March 22, 2025

Klamath Basin News, Thursday 3/13/2025 – KF Police Arrest Multiple Burglaries Suspect; Wolf Creek Man Charged With Manslaughter of Daughter; Missing Two-Year Old Body Found in Siletz River; Klamath County Sportsmen’s & Outdoor Recreation Show presented by Bi-Mart This Weekend

The latest and most comprehensive coverage of local News, Sports, Business, and Community News stories in the Klamath Basin, Southern Oregon and around the state of Oregon from Wynne Broadcasting’s KFLS News/Talk 1450AM / 102.5FM, The Herald and News, and BasinLife.com, and powered by Mick Insurance. Call them at 541-882-6476.

 

Thursday, March 13, 2025

Klamath Basin Weather

Today
Snow showers likely, mainly after 2pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 39. West wind 7 to 11 mph. Total daytime snow accumulation of less than one inch possible. Overnight, a 40% chance of snow showers with a low around 22. West wind 8 to 13 mph. New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

Friday
Snow. High near 40. South southwest wind 8 to 17 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. New snow accumulation of 1 to 2 inches possible. Overnight, more snow flurries, low around 26 degrees.  New snow accumulation of 1 to 2 inches possible.
Saturday
Snow before 5pm, then rain and snow. High near 42. South southwest wind 10 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.
Sunday
Rain and snow likely before 8am, then rain. Snow level 5000 feet rising to 5800 feet in the afternoon. High near 46. Chance of precipitation is 90%. Little or no snow accumulation expected.
Monday
Snow, mainly after 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 41.
Tuesday
A slight chance of snow. Mostly sunny, with a high near 42.
 

 

Today’s Klamath Falls Headlines

On Sunday, March 2, Klamath Falls Police Department patrol officers responded to a report of a suspicious incident from an employee at Ray’s Market located at 4237 Greensprings Drive in Klamath Falls.

The person reported seeing her property outside the side door on the ground. When patrol officers arrived on scene, they cleared the location and discovered the business was burglarized and started their investigation. On Wednesday last week, patrol officers responded to Tyler’s Texas BBQ located at 1414 Oregon Avenue regarding a property alarm.

Officers arrived on scene and initially believed the business was secure. The owner responded to the business and officers found the back door had been forced upon after they were given access to the secure rear parking lot. The officers cleared the location and found it was also burglarized, and they started their investigation. During both investigations, patrol officers developed information that these two cases were possibly related and identified two persons of interest.

Last Sunday, March 9, 2025, patrol officers located one of the persons of interest at the Washburn Chevron located at 3301 Washburn Way in Klamath Falls.

That person was identified as thirty-five year old Christopher Garrison, who was also found to be in possession of a large amount of stolen property from both burglaries.

Garrison was arrested, booked and released at the Klamath County Jail for following charges: two (2) counts – Burglary 2nd Degree, two (2) counts – Criminal Mischief 1st Degree, one (1) count – Theft 1st Degree, one (1) count – Theft 2nd Degree, and Fail to Appear – Bench Warrant. 

The second person of interest is still outstanding, and police believe these subjects are responsible for other commercial burglaries in the area.

They are asking for any information from the community to help locate this person and bring them to justice. If anyone has information related to this case, you are encouraged to contact the Klamath Falls Police Department at 541-883-5336 or contact the anonymous tip line at 541-883-5334. Please reference KFPD cases 25-658 and 25-701. The Klamath Falls Police Department appreciates any assistance you can provide.

 

Reclamation Anticipates Adequate Irrigation Supply for 2025

In a letter dated March 6, 2025, and received today by KWUA, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation indicated that irrigation supplies from Upper Klamath Lake are expected to be sufficient to meet demand this year.

While specific details on projected demand and total supply were not provided, this update is encouraging news. KWUA and the irrigation districts will remain in close communication with Reclamation to monitor conditions and ensure timely updates for our water users.

 

On Wednesday members of the Basin Inter-Agency Narcotics Enforcement Team (BINET) learned that Thomas Walter Anderson (58) was selling Fentanyl and Methamphetamine from a hotel near Klamath Union High School.

Members of BINET worked with the Klamath Falls Police Department and members of Klamath County Community Corrections, and began conducting surveillance of the hotel room and Anderson.

When Anderson left the hotel room, officers stopped him and gained consent to his hotel room. Approximately ½ ounce of Fentanyl that was individually packaged for sales was located, along with Methamphetamine, evidence of distribution of controlled substances, and more than $1,000 of proceeds.

