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Defendants testify in fatal fire

By BILL BRAUN World Staff Writer on Jan 24, 2013, at 2:15 AM  Updated on 1/24/13 at 4:41 AM


Jeffrey Wayne McBride: Testimony from co- defendant Jacob A. Bell on Wednesday indicated that McBride was engaged in a meth-cooking procedure as a fire broke out in the 1400 block of West Admiral Boulevard in November 2011. McBride is charged with arson and felony murder in connection with the smoke inhalation death of 15-month-old Ayden Jennings


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Read the Tulsa World’s continuing coverage of the meth epidemic.

Two defendants who are charged in connection with a fire that claimed a Tulsa baby's life testified Wednesday at the trial of another defendant.

Jeffrey Wayne McBride, 48, is accused of causing the blaze by cooking methamphetamine and is on trial on counts of felony murder, first-degree arson and manufacturing a controlled dangerous substance.

Tulsa County prosecutors charged McBride, Jacob A. Bell and Jennifer Michelle Jennings with acting in concert with one another and causing the death of Jennings' son, Ayden Jennings, by committing arson in the process of manufacturing meth on Nov. 10, 2011.

Ayden, who was nearly 15 months old, was found dead in a back bedroom after an early morning fire at a duplex in the 1400 block of West Admiral Boulevard.

Investigators said they found meth-lab components in the burned duplex.

A medical examiner determined that the cause of Ayden's death was complications of smoke inhalation and thermal injuries.

A jury was seated and testimony began Wednesday in District Judge Kurt Glassco's court for a trial for McBride alone.

In an opening statement, Assistant District Attorney John Salmon said evidence will point to McBride as the person who was cooking meth in the duplex that night.

Bell, 36, and Jennings, 27, who said they were boyfriend and girlfriend, were the first two prosecution witnesses.

Bell testified that the defendants used meth at the residence before the fire.

He said he had seen McBride cook meth previously via the "shake and bake" method and said McBride taught him how to cook it.

Bell testified that McBride showed up at Bell's Admiral Place residence about 2 a.m. and that all three defendants used meth.

Bell indicated that later that morning, he saw McBride in the kitchen, engaged in a procedure that he associated with meth cooking.

Bell said he later smelled smoke and noticed that the "ceiling was full of smoke."

He said he tried to get Ayden out of the back room but could not do so because of the fire and smoke.

Jennings said it was "pitch dark" and "nothing but a wall of flames."

In his cross-examinations, defense attorney Gregg Graves, representing McBride, has pointed out that Bell and Jennings have lied previously about events in the case.

Jennings said she is hoping for "justice for my son."

In a separate case, McBride was sentenced this month to 25 years in prison for another methamphetamine crime.

He pleaded guilty in December to a charge of endeavoring to manufacture or possess meth on Nov. 12, 2011 - two days after the fatal fire - at a residence in the 1000 block of North College Avenue.

He received a 25-year prison term in that case.


Bill Braun 918-581-8455
bill.braun@tulsaworld.com
Original Print Headline: Defendants testify about fatal fire
Legal

Pushups for Tulsa police officer didn't violate man's civil rights, jury says

The plaintiff alleged in a lawsuit that he was made to perform pushups to avoid a ticket or jail.

Out-of-state prisoner charged in Tulsa double murder brought back to face prosecution

Hilliard Andrew Fulgham is accused of killing Linda Wright, 45, and Dorothy Lindley, 60, in 2006.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Bill Braun

918-581-8455
Email

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