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Columbian Newspaper

Clark County homeowners age 61 or older may qualify for a property tax break but many don’t know it
Author: Alexis Weisend

Older homeowners and people with disabilities could be saving thousands in property taxes but Clark County Assessor’s Office staff say a state tax-exemption program is underutilized.

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Judge rejects Hunter Biden’s bid to delay his June trial on federal gun charges
Author: CLAUDIA LAUER and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER, Associated Press

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — Hunter Biden’s federal gun case will go to trial next month, a judge said Tuesday, denying a bid by lawyers for the president’s son to delay the prosecution.

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American sought after ‘So I raped you’ Facebook message detained in France on 2021 warrant
Author: MARYCLAIRE DALE and NICOLAS VAUX-MONTAGNY, MARYCLAIRE DALE and NICOLAS VAUX-MONTAGNY, , Associated Press,

LYON, France (AP) — An American accused of sexually assaulting a Pennsylvania college student in 2013 and later sending her a Facebook message that said, “So I raped you,” has been detained in France after a three-year search.

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Seattle Times Politics

King County recorder misdirected millions in funds, audit finds
Author: David Gutman

The office misallocated nearly $7 million over the span of six years, while overcharging customers by a total of about $1 million, a new audit found.

Washington State News

Commanders release QB Jake Fromm
(Photo credit: Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports) The Washington Commanders pared down the quarterbacks room on Tuesday, releasing Jake Fromm. Fromm signed with the Commanders practice squad in October 2022 and spent most of the past two seasons with that group. Fromm started at Georgia from 2017-19 before the Buffalo Bills selected him in the fifth round of the 2020 NFL Draft. In college, he threw for 8,224 yards with 78 tou
Mariners acquire INF Jake Slaughter from Cubs
(Photo credit: Margaret Kispert/The Register / USA TODAY NETWORK) The Seattle Mariners acquired minor league infielder Jake Slaughter from the Chicago Cubs on Tuesday for right-hander Tyson Miller. Slaughter, 27, is batting .297 with five homers, 17 RBIs and 10 stolen bases in 32 games this season at Triple-A Iowa, where he has started games at first, second and third base. Drafted by Chicago in the 18th round in 2018 o

Portland Business News

AWS CEO Adam Selipsky to step down next month
Author: Alex Halverson
The company has already tapped Adam Selipsky's successor.

The Chronicle - Centralia

Oregon dad accused of drugging girls at sleepover placed on GPS monitoring

A man accused of plying his daughter’s sleep-over friends with sedative-laced smoothies must be monitored by GPS tracking, a Clackamas County judge ruled Monday.

The Clackamas County District Attorney’s Office sought to have Michael Meyden, 57, tracked to ensure he stays away from the three girls he’s accused of drugging and their Lake Oswego school.

“It’s an added level of security so the victims know that Mr. Meyden is not coming anywhere near them,” Senior Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brock said.

The request came from the girls’ families after Meyden attempted to take his own life in March by overdosing on medication, Brock told Circuit Judge Katherine Weber during a brief hearing. Court records show Meyden was hospitalized after overdosing on the sedative Lorazepam.

Brock said Meyden’s apparent attempt to harm himself prompted the victims to worry “that they’re not safe either.”

Meyden already agreed not to have guns while the case is pending.

Meyden’s lawyer, Jeff Turnoy, told Weber that Meyden hasn’t violated any court-imposed conditions while his trial is pending and that there’s no evidence he’s ever gone near the girls’ homes or their families.

He’s in counseling, Turnoy said, and is “fostering stable relationships” with his ex-wife and children.

“Quite frankly, nothing really has changed that would cause any additional fear such that Mr. Meyden would need to be GPS tracked,” he said.

Meyden faces charges of causing another person to ingest a controlled substance and application of a controlled substance to the body of another person, stemming from his alleged conduct while hosting his daughter’s sleepover last August at the Lake Oswego home where he lived at the time.

Court records allege he laced mango smoothies with benzodiazepine and served the drinks to his daughter’s friends. The affidavit written in support of a search warrant doesn’t explain a motive.

During a search of the home, investigators seized computer equipment, a Vitamix blender, a hand-held blender, reusable straws, a mortar and pestle, bottles of a sedative called Temazepam and an opioid painkiller called Tramadol, court records show.

Temazepam is a benzodiazepine used to address insomnia and anxiety and, medical experts say, can cause too much sleepiness, loss of consciousness and can obstruct the airway.

Lake Oswego began the investigation after being called to the emergency room at Randall Children’s Hospital at Legacy Emanuel in Portland where three girls tested positive for benzodiazepine.