Anderson was arrested and lodged at the Klamath County Jail for the following charges: Unlawful Possession of a Controlled Substance – Fentanyl, Unlawful Manufacture/Delivery of a Controlled Substance – Fentanyl.

BINET is a multi-jurisdictional narcotics task force that identifies, disrupts, and dismantles local drug trafficking organizations.

Residents of Klamath County are encouraged to report drug activity to the Klamath Falls Police Department Tip-Line at 541-883-5334.

 

 

New deadline for SNAP replacement benefits

Oregon has received approval from the U.S Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Services (FNS) to extend the 10 day deadline for households to report food losses and request replacement benefits from the February 24, 2025, storm.

The waiver allows 30 days to report food losses for households affected by the storm.  Households in approved Oregon counties now have until March 26, 2025, to report food losses and ask for replacement benefits.

Approved Counties include Klamath, Jackson and Josephine, here in Southern Oregon, where people can request SNAP replacement benefits by March 26, 2025:

You can submit a request to replace the SNAP benefits over the phone, in person, by email, by mail or your ONE online portal:

  • Over the phone: 1-800-699-9075 or 711 (TTY)
  • In person: (find a local office): gov
  • Mail: (must be received by the due date)
    ONE Customer Service Center
    PO Box 14015
    Salem, OR 97309
  • Email:Benefits@odhsoha.oregon.gov

The information required to replace the SNAP benefits may be found in the form 347D found here: https://sharedsystems.dhsoha.state.or.us/DHSForms/Served/de0349d.pdf

The waiver to extend the reporting deadline will last until March 26, 2025.

About SNAP
SNAP helps low income households buy food. If you qualify, you get benefits that can be used to buy groceries at authorized stores. For more information or to request SNAP replacement benefits, contact your local office or visit theOregon SNAP benefit websiteor call 800-699-9075.

 

A man has been sentenced to three consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole after a Klamath County jury found him guilty of sex crimes against children — one of the longest sentences in Oregon history for sex crimes.

Richard Travis Carlson was sentenced after a two-day trial starting Feb. 26. The Klamath County District Attorney’s office said on Monday that a jury found him guilty of eight separate counts of first-degree sodomy from 2018 to 2023.

These eight counts included three separate victims all under the age of 12 during the offenses.  

The District Attorney’s office said the sentence was aggravated because Carlson was previously convicted in 1998 in the state of Washington for felony rape of a child. The victim in that case was also under the age of twelve during the incident. The investigation began in 2023 with reports to the Oregon Department of Human Services, with those reports being investigated by the Oregon State Police (OSP) and the Klamath Falls Police Department (KFPD).  Carlson is serving his sentence in the Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC).

 

Starting Monday, Mar. 31, all schools within the Klamath County School District (KCSD) will be extending their school day by 14 minutes for the rest of the year.

Superintendent Glen Szymoniak said Friday that the district needs to make up class time lost due to last month’s weather-related closures. Start times will stay the same, and bus schedules will be adjusted to accommodate changes in the school schedule.

Fridays with an early release schedule will be adjusted, with students now being released 46 minutes early instead of one hour early.

KCSD junior high and high school students will also have an instructional school day on Thursday, Mar. 20 — a previously scheduled no-school day due to parent-teacher conferences. These conferences will be held in the evening of that same day.

Any families in the district with questions are being asked to contact their school directly. This announcement comes ten days after Klamath Falls City Schools announced they would also be extending their school day by 14 minutes for the rest of the school year, starting Monday, Mar. 31.

 

 

The fairgrounds continues the busy pace over the weekend, as starting Friday, the 2nd annual NEWSWATCH 12 Klamath County Sportsmen’s & Outdoor Recreation Show presented by Bi-Mart takes place. 

Wynne Broadcasting is pleased to be a part of this event.

Hours are Friday, Noon-7:00 p.m.; Saturday 10:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.; Sunday 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Admission is $9.00 for adults or $7.00 with Bi-Mart $2.00 Off coupon (good on Friday & Sunday only), available at www.bimart.com/sportshow. Children 6 to 11 are $1.00 and 5 and under are free.

Avoid the lines and purchase your tickets online.  There will be exhibits and things for the entire family, including the kids fishing pond, the wolves of the TV show Yellowstone will be here, and over 200 total exhibits and vendors will be on hand throughout the weekend. Bi-Mart is the corporate sponsor of the event. 

