Oregon Beach News, Tuesday 3/29 – Tillamook Rock Lighthouse For Sale, Settlement Reached In Brookings Lawsuit Filed By Disabled Woman

The latest news stories across the state of Oregon from the digital home of the Oregon coastal cities, OregonBeachMagazine.com

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Oregon Beach Weather

Today– Mostly cloudy, with a high near 54. Light west northwest wind increasing to 5 to 10 mph in the afternoon.

Wednesday– A 50 percent chance of showers, mainly before 11am. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 53. Light and variable wind becoming north northwest 5 to 10 mph in the morning. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.

Thursday– Partly sunny, with a high near 53. Light north northeast wind becoming north 6 to 11 mph in the afternoon.

Friday– Mostly sunny, with a high near 55.

Saturday– Mostly sunny, with a high near 56.

Tillamook Rock Lighthouse For Sale

The Tillamook Rock Lighthouse off the northwest coast of Oregon is for sale for $6.5 million.

The island’s isolation, impossible boat landings and extreme weather as well as the lighthouse crews’ dislike of their months-long stays where they were cold, wet and constantly reminded of their dangerous job, earned the tower the nickname “Terrible Tilly.”

Investors had paid $50,000 in 1980 to buy the deteriorating lighthouse, Oregon’s only offshore light station. The structure sits a mile from Tillamook Head between Seaside and Cannon Beach.

The owners converted the structure, which has been brutalized for a century and a half by crashing waves, into the Eternity At Sea columbarium. About 30 funeral urns were interred there before the columbarium’s license was not renewed in 1999 by the Oregon Mortuary and Cemetery Board.

The private Tillamook Rock property, which is part of the Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge, can only be reached by helicopter with the owners’ permission.

The Tillamook Rock Lighthouse, designed to guide ships on their treacherous ocean journey to the Columbia River, played a critical role in the development of the Pacific Northwest and World War II shipbuilding.

Settlement Reached In Brookings Lawsuit Filed By Disabled Woman

An Oregon law firm says a Brookings woman has a $300,000 settlement today against the City of Brookings for a federal lawsuit claim filed in Medford.

St. Helens, OR attorney Jacob Johnstun says his client Jennifer Gayman concluded her civil lawsuit against the City of Brookings, OR and some of its police officers this month.  Johnstun says those police officers cited Gayman, “who is disabled, for driving her mobility scooter on the sidewalk, through a crosswalk, and without a helmet.  After officers gave Ms. Gayman an unlawful order to abandon her mobility scooter and walk the rest of the way home (over a mile) because she did not have a helmet, Ms. Gayman refused and drove home.  Officers arrested her, and she was eventually convicted with one felony count of eluding a police officer. She spent 5 days in jail.”

Johnstun says the Oregon Court of Appeals reversed Gayman’s felony conviction in June 2021 saying, “the Oregon Court of Appeals reversed her conviction, holding that an acquittal should have been granted.”

Police body camera shows their initial encounter in 2020.  Gayman filed a federal claim against the City of Brookings for $500,000 claiming, as she told officers as recorded by their body camera video, that they were violating her disability rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act.  Johnstun says that last December the U.S. District Court of Oregon, Medford Division, “found that the two arresting officers violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, the 4th Amendment due to the unlawful seizure, and committed the tort of false imprisonment. Now all the jury has to decide on those claims is what damages to award.”

Her federal lawsuit was set to go to trial starting January 25, 2022.  This month Johnstun announced the City of Brookings had “agreed to pay Gayman $300,000 in damages, issue her a public apology, and require its officers to undergo Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) training.  It was very important to Ms. Gayman that ADA training be given, so that other disabled citizens in mobility scooters can feel safe driving around town without the fear of being cited or arrested for exercising their basic rights.”

The images from police body camera video show Gayman’s exchange with Brookings police and their arrest of Gayman in her garage after police followed her home on her scooter in their patrol car.

Oregon reports 541 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases, 39 new deaths

PORTLAND, Ore. — There are 39 new COVID-19-related deaths in Oregon, raising the state’s death toll to 7,074, Oregon Health Authority (OHA) reported at 12:01 a.m. today.

OHA reported 541 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 as of 12:01 a.m. today, bringing the state total to 703,132.

The 39 new deaths and 541 new cases reported today include data recorded by counties for the three-day period between March 25 and March 27.

The new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases reported today are in the following counties: Benton (23), Clackamas (39), Clatsop (3), Columbia (5), Coos (1), Crook (1), Curry (8), Deschutes (35), Douglas (9), Grant (2), Hood River (2), Jackson (24), Jefferson (1), Josephine (9), Klamath (3), Lane (62), Lincoln (3), Linn (14), Malheur (1), Marion (23), Multnomah (167), Polk (9), Tillamook (5), Umatilla (4), Wallowa (2), Wasco (3), Washington (79) and Yamhill (4).

