OREGON 6A — THE OBSERVER SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 2021 Oregon GOP legislator ousted over state Capitol breach By ANDREW SELSKY The Associated Press SALEM — Repub- lican lawmakers voted with majority Democrats in the Oregon House of Represen- tatives to take the historic step of expelling a Repub- lican member who let vio- lent, far-right protesters into the state Capitol on Dec. 21. Legislators said on the House fl oor that this could be the most important vote they ever cast. They then proceeded Thursday, June 10, to expel an unapologetic Rep. Mike Nearman with a 59-1 vote, marking the fi rst time a member has been expelled by the House in its 160-year history. The only vote against the resolution for expulsion was Near- man’s own. Rep. Paul Holvey, a Democrat who chaired a committee that earlier in the day unanimously recom- mended Nearman’s expul- sion, reminded lawmakers of the events of Dec. 21, which were an eerie fore- shadowing of the much more serious Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol. Kaylee Domzalski/Oregon Public Broadcasting, File Rep Mike Nearman, R-Independence, chats with fellow representatives on the Oregon House fl oor on April 11, 2019, at the Capitol in Salem. The House on Thursday, June 10, 2021, voted 59-1 to expel Nearman after video emerged showing he helped plan an armed incursion in the state Capitol late last year. Near- man was the lone vote against. “On the morning of Dec. 21st, a couple hun- dred protesters — some of them heavily armed and wearing body armor — arrived at the Capitol for a protest, with the intent to illegally enter and presum- ably occupy the building and interrupt the proceed- ings of the Oregon Legis- lature,” Holvey said. “Staff and legislators were terri- fi ed. We can only speculate what would have happened if they were able to get all the way in.” Nearman said he let the protesters in because he believes the Capitol, which has been closed to the public to protect against spread of the coronavirus, should have been open. The assault happened during a peak of the pandemic. But even Republi- cans, who are often bit- terly opposed to Demo- cratic initiatives on climate change and some other bills, said the crowd outside the Capitol that day was not made up of constituents who wanted to peacefully engage in the democratic process. Some were carrying guns. Some shouted false QAnon conspiracy theories about Democrats kidnap- ping babies. They carried American fl ags, banners for former President Donald Trump and a sign calling for the arrest of Demo- cratic Gov. Kate Brown. They broke windows and assaulted journalists. “Nobody should have opened the door to the people who were here that day,” said Rep. Daniel Bonham, a Republican and a member Holvey’s special committee. The fi nal straw for Republican House members came on June 4, when video emerged showing Nearman choreographing how he would let protesters into the Capitol a few days before it actually happened. For his fellow lawmakers, that was proof it was a premed- itated act, which Nearman acknowledged. All 22 of his fellow House Republi- cans wrote him on Monday, strongly recommending he resign. As lawmakers gathered to decide Nearman’s fate, a few dozen people waving American fl ags and one carrying a sign saying “I am Mike Nearman” gath- ered outside the Capitol. One repeatedly kicked a metal door, sending booms through a marble hallway of the building. Nearman was seen on security video opening a door to protesters on Dec. 21 as lawmakers met in emergency session to deal with economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. Protesters barged into the building, which was closed to the public because of coronavirus safety pro- tocols, got into shoving matches with police and sprayed offi cers with bear spray. Oregon might revamp vaccination lott ery to spur more vaccinations By AIMEE GREEN The Oregonian SALEM — The number of Oregonians getting vacci- nated against COVID-19 has nose-dived since Gov. Kate Brown announced a $1 mil- lion lottery for vaccinated residents a few weeks ago. The state says it’s now looking at ways to spark more enthusiasm — and inoculations among those still unvaccinated — in the three weeks left before the drawing is held. Charles Boyle, a gover- nor’s spokesman, said in an email that the governor’s offi ce is “exploring options for drawings earlier in the month to continue to gen- erate excitement throughout the next several weeks.” Brown also hinted at a news conference Friday, June 4, that more prizes may be added to the off erings in coming days, though she hasn’t yet shared any details. “We have more surprises in the works that you’ll hear about soon,” Brown said. “So if you haven’t yet been vaccinated, now is the time. You never know, you may just walk into a vaccine clinic or a pharmacy to get your vaccine and fi nd out you’re a winner.” Oregon is among one of at least nine states — including Washington last week — drumming up lot- teries in hopes of elevating immunization numbers that have plummeted in the late spring nationwide. Most are off ering to make at least one person in each of their bor- ders a millionaire — but only if they’re vaccinated against COVID-19. Brown announced May 21 that Oregon is off ering a $1 million jackpot, three dozen awards of $10,000 doled out to one person in each of the state’s coun- ties, and fi ve scholarships of $100,000 for youth for col- lege or vocational school. SENATE BILL 819 Bill allowing prosecutors, prisoners to ask for conviction reviews gets passed By NOELLE CROMBIE The Oregonian SALEM — A bill that would allow a district attorney and a person con- victed of a crime to ask a judge to revisit a convic- tion or reduce a prison sen- tence has passed both cham- bers of the Legislature and now heads to the governor’s desk. Senate Bill 819 was hailed Tuesday, June 8, by advocates and supporters as among the most signifi cant changes to the criminal jus- tice system to emerge from the legislative session. The bill gives prosecu- tors and a person with a conviction the chance to jointly ask a judge to make a change that could include dropping a felony to a mis- demeanor, erasing a convic- tion altogether or reducing the length of a person’s sentence. The district attorney would have to agree to the petition before it could be heard by the court. The bill was requested by the Criminal Justice Reform Clinic at Lewis & Clark Law School. Aliza Kaplan, a law school professor who runs the clinic, said the bill would be most useful in cases where someone was convicted of a crime based on outdated forensic science. Kaplan said California and Washington have sim- ilar policies that are used sparingly. The bill would allow petitions in other situa- tions as well, such as in cases when a Black defen- dant received a signifi cantly higher sentence than a white person in a similar situation or when a person who com- mitted a crime long ago and has been out of prison and out of trouble cannot apply for professional licenses because of an old felony. Kaplan said an incarcer- ated person with terminal illness and less than a year to live also might be a can- didate to have their sentence revisited under the bill. “It’s really up to the dis- trict attorneys and what their priorities are,” she said. “It’s also up to them whether they even use it.” She called it “one of the most important pieces of criminal justice reform leg- islation that Oregon” has undertaken in a long time. But unlike other states that started their draw- ings within a week or two of their announcements and that are holding draw- ings weekly or even daily, Oregon will draw all its winners on one day, June 28, which is more than fi ve weeks after Brown announced the lottery’s creation. Offi cials estimate it could be another week beyond that date before they announce the winners. State offi cials seem to have acknowledged that delayed timeline might have put a damper on the initial zeal and urgency to go out and get vaccinated as soon as possible. “The ‘Take Your Shot Oregon’ campaign was designed for simplicity, so that there would be a signifi - cant period of time to incen- tivize vaccinations prior to June 28,” said Boyle, before adding that the state might tweak that strategy to award some new prizes soon. The lottery, he cautioned, is one of many strategies the state is using to increase inoculations. “No individual strategy is expected to have a sin- gularly massive impact or to wholly reverse vaccina- tion rate trends,” Boyle said. “Each strategy adds a little energy to the overall eff ort.” So far, the day-to-day number of newly vaccinated people in Oregon has been disappointing. While Oregon was administering about 17,000 shots as of midweek last week — about half of the number it was administering when Brown announced the lottery — that includes shots for people who already opted to get vaccinated and are receiving a second dose. The key metric to watch to gauge the lottery’s per- formance is the number of unvaccinated people receiving their fi rst shots.