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A routine records request about police misconduct in Oilton, Oklahoma led investigators down a rabbit hole that would expose one of the most disturbing cases of corruption they had ever encountered. What started as questions about an officer assaulting a 76-year-old Vietnam veteran on his own property became a months-long investigation into a police chief whose history of alleged sexual violence had followed him across multiple states for decades.
The city clerk's refusal to provide basic public records under Oklahoma's open records law was the first red flag. When she insisted all requests had to go through an attorney, it became clear something was being hidden in this town of just 800 people.
The Chief Who Defended the Indefensible
Chief Carl Stout didn't just refuse to discipline Officer Beers for putting hands on the elderly veteran. He publicly defended the actions on the department's Facebook page, claiming Beers "acted accordingly based on training and officer safety." The veteran had simply told door-to-door salesmen to leave his property, yet Stout characterized this as "obstruction" and "threatening acts of violence."
Beers resigned shortly after the incident went viral, but Stout's defense of the indefensible behavior raised immediate questions. What kind of leader would back such obvious misconduct? The answer would prove more disturbing than anyone anticipated.
A Trail of Victims Across Three States
Background checks on Chief Stout revealed a pattern stretching from Georgia to Texas to Oklahoma. Multiple protective orders. Domestic violence arrests. And allegations involving victims as young as 15 and 16 years old.
One police report contained chilling details from a teenage victim: "Carl drives by my house comes to my work threatening me will not leave me alone. He got me out of a ticket one night and he keeps telling me that I owe him. He stalks me continuously." The report detailed sexual assault charges she had filed against the chief while he was in a position of authority over her.
An anonymous source provided investigators with what appeared to be Stout's personal list rating women by age, marital status, physical attributes, and sexual performance. Some names on the list were as young as 15.
The Mayor Who Hired Him
The person responsible for hiring Stout was Mayor Patrick Kennedy, whose own criminal history proved equally shocking. Kennedy had been convicted of embezzling over $8,000 from the same city he now leads, orchestrating a scheme involving fake contractor invoices and money exchanges in cemeteries.
Despite his conviction for stealing taxpayer money, Kennedy faced no prohibition on running for office again. The deferred sentence was later expunged, allowing him to return to power in the very city he had robbed.
When confronted about hiring a chief with Stout's history, Kennedy's response was telling: "I don't give a damn."
The Emergency Meeting That Changed Nothing
After investigators brought evidence of Stout's protective orders to the city council, an emergency meeting was called. The agenda listed discussion of possible suspension or termination of the police chief, along with potential legal action against the journalists who exposed the story.
Rather than address the serious allegations in public, the council retreated to executive session to hide their discussions from taxpayers. When they emerged, no action was taken against Stout. The man with multiple allegations of sexual violence against minors and adults would keep his badge and gun.
The Confrontation That Revealed Everything
A new protective order was filed against Stout during the investigation, ordering him to surrender his firearms. When investigators attempted to serve him with the order and ask questions about his alleged victims, Stout's reaction spoke volumes.
The encounter was captured on video as Stout attempted to flee, visibly shaking when confronted about "the girl in Bishi" and other victims. His refusal to address the allegations, combined with his obvious distress at being questioned, painted the picture of a man whose secrets were finally catching up to him.
The Final Reckoning
Public pressure eventually forced a second city council meeting where Stout's fate would finally be decided. Despite a handful of supporters attempting to defend him, the overwhelming evidence and community outrage proved too much to ignore.
The council voted to terminate Stout immediately, a decision that would be reported to Oklahoma's Council on Law Enforcement Education and Training. For the first time in his decades-long career of alleged abuse, there would be consequences that would follow him to any future law enforcement position.
What the Video Reveals
The full documentary contains confrontations, secret recordings of city meetings, and interviews with sources that reveal the complete scope of this corruption scandal. The final moments captured Stout's true character as he left his last day as chief.
Watch the complete investigation to see how a small-town cover-up unraveled and why this case represents everything wrong with police accountability in America.