 

 

KLAMATH FALLS, OR - CIRCUS OF HORRORPrepare to be amazed — and horrified — by the daring theatrics of the Circus of Horrors, coming to the Klamath County Fairgrounds tonight!

All the way from Las Vegas, the three-ring act promises a nightmare to remember this week in Klamath Falls. Bookings director Daniela Mercado said this is the company’s second year operating as a circus. 

An all-star crew of funny, frightening clowns as well as dancers, balancers and more will strut their freaky stuff this Thursday at the Klamath County Fairgrounds. The big tent is set for two performances beginning at 6 and 8:30 p.m.

Tickets are $20 and can be purchased online through eventbrite.com or through the Circus of Horrors official Facebook page facebook.com/thecircusofhorror.

 

Take a tour of the first and only Living Building project that is underway in downtown Klamath Falls.

This Thursday, take a 30-minute tour of the “multifaceted endeavor” of Alex and Malu Froom, an ambitious couple with a drive to support and nurture their community and its unique environment. Located in an historic 1928 building, which also houses the popular local outdoors shop The Ledge, the future site of Watershed Row is being transformed into a self-sustaining, thriving business.

Running entirely on its own water and solar energy production as well as utilizing almost all of the original structure’s remnants, Watershed Row aims to achieve the status awarded by the Living Building Challenge. 

To register for the tour, which begins at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, visit the official Facebook page of Watershed Row.

 

Healthy Klamath announces that plans are underway to build the Klamath Falls Pump Track north of Eulalona Park.

This state-of-the-art project is a collaborative effort involving the City of Klamath Falls, Klamath County, Healthy Klamath, Sky Lakes, Oregon Department of Transportation, Cascade Health Alliance, and Klamath Trails Alliance. 

A pump track is a circular trail designed for riding wheeled sports equipment such as bikes, skateboards, and scooters.

Riders generate momentum by pumping their bodies up and down instead of pedaling. This type of recreational infrastructure offers numerous benefits to our community, including supporting bike tourism, community engagement and promoting a healthy, active lifestyle for residents of all ages. 

KF Pump Track Proposed Location

Healthy Klamath is currently halfway to its fundraising goal, and we encourage community members and local businesses to contribute.

Once the final funds are secured, construction will commence, with the aim of completing the project by Summer of 2027.

For more information about the project, how to get involved or to make a donation, visit healthyklamath.com/pumptrack for more details. 

 

 

 

A deadline of April 2, 2025, has been set for the Spring Brick Order for bricks dedicated to military veterans to be placed at the Veterans Memorial in Klamath Falls.

The Veterans Memorial Project is a community wide project which honors and recognizes Veterans who have served this nation. The memorial features a pavilion, war monuments and over 5,000 dedicated bricks meant to be a lasting legacy to military individuals.

Each brick is a tribute to a military member and their service.

Bricks can be ordered for $50.00 each and dedicated to any United States veteran, regardless of where they live and whether they are living or deceased.

A brick order form can be downloaded from the city website at www.klamathfalls.city.

For more information, contact the City of Klamath Falls Development Services Office at 541-883-4950  or  online, at cityparks@klamathfalls.city.

 

Upcoming Events with The United Way

MEETINGS in the Basin

THURSDAY, MARCH 13 — Klamath Falls City Parks Advisory Board meeting, 11:30 a.m., City Administrative Building, 500 Klamath Ave., Klamath Falls.

Klamath Irrigation District (KID) Board of Directors meeting, 1 p.m., 6640 KID Lane, Klamath Falls.

Klamath County School District (KCSD) Board of Directors meeting, 5 p.m., KCSD Office, 2845 Greensprings Drive, Klamath Falls.

 

The weather outside may be frightfully cold, but organizers of the 65th annual ZCBJ Czech Lodge Dinner are making plans to warm bellies for the upcoming gathering.

Pork roast, sauerkraut, baked potatoes, potato dumplings and apple strudel are on the menu for this year’s gathering set for March 23 at the Tulelake Fairgrounds’ Home Economics Building. A refreshment hour will begin at noon with dinner from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m.

Although the dinner is still two weeks away, organizers are urging people to mark the date on their calendars and submit pre-orders for take-home Jaternice and strudel, which typically sell out quickly.

Jaternice is a Czech/Slovak sausage made from pork meat. The strudel is $10 per board and will be available to take home after the dinner from 2 to 3 p.m.  Cost for the dinner is $20 for people 16 and older, $15 for youth 7 to 15, and free for children 6 and younger.

