Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 27, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 22, 2013 Page: 2 of 14
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I'agf 2 - Sapulpa Daily Herald, Ttiesday, October 22,2013
The Sapulpa Daily Herald
News II
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initiative on their meeting
agenda Nov. 4,” Sapulpa
Chamber of Commerce
Director Suzanne Shirey said.
BOCC Chairman Newt
Stephens spoke in favor of the
allied program and noted his
own personal participation and
votes on political priorities
adopted into the One Voice
platform of issues.
The key 2014 state legisla-
tive priorities include:
•Preservation and increase
statewide education funding.
•Support the annual funds
appropriation for the OSU
Medical Center.
•Support for a state bond
issue for the Oklahoma
Museum of Popular Culture.
•Preserve and 'expand
Insure Oklahoma.
•Support for the Gilcrease
Expressway and Bridge in
cooperation with Tulsa
County. ODOT and the
Oklahoma Turnpike Authority.
•Address the medical doc-
tor shortage statewide.
•Municipal Revenue
Diversifrcation.
•A study on the feasibility
of a new South Tulsa County
automobile/pedestrian bridge.
•Increase the Oklahoma
Quick Action Closing Fund.
•Fund OCAST program
(state supported technology
and science business funding)
at a minimum level of $24 mil-
lion annually.
Creek Commissioners
voted unanimously 3-0 to con-
tinue an alliance with the One
Voice program.
One Voice, is comprised of
nine task forces that identify
and prioritize key economic
and social issues.
At the One Voice Regional
Legislative Summit, key issues
are winnowed down to flic top
10 state and top 10 federal pri-
orities. One Voice shares with
State Legislators and
Congressmen via the regional
One Voice legislative agenda,
announced prior to the start of
the new Oklahoma legislative
session.
Editor's Note: Look for
continuing coverage on
Monday's meeting in an
upcoming edition.
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The victim made ii to the
living room and was able to
place a second call and was
able to connect to ask for help.
Noe then made contact with
Pullen at the Sapulpa Jail and
she agreed to speak with inves-
tigators.
Pullen told Noe that it was
not a completely spontaneous
incident. She went on to say
she has been suffering from
depression and had even previ-
ously attempted to commit
sucide. She said it was like she
“premeditated it.”
Pulen went on to confess to waking up and
retrieved the knife from a dresser drawer. She
then grasped the knife with both hands while
she stood over him. and then started stabbing.
Pullen admitted to Noe that she was trying to
hurt her husband and further into the interview
said she was trying to kill him. She said she
could not provide a reason. Pullen swore her
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
husband never threatened her,
abused her. and had not argued
any before \and. Slie further
claimed she loved him and did
not know why she had done it.
She said she could not
count how many times she
tried stabbing him and she said
she thought the first stab was
to the back of his head. She
only stopped because he was
able to wrestle the knife away
from her. Pullen also told offi-
Wl cers she had on a prior day
stood over him with a knife
and did not follow through.
She also confessed to trying to stop him from
calling the cops because she did not want the
police to show up.
Court records show no previous Oklahoma
convictions.
As of press time Pullen is still in custody at
the Creek County Justice Center with bonds
totalling $505,000.
Conservation Services
reopens following shutdown
From the NRCS
Gary O’Neill, Natural
Resources Conservation
Services Oklahoma State
Conservationist, announced
today that all 77 NRCS offices
in Oklahoma have resumed
working with farmers and
ranchers to implement conser-
vation activities.
“We recognize the hardship
that the shutdown has placed
on farmers and ranchers who
are actively engaged in conser-
vation programs on their land,
and we are working to address
the backlog of requests as
expediently as possible,” he
said.
NRCS is able to proceed
with the implementation of
several conservation pro-
grams, including the
Environmental Quality
Incentives Program (EQIP)
and the Conservation
Stewardship Program (CSP).
