent to keep playing the victim card, and that would likely cost him a ton of business and could even sink him.
Grand jury indictments lead to convictions 92% of the time. There is no way he is going to get off the hook here; it's all about preserving public perception.
I passed by Swadley ranch out in Piedmont the other day. He's been making a ton of money somehow.
Although no right for a negotiated plea from State, a defendant has the absolute right to change his plea even if the State objects or doesn't offer anything. Basically called a blind plea leaving it up to the judge to determine sentencing after hearing from both sides.
https://www.oklahoma-criminal-defens...a-in-oklahoma/
There's back office politics that happen with plea bargains also. May not be worth going through all the media circus of a Swadley trial that probably won't even change any opinions regardless of the outcome.
It could be interesting to see where this goes.
I do think that the Governor's office broke several land speed records in the act of distancing themselves from Mr. Swadley after this whole debacle went public--and the grift was common knowledge at the state capitol. Virtually every gathering with state money came from a Swadley's facility--made mostly at taxpayer expense at a state resort and then trucked in. I'm guessing the AG might settle for several bigger fish. Certainly, the previous Attorney General who rubber stamped all of these highly inappropriate contracts has some responsibility here. Winchester almost certainly has some liability here. Maybe even Stitt. The current AG is not a party hack--he's a real law and order guy, so it could get really interesting.
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