Oklahoma
Suspect arrested in deadly party shooting by Oklahoma lake
Edmond Police Department says no fatalities from Arcadia Lake shooting
Sergeant James Hamm with the Edmond Police Department said there were zero fatalities out of the 23 confirmed individuals injured in a shooting at Arcadia Lake on Sunday.
EDMOND, OK − An 18-year-old man was arrested on Wednesday, May 6, in connection with a mass shooting that left one woman dead and 22 others injured at an “unsanctioned party” by an Oklahoma lake, police said.
Jaylan Davis, of Oklahoma City, was arrested on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon in response to the shooting, according to police. Gunfire erupted during a nighttime party on May 3 at Arcadia Lake near the Scissortail Campground in Edmond, a suburb of north Oklahoma City.
During a news conference on May 6, Edmond Police Chief J.D. Younger said the initial charge against Davis was in the process of being upgraded to felony murder after an 18-year-old woman died from injuries sustained during the shooting. Police identified her as Avianna Smith-Gray.
Oklahoma County District Attorney Vicki Behenna confirmed in a news release that Davis will be charged with felony murder in the first degree over the shooting death “at the unsanctioned gathering.” His bond had been set at $1 million on a complaint of assault and battery with a deadly weapon.
Investigators believe the incident began with a “disturbance” between two people attending the gathering and escalated into an altercation between rival gang members, Younger said. Authorities also believe that there is at least one more suspect in the shooting.
“During the altercation, multiple subjects produced firearms and discharged in excess of 80 rounds, striking numerous individuals,” Younger said at the news conference.
What happened in the Oklahoma party shooting?
The shooting took place shortly after 9 p.m. local time on May 3 at Arcadia Lake, according to police. Officers were already responding to an 8:51 p.m. call on May 3 of loud music at a party at the lake when the shooting occurred, Younger said.
A total of 23 victims had gunfire-related injuries, including six “juveniles as young as 15 years of age,” according to the police chief.
Police previously said the incident occurred during an “unsanctioned party that began after dark and was advertised across multiple social media platforms, drawing a large crowd of young adults from across the metro area.” The party was not a permitted or reserved gathering, according to police.
Authorities had received multiple 911 calls reporting shots fired and responding officers located multiple people with injuries “ranging in severity,” police previously reported.
A person of interest in the shooting told investigators that Davis was “the primary aggressor,” a police detective said in an arrest affidavit. The person of interest said Davis was a member of the North Highland Piru gang and had recently gotten into a fight with “a known member of Hoover,” according to the affidavit.
The person “advised that this fight caused havoc between Jaylan and the Hoover gang members in Oklahoma City,” the affidavit states. The person also said a shooting victim, Daviion Wyckoff, told him in a phone call that Davis, also known as 3zzy, “arrived at the party and started shooting,” according to the affidavit.
Police previously identified suspect in shooting as member of a gang
In a May 4 search of the suspect’s home, police found ammunition that was the same brand as spent casings recovered from the crime scene, according to the affidavit. His mother said he had left on May 3 to attend a party at Lake Hefner with two of his friends, the affidavit states.
Davis has been arrested before, including after drive-by shootings in Oklahoma City in 2023 and 2024, court records show. Oklahoma City police described him in a 2024 court affidavit as a member of the North Highland Park Blood gang.
He has been prosecuted in Oklahoma County District Court both as a juvenile and as a youthful offender, the court records show. A March 27 “treatment and service plan” filed in court called for him to “explore positive alternatives to living a gang lifestyle.”
He turned himself in on the morning of May 6 to the U.S. Marshals Service, officials said. He was taken to the Edmond Police Department and was arrested.
Victim remembered as a ‘loving’ and ‘caring’ person
Police had confirmed on May 5 that “an 18-year-old young woman has passed away from injuries sustained in the Arcadia Lake shooting.” The chief medical examiner confirmed her body was being examined on May 6.
“Our thoughts are with her loved ones, as well as all those affected by this tragic incident,” police said in a statement on Facebook.
The victim was identified by police and on a GoFundMe page as Smith-Gray. On the GoFundMe page, Smith-Gray’s sister described her as a “loving” and “caring” person.
“She was good with kids doesn’t matter the age they all just happen to love her, she loved to dance, do hair, sing & so much more,” the online fundraiser states. “My sister was so talented a very good athlete and she was so so smart.”