Along with the meal, the gathering will have door prizes and raffles. People planning to attend are requested to reply early “to help ensure we have enough for all who arrive,” organizers say. Get more information by emailing malin.czech.lodge.222@gmail.com or calling (541) 891-8135 or (541) 274-9049.

Tickets will be available at the door on March 23 on a first-come, first-served basis and supplies will be limited,  Volunteers are also being sought to help with dinner preparations, including getting equipment for cooking and serving, and moving tables on Friday, March 21, beginning at 8 a.m. at the Fairgrounds home economics building.

A second volunteer session will be held Saturday, March 22, beginning at 7 a.m. to peel and slice apples, make strudel and clean up. A potluck lunch will be served with the Lodge providing a meat dish and others asked to bring a salad or dessert.

 

KLAMATH ANIMAL SHELTER PET OF THE WEEK FOR ADOPTION

This week’s pet is a dog named ” Stella “

Stella is a female, retriever mix, around 6 1/2 years old. She is a black with white markings and weighs around 50 pounds.
 
Stella was taken in by relatives of her owner but their son was allergic. They said that she is house trained, lived with children as young as 2 years, has been around other dogs, but has never lived with cats.
 
Stella walks on leash, knows how to sit, and when she’s happy she wags her whole body not just her tail.
 
If you are interested in adopting Stella , The Klamath Animal Shelter is located at 4240 Washburn Way, Monday through Friday from 12:00 – 4:00, walk throughs are available, pet meet and greets are by appointment, you can reach the shelter at 541-884-PETS (541-884-7387)
View all adoptable pets anytime online at http://www.klamathanimalshelter.org
 
 

Around the State of Oregon

A Wolf Creek man is in the Douglas County Jail on second-degree manslaughter charges after a pickup truck crash on Monday killed his daughter.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office (DCSO) said driver impairment is a factor in the crash. Deputies were sent to respond to a crash on ODF land bordering the 1200 block of Tunnel Rd in Glendale at about 1:30 p.m. on Monday, Mar. 11. DCSO said the truck, a green Ford F250, was occupied by the driver, 55-year-old Ian Anthony Fleming of Wolf Creek, when the crash happened.

Three juvenile girls were also reportedly in the truck at the time of the crash.  DCSO said the three girls were thrown from the truck as it rolled down an embankment, with all three sustaining injuries. Fleming got out of the truck and tried to get medical care for his daughter, who was seriously injured. 

Fleming borrowed a car to drive his daughter to the Tunnel Rd ambulance station, where Glendale Ambulance paramedics declared her dead. Paramedics took the other two girls to Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medford for treatment. DCSO said on Tuesday its detectives responded to the scene after deputies said Fleming had fled.

Detectives determined alcohol and drugs were a factor in the crash, arresting Fleming on charges of second-degree manslaughter.

 

The young boy, Dane Paulsen, a two-year-old missing in Oregon since the beginning of March, has been found dead, the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office confirmed Tuesday.

LCSO said Dane was found deceased Tuesday morning at about 11:13 a.m. in the Siletz River, about three miles downstream of his family’s property.

Juan Heredia with Angels Recovery Dive Team was escorted onto the river by a local guide after connecting with the Sheriff’s Office.  LCSO investigators are processing the scene right now, with the Sheriff’s Office partnering with the Lincoln County Medical Examiners Office. 

 

Several Republican members of the Oregon House signed a letter to President Trump asking him to order voter identification and citizenship verification.

The request follows a mutiple clerical errors with Oregon’s Motor-Voter registration system that allowed at least 12-hundred people to be incorrectly registered to vote in the recent general election. Nine of those people voted.  Who knows how many others have voted in other elections and primaries over the past 10 tens years.

The DMV has made changes to correct the problem and the Secretary of State’s Office is slowly reviewing voter registrations from the DMV.

 

The Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office (SCSO) is reminding the public to stay safe on the slopes after a Search and Rescue (SAR) operation last week involving an injured skier.

SCSO said on Tuesday that dispatch got a call at about 6:17 p.m. on Friday, Mar. 7 from a 39-year-old skier who had injured his leg in a skiing accident on Mount Shasta.

The skier was a seasoned backcountry skier from Canada who was traveling alone and crashed during his descent through Avalanche Gulch, suffering a leg injury. The skier then called 911.  The Siskiyou County SAR Team and Mount Shasta Climbing Rangers responded to the Bunny Flat parking lot, launching rescue teams to get to the site of the injured skier.