However, authority to enrol!
acres in several other pro-
grams such as the Wetlands
Reserve Program (WRP)
lapsed on Sept. 30 due to the
expiration of the Farm Bill.
“During FY 2012,
Oklahoma NRCS delivered
$41.2 million in financial
assistance to farmers and
ranchers who are actively
engaged in conserving the
land. This assistance was pro-
vided through Farm Bill pro-
grams including: Agricultural
Water Enhancement Program
(AWEP). (CSP). (EQIP).
Grassland Reserve Program
(GRP. (WRP), and the Wildlife
Habitat Incentive Program
(WHIP)." O’Neill said. "Since
1935, NRCS and the
Oklahoma Conservation
Partnership have been recog-
nized nationally as a leader in
delivering conservation on the
land. The NRCS mission is
"Helping People Help the
Land” and we accomplish that
in Oklahoma by providing
trained, professional conserva-
tionists in 77 offices serving
all counties and working
together with the conservation
districts to deliver ’locally led
conservation’.”
For more information, pro-
ducers are encouraged to con-
tact their local USDA Service
Center or visit: www.nrcs
.usda.gov.
Childhood trauma linked to
adult illness, poverty
From Staff Reports
With many victims of trauma in need of shel-
ter and specialized therapy, including domestic
violence, more than 1.200 mothers and children
last year alone had to be turned away due to
lack of bed space from the YWCA's program
The Oklahoma City Police Department's
received 36,000 domestic violence calls, 6,000
of which were violent enough for detectives to
be assigned at a cost of $8.5 million.
A slate of presenters to interim study 13-109
on Thursday included Oklahoma’s foremost
professionals and other advocates in the area of
unaddressed childhood trauma and its impact
upon health and adult economic security.
Gwendolyn Downing of the Oklahoma
Depaitment of Mental Health and Substance
Abuse who works in the field of Trauma
Informed Therapy spoke about the urgent need
to appropriately identify and treat the negative
effects of exposure in childhood to domestic
violence trauma. In order to prevent dysfunc-
tion in adults, providing secure safe shelter and
specialized therapy is essential. Her presenta-
tion revealed that many chronically ill and dis-
ruptive children are treated for ADHD or other
conditions when in fact the basis for chronic ill-
ness, inattention, hyper vigilance, depression
and violent behavior stems from exposure to
episodic or recurring dysfunction in the home to
include witnessing domestic violence.
“The cost to our community can be calculat-
ed and I think our study presents an opportuni-
ty for us to pull all of the numbers together at
one access point. Oklahoma has some of the
poorest health outcomes and highest poverty
rates in the U.S. while sustaining the rank of #3
in the nation for women beaten to death by per
petrators of domestic violence. To continue to
run behind these medico-social conditions try-
ing to clean up the after effects has proven to be
unsustainable. These conditions have been
shown by our trained professionals to be strong-
ly linked and our state’s overburdened and
underfunded mental health programs, prisons
and courtrooms are evidence of that cost,” said
the study’s host state Rep. Kay Floyd, D-
Oklahoma City.
Annette Wisk-Jacobi, Chief of the Family
Support and Prevention Services for the
Oklahoma State Department of Health,
reviewed the ACE, or Adverse Childhood
Experiences study, that tabulates trauma effects
by scoring an individual's rate of exposure and
comparing that to a participant's number of
chronic health issues. Half of all women nation-
ally presenting for mental health services are
victims of domestic violence, and many in the
study repotted trauma in their childhoods.
Jackie Steyn, the Chief Programs Officer for
the YWCA, spoke to the poverty issue that
many victims of domestic violence face saying
that poverty does not cause domestic violence
or vice-versa, but rather the two exasperate the
overall issue. But, in the case of domestic vio-
lence, the saying goes, “his wealth, her pover-
ty:” when women leave a violent home, they
often end up in poverty and homelessness.
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Gibbs, Angenene. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 27, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 22, 2013, newspaper, October 22, 2013; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1509422/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.