Dean Davis

American politician
Dean Davis
Member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives
from the 98th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
2019
Preceded byMichael Rodgers
Personal details
NationalityAmerican
Political partyRepublican
Residence(s)Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, U.S.

Dean Davis is an American politician serving as a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives from the 98th district. He assumed office in 2019.[1] In 2020, he was re-elected by default.[2]

Oklahoma House of Representatives

Davis authored House Bill 2011 that would allow for vehicles to be registered every two years. It passed the house in March 2023.[3]

Criminal charges

In August 2019, Davis was arrested by Broken Arrow police for driving while intoxicated, speeding, and obstructing an officer.[4] After being arrested, Davis called Representative T. J. Marti of Broken Arrow for bail and also called several other Republican representatives, expressing his confidence that the district attorney would drop charges once he spoke with them.[5] The charges were later deferred, allowing him to plead no contest in exchange for six months probation.[4]

Shortly after his probation expired in March 2023, he was arrested outside an Oklahoma City bar for public intoxication. During the arrest, he claimed legislative privilege prevented the officer from arresting him due to the ongoing legislative session.[4] House Minority Leader Cyndi Munson later called for Republican lawmakers to be held "equally accountable", contrasting the cases of Davis, Ryan Martinez, and Terry O'Donnell (who were each facing criminal charges) with the censure of Representative Mauree Turner.[6][note 1] Davis was later censured on March 27.[8]

History

In 2024, he voted against HB 3329 which still passed the house floor. It is intended to provide free menstrual products in school bathrooms.[9]

Notes

  1. ^ Turner had been censured for sheltering a protester from police; reporting was divided on whether the protester hit the officer, or if the officer grabbed the protester, threw them to the ground, and attempted to pin them.[7]

References

  1. ^ "REPRESENTATIVE DEAN DAVIS DISTRICT 98 - REPUBLICAN". okhouse.gov. Oklahoma State Legislature. Archived from the original on 5 March 2022. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  2. ^ Savage, Tres (2020). "More than 40 Oklahoma legislators re-elected by default". NonDoc.
  3. ^ "House passes Davis Bill to allow vehicle registration every two years". Guthrie News Page. March 13, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Savage, Tres (March 24, 2023). "'You can't detain me': Six months after DUI deferral, Rep. Dean Davis arrested in OKC". NonDoc. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  5. ^ Savage, Tres (August 20, 2019). "In jail call, Rep. Dean Davis said Broken Arrow 'just made an enemy'". NonDoc. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  6. ^ "'Last night has become a story': Broken Arrow Rep. arrested for public intoxication". Fox 25. 23 March 2023.
  7. ^ Factora, James (March 9, 2023). "Nonbinary Oklahoma Legislator Mauree Turner Censured for Protecting Trans Protestor". Them. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  8. ^ Denwalt, Dale (March 27, 2023). "Oklahoma House censures representative who claimed police couldn't arrest him". The Oklahoman. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
  9. ^ "House Votes". webserver1.lsb.state.ok.us. Retrieved 2024-03-12.
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59th Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Charles McCall (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Kyle Hilbert (R)
Majority Leader
Tammy West (R)
Minority Leader
Cyndi Munson (D)
  1. Eddy Dempsey (R)
  2. Jim Olsen (R)
  3. Rick West (R)
  4. Bob Ed Culver Jr. (R)
  5. Josh West (R)
  6. Rusty Cornwell (R)
  7. Steve Bashore (R)
  8. Tom Gann (R)
  9. Mark Lepak (R)
  10. Judd Strom (R)
  11. John Kane (R)
  12. Kevin McDugle (R)
  13. Neil Hays (R)
  14. Chris Sneed (R)
  15. Randy Randleman (R)
  16. Scott Fetgatter (R)
  17. Jim Grego (R)
  18. David Smith (R)
  19. Justin Humphrey (R)
  20. Sherrie Conley (R)
  21. Cody Maynard (R)
  22. Charles McCall (R)
  23. Terry O'Donnell (R)
  24. Chris Banning (R)
  25. Ronny Johns (R)
  26. Dell Kerbs (R)
  27. Danny Sterling (R)
  28. Danny Williams (R)
  29. Kyle Hilbert (R)
  30. Mark Lawson (R)
  31. Collin Duel (R)
  32. Kevin Wallace (R)
  33. John Talley (R)
  34. Trish Ranson (D)
  35. Ty Burns (R)
  36. John George (R)
  37. Ken Luttrell (R)
  38. John Pfeiffer (R)
  39. Erick Harris (R)
  40. Chad Caldwell (R)
  41. Denise Crosswhite Hader (R)
  42. Cynthia Roe (R)
  43. Jay Steagall (R)
  44. Jared Deck (D)
  45. Annie Menz (D)
  46. Jacob Rosecrants (D)
  47. Brian Hill (R)
  48. Tammy Townley (R)
  49. Josh Cantrell (R)
  50. Marcus McEntire (R)
  51. Brad Boles (R)
  52. Gerrid Kendrix (R)
  53. Mark McBride (R)
  54. Kevin West (R)
  55. Nick Archer (R)
  56. Dick Lowe (R)
  57. Anthony Moore (R)
  58. Carl Newton (R)
  59. Mike Dobrinski (R)
  60. Rhonda Baker (R)
  61. Kenton Patzkowsky (R)
  62. Daniel Pae (R)
  63. Trey Caldwell (R)
  64. Rande Worthen (R)
  65. Toni Hasenbeck (R)
  66. Clay Staires (R)
  67. Jeff Boatman (R)
  68. Lonnie Sims (R)
  69. Mark Tedford (R)
  70. Suzanne Schreiber (D)
  71. Amanda Swope (D)
  72. Monroe Nichols (D)
  73. Regina Goodwin (D)
  74. Mark Vancuren (R)
  75. T. J. Marti (R)
  76. Ross Ford (R)
  77. John Waldron (D)
  78. Meloyde Blancett (D)
  79. Melissa Provenzano (D)
  80. Stan May (R)
  81. Mike Osburn (R)
  82. Nicole Miller (R)
  83. Eric Roberts (R)
  84. Tammy West (R)
  85. Cyndi Munson (D)
  86. Dave Hardin (R)
  87. Ellyn Hefner (D)
  88. Mauree Turner (D)
  89. Arturo Alonso (D)
  90. Jon Echols (R)
  91. Chris Kannady (R)
  92. Forrest Bennett (D)
  93. Mickey Dollens (D)
  94. Andy Fugate (D)
  95. Max Wolfley (R)
  96. Preston Stinson (R)
  97. Jason Lowe (D)
  98. Dean Davis (R)
  99. Ajay Pittman (D)
  100. Marilyn Stark (R)
  101. Robert Manger (R)


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