
A Hartshorne woman is facing serious felony charges after prosecutors allege she was under the influence when her vehicle struck two pedestrians in Krebs last year, killing one and seriously injuring another.
Amanda Dawn Shinn, 46, is charged in Pittsburg County District Court with first-degree manslaughter and child endangerment by driving under the influence.
According to a probable cause affidavit, the charges stem from an Aug. 29, 2025, crash on Highway 270 near the Gorilla Store in Krebs.
It is alleged that Shinn was driving a Nissan Rogue when she struck two pedestrians. One of the victims, Derrick Bolin, died from injuries sustained in the crash.
A second victim suffered extensive injuries and was flown to a Tulsa trauma center for treatment. According to the affidavit, the victim suffered a spinal fracture, multiple broken ribs, a broken foot and other injuries requiring surgery and months of rehabilitation.
The affidavit states a juvenile was riding in Shinn’s vehicle at the time of the crash as well, leading to the child-endangerment charge.
Shinn allegedly told officers she had reached into the back seat to hand something to her son when her foot slipped off the brake pedal. Authorities also obtained a blood sample from Shinn as part of the investigation.
The filing also triggered action in a previous Pittsburg County felony case. Shinn was serving a five-year suspended sentence stemming from a 2022 conviction for child endangerment by actual physical control of a vehicle while under the influence.
Shinn pleaded guilty in that case in October 2022 and was ordered to serve five years under a suspended sentence while supervised by Community Sentencing.
Court records show prosecutors filed a motion to revoke that suspended sentence on June 3, the same day the new manslaughter case was filed. A judge subsequently issued a warrant in the revocation case and set bond at $50,000.
Her total bond is set at $300,000 as the bond on the new charges were set at $250,000.
The new manslaughter charge carries a potential sentence ranging from four years to life in prison if convicted.

