Oklahoma City

Caddo County Deputy Busted After Alleged Chokehold, Gun Threat In Domestic Kidnapping Case

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Published on March 03, 2026
Caddo County Deputy Busted After Alleged Chokehold, Gun Threat In Domestic Kidnapping CaseSource: Wikipedia/NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Last Thursday night, a Caddo County patrol deputy found himself under arrest after a woman reported she had been assaulted and held against her will, according to court documents. The deputy, identified in those records as Logan Davis, now faces counts of domestic assault, battery by strangulation, feloniously pointing a firearm and kidnapping following what authorities say was a domestic dispute that escalated at a residence in Caddo County.

According to KOCO, a probable‑cause affidavit filed Monday states the woman left the house after an argument and Davis chased her down in his pickup, blocking her from driving away. The affidavit alleges Davis later threw the woman onto a bed, into a television stand and choked her for about three seconds, during which she could not breathe. The document also says that when the 911 communications center tried to call back, Davis took the phone from the woman and at one point pointed a gun at her.

Still Listed on Sheriff’s Staff Page

The Caddo County Sheriff's Office lists Logan Davis as a patrol deputy on its staff page, according to the Caddo County Sheriff's Office. The online roster confirms his employment with the agency but does not reference the criminal allegations, offering only contact and departmental details.

Affidavit Filed, Bond Posted, Silence From Sheriff

Court records show a probable‑cause affidavit was filed Monday and that Davis posted bond that same morning. Local coverage reports that he bonded out and that the sheriff’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment, according to KOCO.

What the Felony Counts Could Mean

Under Oklahoma law, domestic assault and battery by strangulation is a felony and can carry a prison term for a first conviction, according to 21 O.S. § 644 as summarized by Justia. Feloniously pointing a firearm is prohibited under 21 O.S. § 1289.16, with penalties for conviction laid out in statute, per Justia. Kidnapping is a separate felony that can carry lengthy prison terms under state law, according to statute summaries at WomensLaw. These are only potential penalties; prosecutors would still need to prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt.

Case Heads to District Court

The case is set to move forward in Caddo County District Court, according to Oklahoma Courts. Court dockets and filings can be checked through the county clerk or the Oklahoma State Courts Network. As with any criminal matter, the charges remain allegations at this stage, and Davis is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in court.