Oregon reports 270 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases on March 25, 155 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases on March 26 and 116 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases on March 27.

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Oregon Funding Expansion of Wildfire Detection System

State lawmakers have awarded $4.5 million to the ALERTWildfire camera network system, which is run in part by the University of Oregon.

“Alertwildfire.org is a set of mountaintop pan-tilt zoom cameras for early fire prevention and suppression,” said Doug Toomey, a earth sciences professor at the university.

It’s an online network of cameras allowing you to see or even spot fires in real time.

Toomey said the ground the cameras cover will be expanding thanks to the millions of dollars on the way to the program.

“What it’s going to go towards — it’s approximately 35 camera sites. It’s a very amazing system; it allows people to see what’s happening in real time. In fact, there was a fire in California that was almost reported by someone in New Zealand because they were watching the cameras.”

Toomey said considering the recent fire seasons and how dry it has been this year, the timing of these funds could not have come at a better time.

“It takes time to put up cameras; it will probably take us a year or more to go through these funds. I anticipate the major build will probably occur next year. But we are going to pull out all the stops to get up as many as we can as quickly as we can,” Toomey said.

You can access the cameras by going to https://www.alertwildfire.org

Prineville Woman Arrested For Fentanyl Trafficking

A Prineville woman faces controlled substance trafficking charges as the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team continues to pursue sources of fentanyl that have been flooding the region. 

On March 13th, 2022, at approximately 7:00 PM, the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team concluded a long-term investigation with the arrest of Bryanna Nelson, age 26, of Prineville, Oregon.  

During a concurrent investigation, drug Agents identified Bryanna Nelson as fentanyl traffickers in the central Oregon area. The initial investigation alleges Ms. Nelson have been importing large quantities of fentanyl pills from the Portland area into central Oregon where she distributes it primarily in the Prineville area.

After a multi-day surveillance operation throughout the metropolitan Portland area, CODE Detectives, the assistance of Oregon State Police Troopers, stopped Bryanna Nelson on Highway 26 between Madras and Prineville. She was detained at the scene with an un-involved male passenger and toddler. The male passenger was later released without charges. The toddler was released to Oregon DHS-Child Welfare.

Based on the investigation, CODE Detectives applied for and obtained a Search Warrant for her home and her Nissan Rouge.  

A subsequent search of Nelson’s Nissan Rouge located a commercial quantity of counterfeit Oxycodone tablets made of fentanyl. These counterfeit tablets have been linked to an ongoing overdose epidemic in Central Oregon and contain fentanyl or methamphetamine and can be deadly to an unsuspecting user. In addition to the fentanyl, drug agents seized a large amount of currency that was also seized.  

Ms. Nelson was lodged in the Crook County Sheriff’s Jail with the following criminal charges.

Unlawful Possession, Manufacture, and Attempted Distribution of a Schedule II Controlled Substance (Fentanyl) 

Child Neglect I

Crook County District Attorney, Kari Hathorn, provided the following comment, “My office supports a public safety surge to address the alarming increase in the availability of these fentanyl-laced fake pills. It is the Crook County District Attorney’s Office goal to work with our law enforcement partners and the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team to protect the safety and health of our Crook County community from the harm, crime and overdoses driven by these criminal drug networks.”

Criminal complaints contain only charges; defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

CONTACT FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:   Sgt. Kent Vander Kamp, 541-550-4869 or kentv@deschutes.org 

The Central Oregon Drug Enforcement (CODE) team is a multi-jurisdictional narcotics task force supported by the Oregon-Idaho High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program and the following Central Oregon law enforcement agencies:  Bend Police Department, Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, Redmond Police Department,  Prineville Police Department, Crook County Sheriff’s Office, Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, Madras Police Department, Oregon State Police, Sunriver Police Department, Black Butte Police Department, United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Warm Springs Tribal Police Department, Deschutes, Crook, and Jefferson County District Attorney’s, and the Oregon National Guard.

The Oregon-Idaho HIDTA program is an Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) sponsored counterdrug grant program that coordinates and provides funding resources to multi-agency drug enforcement task forces to disrupt or dismantle local, multi-state and international drug trafficking organizations.

Salem Police Arrest Driver in Homeless Site Crash

Salem Police arrested 24-year-old Enrique Rodriguez, Jr. who they said is the driver involved in a crash at a homeless site early Sunday morning. The crash happened around 2 a.m. in the area of Front and Division Streets NE.