SCSO said crews determined he had broken his tibula/fibula in the crash, but was in stable enough condition to be skied down the mountain in and delivering him to an ambulance.

 

Oregon Senator Ron Wyden says the Environmental Protection Agency intends to roll back findings that greenhouse gas emissions are a health danger.

The liberal Wyden says the findings were repeatedly upheld in court and reinforced by research from a vast majority of scientists, who don’t make the laws and are mostly liberal environmentalists.

Wyden has joined 12 Senate Democrats in asking new EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to provide evidence for the reversal of the policy and how the EPA plans to address the legal precedent set by the U.S. Supreme Court.

 

The state of Oregon and 38 attorneys general, have submitted a proposed fix to end Google’s “search” monopoly.

Last year, a federal judge ruled Google has a monopoly over the internet search market. The state is proposing that Google can no longer pay companies like Apple and Android to make Google the default search option.

Google would also have to sell the Chrome browser. A hearing on the proposals will be held starting April 21st in Washington D.C. Stay tuned on this one.

 

A Lake Oswego teen was rescued after a snowmobile accident near Elk Lake Saturday, west of Mount Bachelor.

The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office says the 14-year-old girl was seriously injured after she went off-trail and collided with a tree. Search and Rescue responded with medical teams. Air Link was also dispatched, but was unable to land due to the terrain. S

AR used a snow ambulance to transport her more than a mile and a half to the helicopter landing zone, and she was flown to the hospital in Bend for treatment. Her current condition is unknown.

 

Oregon’s unemployment rate was 4.4% in January and 4.3%, as revised, in December, after rising gradually over the past year from 4.1% in January 2024.

Oregon’s 4.4% unemployment rate was the highest since September 2021, when the rate was also 4.4%. The U.S. unemployment rate was 4.1% in December 2024 and 4.0% in January 2025.

In January, Oregon’s seasonally adjusted nonfarm payroll employment rose by 2,400 jobs.

January’s gains were largest in professional and business services (+1,400 jobs); leisure and hospitality (+1,200); retail trade (+900); and private educational services (+900). Declines were largest in manufacturing (-2,200) and health care and social assistance (-1,300).

Oregon’s private sector added 12,700 jobs, or 0.8%, between January 2024 and January 2025. Job gains during 2024 were less than previously indicated, as annual data revisions resulted in an average reduction of 15,600 jobs per month during the second half of 2024.

 

As of March 11th, Paid Leave Oregon has delivered more than $1 billion in benefits to Oregon workers, marking a significant milestone in supporting people and families across the state.

To date, over 150,000 people have received Paid Leave benefits. Paid Leave Oregon continues to be a national model for state-administered paid leave programs, ensuring equitable access to benefits for workers. The program is funded through contributions from employers and employees, ensuring a sustainable and robust support system for Oregonians who take paid leave.  Every dollar goes to someone facing a serious health condition, caring for a family member, bonding with a new child, or dealing with the impacts of domestic violence, stalking, harassment, or sexual assault.

Since its launch in January 2023, Paid Leave has paid benefits to more than 150,000 Oregonians. Of the approved applications, 45% have been for medical leave, 28% for bonding with a new child, 14% to care for a family member with a serious health condition, 12% for leave due to pregnancy, and 1% for safe leave. 

Paid Leave Oregon continues to expand its outreach and services to ensure more workers and businesses understand and use the program when they need it. For more information, visit paidleave.oregon.gov.  

 

The Upper Illinois River Watershed Post-Fire Restoration Project is nearing its completion. Crews helped with the replanting and remediating of trees and shrubs devastated by the Slater Fire.

The 74 acre project started in April 2023. The Illinois Valley Soil and Water Conservation District (IVSWCD), Illinois Valley Fire Resiliency Oversight Group (IVFROG) and the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board (OWEB) all helped in the effort. 

John Bellville, District Manager for IVSWCD, explained that the project aimed to address the environmental impact of the fire. The early stages of the project were filled with uncertainty when it came to securing trees for replanting. However, the project received a two-year extension, allowing for the successful sourcing of trees from Scholls Valley Native Nursery in Forest Grove. 

One of the key components of the project is the replanting of native trees and shrubs on lands severely burned by the fire. This work helps combat erosion, invasive species like tanoak and madrone and the risk of future wildfires. The IVSWCD and IVFROG have also been engaging the local community through a series of educational events.