According to court records, the girls told police they attended a sleepover the night before at their friend’s home and suspected Meyden had given them drugs, leading them to feel groggy and even blacking out.

An affidavit written by Lake Oswego police Detective Nicole Palmeri states that Meyden served each of the girls two smoothies each. One girl drank both. One finished one of the drinks and the third girl sipped from a straw “to be nice” but she barely drank any, the affidavit says. Meyden gave each of them their own straws and then later grew upset when he thought his daughter and one of the girls were switching straws, the affidavit states.

The court filing says the girl who left most of her smoothie recounted for police what happened next, describing how he returned to the basement as the other girls slept and moved her arm and then moved her friend’s body. She told police she stayed awake afraid Meyden was going to harm her friend, according to the affidavit. At one point, the record notes, she said she saw Meyden place a finger under her friend’s nose to see if she was asleep and waved his hand in her face.

The girl, identified in court records by an initial, was terrified and repeatedly texted and called her parents, saying “Mom please pick me up and say I had a family emergency. I don’t feel safe. I might not respond but please come get me (crying emoji), Please. Please pick up. Please. PLEASE!!” She then called and texted several friends asking for a ride.

Investigators saw the text the girl sent a family friend. The girl’s message said Meyden “kept moving us away from each other but kept doing tests to make sure we weren’t awake,” according to the affidavit. She texted that one of the girls “won’t wake up,” the filing states.

The court record says the girl saw Meyden return to the basement a third time and he “seemed drunk.”

The family friend drove her home; she woke her parents who woke the other girls’ parents. They picked up the two other friends still at Meyden’s house, court records say.

Meyden’s next court appearance is later this month.

©2024 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit oregonlive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Killer in Oregon beat, strangled girlfriend's father and then went on family vacation; gets 19 years

Zachary Hackman jogged down the Seaside beach, scooping up sand dollars and tossing them into the waves on a vacation with his girlfriend’s family in October 2022.

It didn’t appear Hackman had a care in the world during those days of s’mores, hot dogs and ice cream, but family members said they returned from Seaside only to learn that the 22-year-old had killed James Harris — his girlfriend’s father — the day before the vacation began.

Harris was found dead in a sleeping bag that had been dumped 20 feet off Northeast Marine Drive in heavy brush. Harris, 54, had been killed on Oct. 4, 2022, with a hammer blow to the head and had also been strangled with a dog leash, according to autopsy reports.

Hackman had been living for months with Harris’ daughter at Harris’ southeast Portland home, family members said.

“He stole something that cannot be replaced,” Donna Harris, Harris’ sister, said Monday at Hackman’s sentencing.

Multnomah County Circuit Court Judge Jenna Plank sentenced Hackman, now 24, to 19 years in state prison after he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and abuse of corpse under the terms of a deal with prosecutors.

Surveillance footage from nearby businesses showed Hackman drapping a towel over the kitchen window of the Harris home in the Montavilla neighborhood on the day of the murder, according to an affidavit written earlier by prosecutors.

The videos showed Hackman and his girlfriend, LoraJean Harris, loading a very large plastic container from the house into her Dodge Charger, the affidavit said.

Hackman, who went by the name Zack Call, was confronted by detectives Oct. 13 but said he didn’t remember anything out-of-the-ordinary before James Harris’ disappearance, according to the affidavit.

LoraJean Harris told detectives she’d just gotten back from an out-of-town concert when Hackman asked for her help cleaning up some trash and only told her after the fact that she had helped him dump her father’s body, the affidavit said.

The couple then extensively cleaned the house, but criminalists still found trace amounts of blood on the walls and ceilings, according to the affidavit written by Senior Deputy District Attorney Kevin Demer.

LoraJean Harris was never charged in the case and watched the sentencing hearing remotely. She told police she was afraid of Hackman and was forced to help conceal his crime, according to the affidavit.

Hackman didn’t make a statement during the hearing and LoraJean Harris said he never disclosed a motive. His defense attorney said Hackman would write a letter to the family answering their questions — though many in the courtroom gallery said they were still in shock at Hackman’s deception.

Family members recalled James Harris as an all-around handyman with a “MacGuyver” talent for fixing cars and a passion and creativity for landscaping. In his youth, Harris had found great success as a car salesman and could have started his own landscaping company, but a chronic spinal injury left him out of work for years, they said.

Kathryn Pyland recalled how her uncle once fixed a spark plug with a speaker wire and was known for rescuing anyone who was stranded with car trouble.

“He preferred it to be midnight and a blizzard. He would drop everything to come save us,” she said.

As for Hackman, his troubled childhood was no excuse, Pyland said, and only one punishment was fitting: “a dark room with a mirror that he can’t look away from.”