“Avianna was so full of life and loved spending time with her family, friends, her boyfriend,” Smith-Gray’s sister wrote on the GoFundMe page. “She was 18 years old, just graduated and was waiting to walk that stage!”
Oklahoma
Teen facing multiple charges in Oklahoma City shooting death
OKLAHOMA CITY (KOKH) — A 19-year-old man is facing charges related to the murder of a man in November.
Around 5:30 p.m. on Nov. 15, 2025, Oklahoma City police were called to a possible robbery and shooting near S.E. 57th and Bodine.
When they arrived, they found 21-year-old Ralend Rex-Dean suffering from gunshot wounds.
Rex-Dean was rushed to a nearby hospital where he died from his injuries.
Investigators believe Rex-Dean was shot by 19-year-old Christopher Upchurch during an attempted robbery.
Upchurch was later arrested for the crime.
He is now facing charges of first-degree murder, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, possession of a firearm after juvenile adjudication, and penalty enhancement for weapon possession.
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Upchurch’s arraignment is set for July 8.
Oklahoma
A red-state revolt against insurers
Consumer anger over rising insurance bills in Oklahoma is having an unusual effect in the political race for the state office of insurance commissioner: Four Republican candidates are threatening to curb industry rates.
Property insurance premiums have surged in Oklahoma due in part to the increased frequency and intensity of extreme-weather events. That has caused growing frustration in a conservative state that historically has taken a hands-off approach to insurance premiums, resulting in some of the highest rates in the nation.
The only Democrat in the race has vowed to bring down rates. The Republican candidates aren’t going that far — but they are promising to sharply scrutinize the industry as voters head to the polls for a primary election on Tuesday.
“Politicians [in Oklahoma] may be far right, but they do read polls,” said Bob Hunter, a former Texas insurance commissioner and director of insurance at the Consumer Federation of America.
Oklahomans’ aggravation dovetails with many homeowners’ feelings nationwide: From coastal states to the heartland, households find it increasingly difficult to get affordable insurance coverage — or any at all — as insurers react to climbing damage from hurricanes, wildfires, hailstorms and other hazards. Those concerns are reflected in the race in Oklahoma, where regulations have traditionally been overshadowed by free-market principles.
“You can see the insurers are very profitable, and there’s no reason for them to be charging what they’re charging,” said Greta Shuler, a city commissioner in Shawnee who’s running to be the industry’s top regulator as a Republican, at a recent debate. “We should have an insurance commissioner looking at those rates. And we haven’t.”
Oklahoma is one of 11 states that elects its insurance commissioner. Up to two candidates can advance from the Republican primary; they would face off in an August runoff before the general election in November.
The state has been “too easy to deal with” for insurers, said Bob Sullivan, an independent insurance agent who’s running as a Republican, adding that neighboring states make the industry work harder to justify rate hikes.
Sullivan said in an interview that if he’s elected commissioner, he would declare Oklahoma’s home insurance market “non-competitive” — skewed to favor a few large companies — giving the department the “strength to push back” against large rate increases.
Oklahoma is one of many states revisiting their approach to insurance markets as extreme weather and general cost inflation make policies more expensive, hard to get or both.
Leaders in both major political parties are questioning an article of faith about insurance: that the best way to keep prices low for consumers is to promote competition between companies, and that the state should not try to control prices.
Illinois, another state that has historically been laissez-faire toward the insurance industry, recently gave regulators new power to reject rate increases. California has loosened some of its long-standing restrictions on insurers’ ability to raise premiums after wildfires led insurers to flee the state en masse.
In Oklahoma, the average cost of home insurance has spiked to $5,736 a year, second-highest in the country, according to data provider Insurify. Rising risk from hail, wind and wildfire events are increasingly showing up in consumers’ bills.
The surging costs have put pressure on Oklahoma’s Republican-led Legislature to act. In the waning days of the legislative session last month, Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt signed a bill that will for the first time require insurers to explain why they’re asking regulators to approve higher rates.
The law takes effect in July 2027. Until then, insurers in Oklahoma can use the existing regulatory system, which allows them to raise rates when and how they see fit, as long as they notify the insurance department afterward.
Former State Sen. Marty Quinn (R), ex-chair of the Senate Insurance Committee, supported the new law. Now he’s running for insurance commissioner.