These include a riparian planting along Page Creek and several native plant giveaways at locations in Cave Junction. Crews working on the project, including those from Grayback Forestry and Pacific Ridgeline Forestry, have faced challenging terrain, navigating steep slopes and dense brush. Many of these same crews helped save the Illinois Valley from the Slater Fire. Their efforts are seen as a full-circle moment for the fire resiliency initiative, as they work to restore the land they helped protect.

The project will hold a celebratory event on April 5 at the newly remodeled Cave Junction Library, where the community can gather to acknowledge the progress made and look ahead to future restoration efforts.

 

U.S. Senator Ron Wyden said late last week he has joined Senate colleagues to introduce bipartisan legislation that would ensure truckers are compensated fairly for the hours that they are on the clock, including overtime.

The legislation was introduced in the Senate by U.S. Senators Alex Padilla, D-Calif., and Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., and introduced in the House by U.S. Representatives Mark Takano, D-Calif., and Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J. In addition to Wyden, the legislation is cosponsored by Senators Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. The Guaranteeing Overtime for Truckers Act is supported by Teamsters and the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association. 

 

Sex assault survivors and advocates are blasting Oregon’s solution to address a backlog of thousands of unclassified sex offenders in the state, as the agency defended it as a data-driven approach to get a handle on a years-long problem. And where’s the legislature and Gov. Tina Kotek on this issue, say concerned Oregon residents and advocates.

There are currently about 12,500 sex offenders living, working, or going to school in Oregon who have not undergone a risk assessment by the Oregon Board of Parole or local corrections agencies – meaning the state has no idea how likely those people are to commit new sex crimes.

The agency is currently under a legislative deadline to clear that backlog by Dec. 1, 2026. However, its leaders want the legislature to remove the deadline and reduce the number of people it needs to do risk assessments on. 

Under the proposal, the Board of Parole would only need to do risk assessments on offenders who are younger than 35 years old next January and people with two or more sex crimes convictions. It would continue to do the assessments on people getting out of prison or moving into Oregon.

Last year, lawmakers failed to approve a request to give the parole board an additional $6 million – in part to address the backlog.

 

Daffodils are blooming, summer camps are already sold out … and spring, which officially begins on Thursday, March 20, is on the horizon.

But Oregonians who were hoping for an early season warm-up will probably be disappointed this year.

According to the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center, the first days of spring will likely be colder than normal and also wetter than normal for the north half of the state. The entire state is leaning below normal temperatures for the days right before spring and the first few days of the season, according the outlook.

 

A Salem, Oregon man was arraigned in federal court on Friday, for possessing Molotov cocktails while attempting to destroy property at a Salem Tesla car dealership.

Adam Matthew Lansky, 41, has been charged by criminal complaint with illegally possessing an unregistered destructive device.

According to court documents, on January 20, 2025, officers from the Salem Police Department responded to a report of an individual throwing Molotov cocktails at a local Tesla car dealership.

Officers arrived at the dealership after a report of damage from what appeared to be bullets fired into a building and vehicle. Investigators soon linked Lansky to both incidents. Surveillance footage obtained from the car dealership appeared to show Lansky throwing Molotov cocktails that struck a dealership building and several vehicles, causing fires.

Surveillance video from a patrol car captured a vehicle parked near the dealership while Lansky is alleged to have discharged multiple firearm rounds into a building and at least one vehicle. Investigators learned the vehicle was registered to Lansky and observed it at his residence.

Lansky was arrested Tuesday without incident in Salem and made his first appearance in federal court today before a U.S. Magistrate Judge. He was ordered detained pending further court proceedings.

The case is being investigated by the FBI, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and Salem Police Department. It is being prosecuted by Parakram Singh, Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Oregon. A criminal complaint is only an accusation of a crime, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

 

Oregon State Parks will hire more than 200 seasonal Rangers and Ranger Assistants for positions across the state for the 2025 season.

Hiring starts as soon as this month and runs through about June with new positions listed on a rolling basis on the website. The positions last anywhere from four to nine months. Most seasonal staff work April through September, but some start as early as this month or work as late as December. Seasonal staff help visitors access world-class experiences and ensure clean and safe park areas for everyone to enjoy.

Duties include janitorial work, landscape maintenance, visitor education and visitor services. Salaries start at $19.78 per hour for seasonal assistants and $23.21 for seasonal rangers. Both positions include comprehensive medical, vision and dental plans for employees and qualified family members. The positions also include paid sick leave, vacation, personal leave and 11 paid holidays per year.

