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Obscene VIP jail treatment given to rich wine mom who maimed woman, 20, in DUI crash and got freed very early.. as her cozy friendship with governor is revealed

A rich lawyer’s wife with friends in high places got cushy perks behind bars until she was released just 73 days into an eight-year sentence.

Sara Polston drove to pick up her kids from school after a boozy margarita lunch and crashed her Cadillac Escalade into Micaela Borrego’s car at 66mph in February 2023.

Police in Norman, just outside Oklahoma City, found an empty bottle of tequila she bought on the way and tests found she had a blood alcohol level of 0.158.

After a drawn-out legal battle she finally pleaded guilty and was jailed for eight years last December, also paying $5 million to Borrego in a civil settlement.

Meanwhile, Borrego, just 19 when Polston ran into her car, spent weeks in a coma with a five percent chance of survival and had to learn to walk and talk all over again.

Shockingly, Polston, now 43, was released just 73 days into her sentence as part of Oklahoma’s controversial ankle monitor program.

Her case prompted a multi-county grand jury investigation into the program and uncovered astonishing VIP treatment she received in jail.

The damning report revealed the personal intervention of Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt, a longtime friend of Polston’s husband Rod, a well-connected tax lawyer.

Sara Polston, a rich lawyer’s wife with friends in high places, got cushy perks behind bars until she was released just 73 days into an eight-year sentence

Polston drove pick up her kids from school after a boozy margarita lunch and crashed into Micaela Borrego's (pictured) car at 66mph in February 2023

Polston drove pick up her kids from school after a boozy margarita lunch and crashed into Micaela Borrego’s (pictured) car at 66mph in February 2023

Rod Polston and Stitt were high school classmates and college fraternity brothers, and the Polstons gave $27,000 to his campaigns along with hosting a fundraiser at their home.

Dozens of prison phone calls recorded the couple discussing political machinations to get Polston special treatment, and ultimately secure her release.

Stitt was never mentioned by name, but the grand jury found that code words like ‘Kevin’, ‘The Guy’, ‘Our Friend’, and ‘Our Buddy’ referred to him.

Rod also said ‘we only have “A Friend” for a year left’. Stitts is in his last year as a term-limited governor.

‘Do you think I’ll have any special treatment?’ Polston asked her husband in one of the calls.

‘I don’t know, I’m going to try anyway that I can. I got the highest workers working on it,’ he replied.

‘That’s why I’m concerned about how quickly I can get you out of there. I’m going to try not to beg Kevin, bother him.

‘You can’t be acting like you’re better than anybody. You let me work it from the top, and you be nice as f**k to everybody from the bottom.’ 

Another conversation implied the governor was trying to secure a pardon for Polston behind the scenes.

‘He can’t do the P?’ Polston asked. 

‘He’s got to check to see if he’s got, if they (the Pardon and Parole Board) serve, quote-unquote at his pleasure,’ Rod replied.

Micaela Borrego (pictured) was in critical condition - locked in a weeks-long coma that would ultimately rob her of the ability to speak, eat and walk

Micaela Borrego (pictured) was in critical condition – locked in a weeks-long coma that would ultimately rob her of the ability to speak, eat and walk

‘Our friend was not happy that the district attorney did not change her position… I mean, got mad like, ‘you are kidding me?”

While at the county jail, Sheriff Chris Amason also bent over backwards to make her time behind bars more comfortable.

Calls showed she whined about her iPad – which she was allowed to have against normal procedures – wasn’t charged.

Rod was also allowed to bring her a Chick-Fil-A meal at one of frequent visitations coordinated by Amason, according to the report.

These sorts of inmate accommodations were unprecedented in the Cleveland County Jail,’ the grand jury wrote.

‘The sheriff informed investigators that he wanted to help the Polstons. He stated he was trying to do Polston a favor and wanted to “do them a solid.”‘

Polston was initially housed in a medical cell, then another area of the jail where she could watch TV, then back to medical when she decided it was too loud. 

‘Hey, can you text Chris Amason and see if they can move me back to the area that I slept in last night?’ she asked her husband in one call.

Polston is married to renowned local tax attorney Rod Polston (pictured), and together, the couple live in Norman with their children

Polston is married to renowned local tax attorney Rod Polston (pictured), and together, the couple live in Norman with their children 

Polston was moved from the county jail to a more comfortable, long-term prison far earlier than the average inmate. 