Police said four people were killed as a result of the crash. Two people sustained life-threatening injuries, according to police.

Rodriguez is lodged at Marion County Jail facing multiple charges including first-degree manslaughter, DUII and reckless endangerment.

Teenage Suspect Arrested in Eugene Shooting

UPDATE: The Lane County Sheriff’s Office said that Elijah Grinstead has been arrested in Douglas County.

According to LCSO, Grinstead was found in a home in the Roseburg area. He was arrested without incident and has been lodged at the juvenile detention center.

The suspect authorities are searching for after a shooting in Eugene has been identified as 16-year-old Elijah Grinstead.

Lane County Sheriff’s Office deputies searched for Grinstead following the incident, which happened just before 5 p.m. on Saturday in the 2400 block of Marjorie Avenue. 

Authorities said Grinstead shot another juvenile he knew, hitting them in the arm, and went on the run. According to officials, the weapon used in the incident has not been located.

Anyone with information on the case should call the Lane County Sheriff’s Office at 541-682-4150, option 1.

High Desert Museum to Welcome This Thursday Three Indigenous Artists of “Imagine a World”

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BEND, OR — Entering the High Desert Museum’s original exhibit Imagine a World, visitors are greeted by two life-size, brightly painted astronauts hovering over a mural with blue bison running over a moonscape and flying saucers in the sky above. The display is the artwork of Frank Buffalo Hyde (Onondaga Nation Beaver Clan and Nez Perce).

The Museum will welcome Hyde as well as two other Indigenous artists featured in Imagine a World–Camas Logue (Klamath, Modoc, Northern Paiute) and Brutis Baez (Wasco, Paiute, Warm Springs)—for the panel event “A Future That’s Indigenous” on Thursday, March 31 at 6:00 pm. Doors will open at 5:30 pm.

The three Native artists will explore a concept called Indigenous futurism and discuss their artwork in Imagine a World. Indigenous futurism envisions alternative worlds and recognizes the ways that cosmology, science and futurism have long been part of Indigenous worldviews and oral traditions. Artwork imagines Native people well into the future, including in the realms of science fiction and outer space.

Frank Buffalo Hyde was born in Sante Fe, New Mexico and raised on his mother’s Onondaga reservation in New York. Hyde returned to New Mexico to attend the Santa Fe Fine Arts Institute and Institute of American Indians Arts. His artwork, he says on his website, combines modern culture and technology with Indigenous themes and tradition using “overlapping imagery to mimic the way the mind holds information: nonlinear and without separation (sic). I don’t need permission to make what I make. Never have… no artist should.”

Camas Logue is a weaver, carver, fine woodworker, painter, illustrator, printmaker and musician who lives in the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community in northwest 

Washington with his family. Logue’s artwork has been shown at the Portland Art Museum, Northwest Marine Ironworks and Abrons Arts Center in New York City.

Brutis Baez hails from California and Warm Springs, Oregon and has created music since 2002. In 2015, he released “More Than Music,” an autobiographical DVD. His short film Indians on the Moon featured in Imagine a World was also on exhibit in The Museum at Warm Springs 26th Annual Tribal Member Art Exhibit.

The original exhibit Imagine a World will be open at the High Desert Museum through September 25. It examines efforts over the decades to create ideal societies throughout the Western United States from the glass domes of Biosphere 2 to Rajneeshpuram. Learn more at highdesertmuseum.org/imagine-a-world.

Tickets for “A Future That’s Indigenous” are $10 (members receive 20 percent discount) and can be purchased online at highdesertmuseum.org/future-thats-indigenous

 ABOUT THE MUSEUM:

THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM opened in Bend, Oregon in 1982. It brings together wildlife, cultures, art, history and the natural world to convey the wonder of North America’s High Desert. The Museum is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, is a Smithsonian Affiliate, was the 2019 recipient of the Western Museums Association’s Charles Redd Award for Exhibition Excellence and was a 2021 recipient of the National Medal for Museum and Library Service. To learn more, visit highdesertmuseum.org and follow us on FacebookInstagram and Twitter.

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Klamath County Sheriff’s Office Asks for Public’s Help in Search For Trucker Suspect

The first real clue to come in on all the missing person cases in the area. Help Klamath Falls Oregon Sheriff Office ID this trucker. He was the last to see this woman alive and could be the key to not only solving this woman’s disappearance but a number of the hundred other women missing in PNW. IF you have any information, please call (541) 883-5130

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https://www.facebook.com/pg/Have-You-Seen-Me-Southern-Oregons-Missing-People-161249961222839/posts/

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