©2024 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit oregonlive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Washington state to acquire 9,700-acre forest near Cle Elum thanks to federal grant

SEATTLE — As Darcy Batura often wanders Cle Elum Ridge, she cherishes the ponderosa pine bark glowing red in the sunshine, releasing a sweet aroma that permeates the forest. A blanket of lupine and yellow balsamroot flowers color the hills this time of year.

Batura, of The Nature Conservancy and a 20-year resident of Roslyn, has been among a coalition of local, state and federal officials, nonprofits, tribal members and others working to preserve thousands of acres of forestland in Kittitas County for wildlife, recreation, forest health and water supply.

Now, the state Department of Natural Resources will soon acquire the 9,700-acre forest, with $15.3 million from the federal Inflation Reduction Act, coupled with $5.7 million in matching state funding.

U.S. Forest Service officials announced the funding on their visit to Washington this week, with the state getting more than $30 million in federal money to conserve forests like Cle Elum Ridge, which abuts the Teanaway Community Forest and touches the communities of Cle Elum, Roslyn and Ronald.

The state will manage Cle Elum Ridge under a community-based plan.

"In many ways it's the heart of Washington," Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz said of the area in a phone call.

This project, Franz said, is especially important amid a changing climate — reducing sprawl into fire-prone areas, preserving fish and wildlife habitat and further safeguarding the headwaters of the Yakima River basin.

The river basin is increasingly strained to supply a growing population with drinking water, support the area's roughly $4 billion agricultural economy and keep cool, clean water in the river for fish.

The Forest Service announced a total of $154 million in grant funding for 26 projects to conserve forests in 17 states. That also included $14 million to move nearly 14,000 acres of forestland near the White Salmon River into the conservation status and legally protect them from development. The land is owned by Twin Creeks Timber and managed by Seattle-based Green Diamond.

That project is intended to help sustain three local mills which have 300 jobs combined, while protecting drinking water and recreation opportunities.

Another $1.5 million will go toward a conservation project at Green Mountain in Kitsap County. The project will move 360 acres of forest and salmon habitat adjacent to federal, state and local forests into the conservation status. The land is within a contiguous 70,000-acre forest and builds on three nearby conservation projects including the Tahuya River headwaters.

The federal grants will cover a portion of those projects, with the state also footing some of the costs.

"About half of Washington is forestland and a third of that forestland is private," said U.S. Agriculture Deputy Secretary Xochitl Torres Small in a phone call. "That speaks to the importance of collaboration when it comes to habitat restoration and healthy forests."

Those forests provide services like a clean water supply and crucial habitat for culturally important species like steelheads and bull trout, Torres Small said.

The piece of forestland in Cle Elum is just one piece of a much larger community-led landscape protection project.

A decade ago, private investors helped The Nature Conservancy acquire nearly 50,000 acres of forest land in upper Kittitas County from Plum Creek Timber. The land spanned all of the timber company's holdings from Snoqualmie Pass to Cle Elum along both sides of the Interstate 90 corridor.

The acquisition was focused on pausing the threat of development, so the Nature Conservancy could work with the community and adjacent land managers to develop a protection and conservation vision centering community voices and values, Batura said.

Batura joined the Nature Conservancy just a couple of years later, where she has focused on developing the vision with the community to protect and conserve the forest.

The forests were incredibly dense, overstocked and unhealthy, fueling the 2017 Jolly Mountain fire which burned about 36,808 acres across all land ownerships, including a small portion of the conservancy's lands.

Since then, the Conservancy has collaborated with DNR, the Upper Kittitas County fuels crew and other partners to put fire back on the landscape through prescribed burns, commercial thinning and forest mastication to weed out smaller trees that can serve as fuels.

Cle Elum Ridge has served as a "living laboratory" to explore forest health treatments like these. Research found thinning the forest and opening up gaps in the canopy increases the depth and duration of snowpack. The gaps, similar to those found in old growth forests, indicate that lost water can return to a landscape if a more natural structure can be restored.

The protection of Cle Elum Ridge was the culmination of 20 years of collaboration and planning to expand the adjacent Teanaway Community Forest. The Teanaway property became Washington's first Community Forest, a new model providing for state and community collaboration to conserve forests.

The Nature Conservancy and DNR submitted the proposal for the Cle Elum grant, with letters of support from 25 partners, including the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, nonprofits and U.S. Rep Kim Schrier.

Nearly half of the grants announced Monday will go to conserving forests near disadvantaged communities identified by the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool across the U.S.

Upon the acquisition of Cle Elum Ridge, DNR will most likely classify some areas as Community Forest and some as Trust Lands to allow for timber harvest.

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