Former Tulsa Deputy Sentenced For Sexual Battery, Indecent Exposure

<p>Gerald Nuckolls, a former Tulsa County Sheriff's Deputy, has been&nbsp;sentenced to eight years in prison after convictions for sexual battery and indecent exposure.</p>

Monday, November 23rd 2015, 12:36 pm



Gerald Nuckolls, a former Tulsa County Sheriff's Deputy, has been sentenced to eight years in prison. Earlier this year, a jury convicted Nuckolls of sexual battery and indecent exposure while on duty.

His sentence is four years for each count - to run consecutively. 

In trying to get a lesser sentence, his attorney said if his client were not to serve another day, he still would have been severely punished - because he's lost his job, fiancee and reputation.

A jury deliberated for less than two hours in October to find him guilty in an incident that took place while he responded to a 911 hang-up call in September, 2014. He'd been assigned to investigate the call, and during the investigation he grabbed a woman's breast and exposed himself to her.

The jury recommended he serve four years for each crime.

"He was inappropriate that  morning - which he admitted to," said Terry Funk, Nuckolls' attorney.

10/16/2015 Related Story: Ex-Tulsa County Deputy Found Guilty Of Sexual Battery While In Uniform

In a brief filed just before sentencing, the word victim had quotation marks around it. And despite a conviction, the documents maintained Nuckolls is innocent, saying the contact was consensual. The papers say Nuckolls is a veteran suffering from major depressive disorder.

Nuckolls told the judge he had neglected his mental health saying, "in the infantry you're supposed to be tough."

Tulsa County Prosecutor Kenneth Elmore - a combat veteran himself - says Nuckolls' veteran status and time spent as a deputy should not factor into sentencing.

"It was a little personal, yes ma'am," Elmore said. "The laws apply to us all the same.

"Whether you've served in combat or whether you're a law enforcement officer, you shouldn't receive special treatment when it comes to sentencing, especially for a crime like this."

Judge Bill LaFortune seemed to agree, sentencing Nuckolls to eight years total.

"To get consecutive four-year terms is disappointing," Funk said.

Nuckolls' attorney said he believes his client's past jobs played a role in that decision.

"I don't know about making an example, but I think it worked against him," Funk said.

logo

Get The Daily Update!

Be among the first to get breaking news, weather, and general news updates from News on 6 delivered right to your inbox!

More Like This

November 23rd, 2015

April 15th, 2024

April 12th, 2024

March 14th, 2024

Top Headlines

April 18th, 2024

April 18th, 2024

April 18th, 2024

April 18th, 2024