‘Department of Corrections chief of operation, Jason Sparks ordered chief of population, Jason Bryant, to expedite Sara Polston’s transport and have her picked up from the Cleveland County Jail,’ the report stated.

Rod told his wife in another call that he got her moved to the Dr Eddie Warrior Correctional Center because it ‘was at 99 percent capacity so they can “justify bouncing you out earlier because they just don’t have the space”.’

The pardon never materialized, but Polston’s friends in high places were able to swiftly secure the next best thing – release with the ankle monitor, the report found.

‘I don’t give a f**k about any of it. Protesters, media, whatever. I’m like, we’re going home, and nothing is interfering with that,’ Rod said in one of the calls.

‘We’re going f**king home. Whatever fire, we’ve got to walk through, we’ll walk through it. They don’t know how f**king fireproof we are right now.’

Stitt intervened at least twice to encourage jail authorities to get her onto the program, and later called to interim DOC director Justin Farris to ‘confirm’ she was being released.

Bryant eventually approved her for the program, and both Farris and Sparks told the grand jury that they could have overruled the decision but chose not to.

The grand jury report noted that no witness testified that they were directed by the governor to release Polston.

However, ‘it defies common sense and logic to believe that the governor and governor’s staff’s multiple phone calls to newly appointed interim director Farris did not play a role in the remarkable decision to release Sara Polston just over two months into an eight year sentence’.

Krista Borrego, Micaela’s mother and now Micaela’s primary full-time caregiver, was not told of the possibility Polston could be getting out, or given an opportunity to object, and only learned of it after the release date was set.

The damning report revealed the personal intervention of Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt (pictured), a longtime friend of Polston's husband Rod

The damning report revealed the personal intervention of Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt (pictured), a longtime friend of Polston’s husband Rod

But Polston and her husband didn’t care about the feelings of the woman she maimed for life, or those of her family.

‘At this point, I’m like, they’ve got an unforgiveness hole. There’s not enough money and there’s not enough time for you to do that would ever make them happy,’ Rod said.

‘But it doesn’t matter. Outside of you just being killed, nothing’s going to make them happy. I mean, I feel for them. I want the best for their family. 

‘I want them to hopefully someday have forgiveness and have happiness and get past this so that Sara Polston’s not owning space in their head for the rest of their lives, but that’s up to them.’

Polston’s special treatment began even before her sentencing, according to the grand jury’s report.

‘Civil attorneys for the Polstons presented the Borregos with a conditional offer stating the Polstons would pay $500,000.00 out of their own pocket to the Borregos if Sara Polston was not sentenced to prison,’ the report noted.

The Borrego family didn’t take the offer, and pushed for Polston to be jailed. They later received 10 times that offer in a settlement.

‘We did everything we could do. We even tried to cut a deal with ya,’ Rod said to his wife after the release was approved about what the Borregos were probably thinking.

‘This is what you wanted, and don’t cry a river now because the system provides an opportunity for you to get out.’

Micaela Borrego (right) and her mother, Krista Borrego, on May 6, outside of the attorney general's office in Oklahoma City after appearing before the multicounty grand jury

Micaela Borrego (right) and her mother, Krista Borrego, on May 6, outside of the attorney general’s office in Oklahoma City after appearing before the multicounty grand jury

Borrego, just 19 when Polston ran into her car, spent weeks in a coma with a five percent chance of survival and had to learn to walk and talk all over again

Borrego, just 19 when Polston ran into her car, spent weeks in a coma with a five percent chance of survival and had to learn to walk and talk all over again

The pre-sentence investigation officer assigned to her case was instructed by his supervisor to ‘ensure Polston was treated with respect and made to feel comfortable’ as she ‘feels like law enforcement doesn’t like her’.

‘The PSI officer was not explicitly instructed to be lenient in his sentencing recommendation to the court; however, he believed that the message carried an implication that he was to be lenient,’ the report stated.

‘He felt that the wrong decision could cost him his job.’

The grand jury stated that the officer was told by his supervisor that this directive was a result of Farris receiving a call from the governor’s office.

The reported stated that the grand jury investigation ‘uncovered deeply concerning practices and actions’ by officials, but there was not enough evidence to recommend criminal charges.