Quinn said at the recent debate that he would force insurance companies to hear “what our consumers are going through” and negotiate more affordable rates.
Chris Merideth, another candidate for the office, said the law will provide transparency that will help the public determine if rate hikes are needed. But he warned that overzealous efforts to control insurance companies’ prices could backfire.
“California tried to regulate out of [price increases],” Merideth, who worked for two decades at Farmers Insurance as a lobbyist and claims manager, said at the debate. “Their market collapsed. You can’t find insurance.”
Leading officials including state Attorney General Gentner Drummond (R), who is running for governor, have accused insurance companies of bilking Oklahomans.
Drummond has alleged that State Farm, the state’s largest home insurer, set up a secret internal program to deny legitimate claims for roofs that were damaged in hailstorms.
“I’ve taken on State Farm. Next to be taken on is Allstate,” Drummond said in a May debate among gubernatorial candidates.
State Farm, which has previously denied the allegation, couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. Allstate didn’t respond to a request for comment sent Monday evening.
“More government regulation will not bring additional insurance capital into the marketplace,” Chelsea Stallings, regional vice president for the Southwest at the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies, said in an email.
Stallings said curbing excessive lawsuits against insurers, strengthening building codes and hardening homes against extreme weather would be more effective to court insurers.
Drummond and Sullivan, the candidate for insurance commissioner, have also criticized current Insurance Commissioner Glen Mulready (R ) for not doing enough to prevent companies from hiking rates.
The two candidates have demanded that Mulready hold a public hearing to consider if Oklahoma’s home insurance market is “competitive” — meaning that it’s functioning efficiently for both insurers and consumers.
Under Oklahoma law, if the department deems the market is not competitive, regulators gain new powers to scrutinize and potentially reject proposed rate increases. Legislative leaders have said that four insurance companies dominate the state market, giving them disproportionate power to inflate prices.
Mulready has repeatedly denied that the market isn’t competitive, citing indicators used by economists.
But he has scheduled a hearing for September in which multiple presenters will make their arguments to an independent administrative law judge selected by the insurance department, Mulready said in an interview. Thirty days later, the judge will render an opinion.
Drummond pushed Mulready to schedule the hearing for June. Mulready said he scheduled it for September, well after the primaries, because he didn’t “want this to be used as a political stunt.”
Mulready, who is exiting the office due to term limits, said he hopes the next insurance commissioner is “focused on maintaining a competitive free market that allows for more choices for Oklahoma and doesn’t go down a California-type path.”
Oklahoma
Oklahoma City boy burned after trying viral NeeDoh microwave trend
An Oklahoma City family is warning parents after they say a viral social media trend led to serious injuries for their 11-year-old son.
Koltyn Preston says he saw videos online showing people microwaving NeeDoh stress toys to make them softer. He says he tried it himself and within seconds, it went wrong.
“I put it in the microwave,” said Koltyn. “It wouldn’t come off and it was burning.”
The hot gel inside the toy splattered across his face and neck.
His mother, Kami Gill, was in another room when she suddenly heard him scream.
“I’m sitting on my bed taking a bite of my sandwich and I hear this scream,” said Gill. “I’m like, what in the world could have happened?”
She says she rushed to help him and quickly realized the severity of the injury.
“It was terrifying and terrible,” said Gill.
Koltyn was taken to the hospital, where he stayed overnight. Gill says he has since undergone multiple wound care appointments and is still recovering weeks later.
“If it would have got in his eyes, he’d be blind,” she said. “He’s been under anesthesia twice to scrub the wounds.”
Gill also says that when she later looked at the packaging, she noticed a warning label that was difficult to see.
“There’s a giant barcode over the warning label,” she said. “If you’re not looking for it, you don’t see it.”
Doctors say they’ve received questions about similar online trends involving the toys and warn that they should never be heated.
“The material inside heats up very fast and it can blow up,” said Dr. Ryan Brown at OU Children’s. “It can explode in the microwave or once you get it out it can burn your hands or explode into your face.”
Gill is sharing her family’s experience in hopes that other parents will talk with their children about what they see online before trying viral trends themselves.
The manufacturer, Schylling, says microwaving, heating or freezing NeeDoh products is dangerous and can cause injury.
The company says it has worked with TikTok to remove videos showing misuse and has added safety warnings to packaging and online listings.
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