OKLAHOMA CITY – VERNON WAYNE BROCK, 70, of Alva, has pleaded
guilty to hiring someone to commit murder, announced U.S. Attorney Timothy J.
Downing.
A federal grand jury indicted Brock on April 17, 2019, for
using interstate commerce facilities to commit murder-for-hire during the first
few days of April. According to an
affidavit filed in the case, an individual from Kansas whom Brock was trying to
hire to commit murder contacted the FBI and cooperated in the
investigation. Law enforcement
determined that Brock and the individual from Kansas were partners in Oklahoma
vape shops and that Brock was upset with a former employee who refused to
continue a sexual relationship with him.
Brock wanted the individual from Kansas to arrange the murder of the
former employee’s boyfriend in Oklahoma City in exchange for $5,000. He identified the boyfriend by sending a
picture to the individual from Kansas and confirming "that’s the guy we
want dead." Recorded conversations
between Brock and the individual from Kansas included statements such as:
"Are they going to thump her around a little bit? And do him?
Cause that’s what I wanted."
FBI agents arrested Brock on the afternoon of April 3, with
the assistance of the Woods County Sheriff’s Office, after Brock delivered a
$5,000 check to the individual from Kansas at a café in Harper, Kansas. He has been in federal custody since that
time.
Brock pleaded guilty this morning to the one-count
indictment. He admitted he traveled in
interstate commerce on April 1, 2019, and used facilities of interstate
commerce—a cell phone and a pickup truck—with intent that murder be committed
in exchange for payment.
At sentencing, Brock faces a potential penalty of ten years
in prison, a fine of $250,000, and three years of supervised release. Sentencing will take place in approximately
90 days.
This case is a result of an investigation by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation–Oklahoma City Field Office, Woodward Resident
Agency. Prosecuted by Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Ashley Altshuler and Jason Harley, the case is part of Project Safe
Neighborhoods, the centerpiece of the Department of Justice’s violent crime
reduction efforts. Through PSN, a broad
spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent
crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses on the
most violent offenders and partners with local prevention and re-entry programs
for lasting reductions in crime. To
enhance local effectiveness, the Western District of Oklahoma has emphasized
prosecution of federal crimes connected to domestic violence.
Reference is made to public filings for more information.
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