However, it branded the GPS program ‘indefensible and the instances of political favoritism reprehensible’. 

‘Citizens deserve an even playing field irrespective of wealth, social status, and political connections,’ it added.

‘This rank political favoritism, particularly on a crime that nearly took the life of a 20-year-old young woman, is indefensible.’

Sara Polston was released from prison on Thursday after 73 served and will now be under electronic monitoring in her home after pleading guilty to a DUI in October 

Polston on the ground next to her car after emerging from her wrecked Cadillac Escalade

Polston on the ground next to her car after emerging from her wrecked Cadillac Escalade

Stitt denied doing anything improper or urging corrections officials to release Polston, and claimed Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond was trying to smear him.

‘I never asked for that to happen nor called in special favors. No one testified to that effect and the grand jury found no evidence of such accusations,’ he said.

‘What is buried deep in this grand jury report is who DID do favors while the inmate was in county jail…

‘Cleveland County Sheriff Amason who the attorney general just recently gave a sweetheart plea deal to, and whose attorney is the attorney general’s biggest political supporter and fundraiser.

‘His campaign is not doing well. He’s searching for anything to get himself in the headlines, coming and attacking me.’

Amason resigned on April 27 after pleading no contest to embezzling campaign funds. His plea deal put him on probation for five years for one count, with three others dismissed. 

Police bodycam footage released along with the grand jury report showed the horrifying aftermath of the crash.

Borrego was dangling from her wrecked car, muttering and barely alive, while Polston was barely injured other than complaining to officers about her wrist.

‘I don’t know if she’s loopy because of the collision or if it’s because of…’ one of the cops wondered aloud about her intoxication to another.

The aftermath of the crash that almost killed Borrego with her car caved in by the impact

The aftermath of the crash that almost killed Borrego with her car caved in by the impact

Borrego in the driver's seat of her car after the crash

Borrego in the driver’s seat of her car after the crash

Borrego suffered permanent life-changing injuries including brain swelling, a sacrum fracture, lumbar spine fracture, dislocation of her tailbone area, and bleeding around her brain, the report detailed.

She also had cuts to her scalp and eyelids, vertebral artery injuries, cerebral artery injuries, and carotid artery injuries. 

The teenager spent two months in a coma and suffered a stroke due to her injuries, potentially shortening her life expectancy by 10 years. 

Under the GPS program, convicted DUI drivers can be eligible for early release with a GPS tag if they meet certain criteria such as having no prior criminal record.

The law was amended last month to ban DUI offenders who caused severe injuries from the program, starting November 1. It is unclear whether this means Polston could be sent back to prison.

Cleveland County District Attorney Jennifer Austin was also frustrated with the decision to grant the DUI driver early release. 

‘This is not what the law intends: that a victim can almost be killed and 70 days later, they’re released. We have to do better. This is not okay,’ Austin said. 

Austin discovered 21 other offenders release under similar circumstances, but said their offenses were much less severe. 

‘I looked at what some of those were, trafficking in drugs, possession with intent, burglaries of autos, not cases that had true victims, that their lives were changed forever,’ she told the outlet. 

While at the county jail, Sheriff Chris Amason (pictured) bent over backwards to make her time behind bars more comfortable

While at the county jail, Sheriff Chris Amason (pictured) bent over backwards to make her time behind bars more comfortable

Stitt intervened at least twice to encourage jail authorities to get her onto the program, and later called to interim DOC director Justin Farris (pictured) to 'confirm' she was being released

Stitt intervened at least twice to encourage jail authorities to get her onto the program, and later called to interim DOC director Justin Farris (pictured) to ‘confirm’ she was being released

The Oklahoma Department of Corrections said that the Global Positioning Satellite Program allows eligible inmates to be reintegrated under ‘strict supervision.’ 

The ODOC wrote that Polston had no disqualifying criteria, no prior criminal record and a ‘successful history of treatment and community service,’ and was therefore eligible. 

The Population and Classification unit approved the placement on February 11, according to the ODOC. 

‘We anticipated that she would be in custody for 24 months, which would be the quarter that she is required to serve by law until she’s eligible for parole,’ Austin said. 

Borrego’s heartbroken mother told the outlet: ‘[the judge] gave her eight years, and with the stroke of a pen, the DOC [Department of Corrections] was able to unravel that.’ 

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