
By: Patti Weaver
(Stillwater, Okla.) — A Creek County man with a criminal record in four counties was given a six-year prison term Friday for giving a Payne County sheriff’s deputy a false name during a traffic stop at 9th and Norfolk Road in rural Cushing on June 29, 2017.
Michael Shane Davis, 30, of Mannford, told Payne County District Judge Phillip Corley in court on Friday that he gave a high school classmate’s name to the deputy when he was pulled over because he had outstanding arrest warrants from other counties.
As part of a plea bargain with the prosecution, Davis’s sentence from Payne County was ordered to run concurrently with prison terms he has been serving in the Cushing prison from Pawnee and Rogers counties.
According to the state Department of Corrections, Davis had previously been convicted of:
* drug possession in three separate cases in Creek County in 2008 for which he was given three concurrent five-year prison terms in 2011 of which he served less than a year;
* drug possession with intent to distribute in Pawnee County in 2010 for which he was given a concurrent five-year prison term of which he served about three years;
* drug possession in 2011 in Pawnee County for which he was given a concurrent five-year prison term of which he served about three years;
* drug possession in 2016 in Osage County for which he was given a three-year prison term in 2018 that he is serving;
* false personation in 2016 in Osage County for which he was given a concurrent five-year prison term in 2018 that he is serving;
* drug possession and false personation in 2016 in Pawnee County for which he was given two concurrent eight-year prison terms in 2018 that he is serving;
* drug possession with intent to distribute and being a felon in possession of a firearm in 2017 in Rogers County for which he was given two concurrent eight-year prison terms in 2017 that he is serving.
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