Student workers, ages 16 and older, start at $19.77 or more per hour depending on experience. Several of Oregon State Parks’ top leaders started their careers as seasonal employees including all three Region Directors. Seasonal staff gain valuable skills working with experienced Rangers at parks around the state.

The first wave of openings include positions along the coast from Washburne to Cape Lookout; the Willamette Valley including Silver Falls and Detroit Lake; the Columbia River Gorge and Eastern Oregon including Wallowa Lake and Lake Owyhee. For more information about current openings, visit stateparks.oregon.gov.

If you have any questions or need additional assistance in accessibility or alternative formats, please email Oregon Parks and Recreation Department Recruiting OPRD.Recruiting@oprd.oregon.gov. Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer, committed to diversity and pay equity.

 

Station Wagon Pulled from River May Belong to Oregon Family Missing for Nearly 70 Years

Authorities pulled a station wagon from the Columbia River Friday that’s believed to have belonged to an Oregon family of five who disappeared nearly 70 years ago while they were out searching for Christmas greenery.

Deputy Pete Hughes of the Hood River County Sheriff’s Office said the salvage crew working near the Cascade Locks Marine Park believes the chassis and motor they pulled from the Columbia River around 3:45 p.m. did, in fact, belong to the Portland family. Officials won’t be able to confirm that it’s the car, which fell apart as they were recovering it, until they check the VIN number stamped on the engine.

The search for the Martin family was a national news story at the time and led some to speculate about the possibility of foul play, with a $1,000 reward offered for information about their whereabouts.

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3tHYq3_0zV7UM2900
The Martin family went missing in 1958. AP

The Martins took their daughters Barbara, 14, Virginia, 13, and Sue, 11, on a ride to the mountains on Dec. 7, 1958, to collect Christmas greenery, according to AP stories from the time. They never returned.

Officials narrowed their search for the family after learning that Ken Martin had used a credit card to buy gas at a station near Cascade Locks, a small Columbia River community about 40 miles east of Portland.

“Police have speculated that Martin’s red and white station wagon might have plunged into an isolated canyon or river,” the AP reported. “The credit card purchase was the only thing to pin-point the family’s movements.” (READ MORE)

 

President Donald Trump wants to increase logging in national forests and on public lands, including by bypassing endangered species protections.

To do that, the federal government would have to activate a seldom-used committee nicknamed the “God Squad” because it can approve federal projects even if it leads to extinction of a species otherwise protected by the Endangered Species Act. But environmentalists say there are strict procedural requirements — and no provision under law to proactively use the committee to bypass protections. 

The president just signed actions to increase domestic lumber production in national forests and other public lands, directing federal agencies to look for ways to bypass protections for endangered species. 

Officially called the Endangered Species Committee, it was established in 1978 as a way to exempt projects from Endangered Species Act protections if a cost-benefit analysis concluded it was the only way to achieve net economic benefits in the national or regional interest.

In the case of logging, the analysis also should determine if the benefits of cutting trees outweigh the economic value of watershed and other protections provided by standing timber, said Patrick Parenteau, an emeritus professor at the Vermont Law and Graduate School who helped write criteria for the God Squad.

 

GraphicPEOPLE AGES 65+ OR IMMUNOCOMPROMISED ARE ELIGIBLE FOR COVID-19 BOOSTER

News Release from Oregon Health Authority
 

PORTLAND, Ore. – Now that it’s March, eligible people can get an additional dose of the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine, which was first made available in Oregon almost six months ago, in September.

An additional dose of the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine is recommended for People ages 65 and older, and people who are moderately to severly immunocompromised and have weakened immune systems.

Paul Cieslak, M.D., medical director for communicable diseases and immunizations at Oregon Health Authority’s (OHA) Public Health Division, said a second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine can provide increased protection for older adults and those with immunocompromising medical conditions.

“Immunity from vaccines can wane over time, but getting a second dose can bring that protection back,” Cieslak said. “That’s why we’re encouraging anyone 65 and older or who is moderately to severely immunocompromised to talk to a health care or vaccine provider about getting a second dose, which could keep them out of the hospital or from dying.”

People in these categories are recommended to receive the additional dose six months after receiving the initial dose of the 2024-2025 vaccine. However, it can be given as soon as two months after the first dose offering significantly flexibility. Those who are moderately or severely immunocompromised do not need to show proof to receive a COVID-19 vaccination.

People have weakened immune systems because of certain medical conditions, or if they receive medications or treatments that suppress their immune systems.

In recent years, OHA has bolstered its tracking of communicable diseases such as COVID-19 with the development and modernization of data reporting tools, including an interactive, web-based dashboard that visualizes data on COVID-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). The dashboard’s data are organized by community transmission, hospitalizations, hospital capacity, deaths and vaccination.

The dashboard is one of the ways OHA is increasing awareness and education about public health risks and preventive health services, which is a core goal of OHA’s 2024-2027 Strategic Plan.  OHA’s Strategic Plan further supports expanding access to vaccines and other health resources for children, parents and families in all communities in Oregon.

Doctor’s offices and neighborhood pharmacies are great places for getting immunizations. Those who need help finding a health care or vaccine provider doctor can contact 211 Info, by emailing help@211info.org or by dialing 2-1-1. Language interpreters are available.  

 

A bill to make Oregon one of a small number of states that have banned the sale of flavored tobacco drew passionate support but also very personal objections during a public hearing this week.

Proponents of the bill told a legislative committee that flavored tobacco “smells like candy” and addicts children as young as elementary school age while setting them on a path toward early death.

But opponents argued flavored tobacco, which often is ingested through vaping or packets that are sucked on, offers adults a less harmful alternative to smoking traditional cigarettes and the problem resides with stores that violate the law by selling it to Oregonians under age 21.

Chief among the bill’s opponents is Sen. David Brock Smith, a Port Orford Republican, who told the Senate Committee On Early Childhood and Behavioral Health that vaping flavored tobacco allowed him to kick a 30-year habit of smoking that was passed on to him from his dad.

Richard Burke, executive director of the 21+ Tobacco and Vapor Retail Association of Oregon, said banning flavored tobacco takes away “bodily autonomy” for adults and even the National Health Service in the United Kingdom has started a “Swap to Stop” program where it gives smokers vaping products in exchange for their traditional cigarettes. Burke also said a prohibition could create an underground trade.

Senate Bill 702 supporters who testified Tuesday were people of all ages, including parents, teens and doctors. They said not only do the fruity and sweet flavors hook youth under 21, the flavored tobacco impacts their ability to focus at school and be productive later in life.

Youth have little trouble getting around Oregon’s age restrictions on sales by getting the products from adults or buying the products at stores that are lackadaisical about enforcement, proponents of the bill said.

 

A pair of country stars is coming to one of Oregon’s biggest summer events, The Happy Canyon Kick-Off Concert, which is the opening to the Pendleton Round-Up.  The weeklong festival in northeast Oregon that’s anchored by one of the biggest and most popular rodeos in the country.

This year, the concert will be headlined by country singers Tracy Lawrence and Rodney Atkins, who will perform at the Happy Canyon Arena on Saturday, Sept. 6.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. March 14 at pendletonroundup.com.  Lawrence, who had more than a dozen chart-topping singles in the 1990s and 2000s, is coming off his “Ain’t My Last Rodeo Tour” and hosts a radio show, “Honky Tonkin’ with Tracy Lawrence.” Atkins, who has also had several No. 1 singles, has been trickling out new songs in recent months, his first new solo work since 2019.

The rodeo portion of the Pendleton Round-Up will take place Sept. 10-13 this year. Tickets are on sale now.

 

The long-delayed deadline for REAL ID is now just three months away. There’s a chance that full enforcement may get gradually rolled out, but May 7, 2025, is the changeover deadline.

Starting then, state-level ID cards, such as driver’s licenses, won’t be accepted for federal purposes, namely getting through airport security, unless it’s REAL ID-compliant. If you plan to catch a domestic flight on or after May 7, you will be required to use a REAL ID. A little gold or black star in the upper right-hand corner is one of the easiest ways to know you’re holding a REAL ID.

In Oregon, it’s a black star. A REAL ID is an identification card that serves all of the same purposes of a standard drivers’ license or state-issued identification card. A federally-mandated switch to REAL ID for federal purposes, such as flying domestically, was originally signed into law by Congress in 2005.

The purpose is to establish “minimum security standards for license issuance and production,” according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security website. The law, established four years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, came in response to federal calls for higher security standards in the U.S. Originally, the law mandated the switch to REAL ID by 2008, but it has been pushed back for various reasons due to logistical hurdles and later the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

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