REGION THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2022 Conduct unbecoming By BENNETT HALL Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Abigail Mobley, the former Grant County sheriff ’s deputy at the heart of the “sex talk” scandal, committed no fewer than eight violations of the department’s code of conduct ranging from abuse of her position to conduct unbecoming an offi cer and neglect of duty, according to public records recently unsealed by a judge after the ex-deputy sued to keep them secret. For those transgressions, Mobley was given a 30-day unpaid suspension starting on Nov. 26, 2020, the records reveal. On Dec. 26, the day after the suspension ended, Mobley resigned from the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce. The disciplinary action was the culmination of a 21-month investigation into Mobley’s inappropriate relationship with an inmate at the Grant County Jail, where she worked as a cor- rections deputy. During the probe, Mobley was on paid administrative leave from her job at a cost to Grant County taxpayers of well over $100,000 in salary and benefi ts. The documents con- taining this information were among a trove of public records requested by the Blue Mountain Eagle in October 2020 as part of a follow-up to a story on the “sex talk” scandal published the month before. After some delay, county offi cials were preparing to release the information, but on March 9, 2021, Mobley fi led a motion in Grant County Circuit Court for an injunc- tion to block the release of the records. The case concluded on Feb. 3, 2022, when Judge Thomas B. Powers issued a judgment of dismissal in which he ruled that most, but not all, of the requested records should be released. The documents that were released contain addi- tional revelations about alle- gations of misconduct by Mobley and other Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce employees during the tenure of Sheriff Glenn Palmer. Palmer left offi ce at the end of 2020 after losing the elec- tion to current Sheriff Todd McKinley. At the same time, how- ever, some questions still remain unanswered. Scope of the investigation In early 2019, after a number of allegations had been raised about possible misconduct by members of his staff , Palmer, fol- lowing standard procedure for such situations, turned to an outside law enforce- ment agency to investigate the claims. In March 2019, investi- gators from the Deschutes County Sheriff ’s Offi ce met with Grant County District Attorney Jim Carpenter, acting in the role of county counsel, in Carpenter’s Canyon City offi ce. In their report, which was among the documents ordered released by the judge, the investigators summarize the allegations they were asked to look into. Most of the complaints revolved around Mobley and her husband, Undersheriff Zach Mobley, who remains second in command of the Grant County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce. The complaints included allegations that: • Abigail Mobley had been having a relation- ship with Grant County Jail inmate Darren Mor- timore, who was serving four consecutive six-month sentences after pleading guilty to charges of stran- gulation, fourth-degree assault and menacing. • Abigail Mobley had sexually harassed Deputy Brandon Hutchison by con- tacting him via Facetime and making inappropriate sexual comments. • Zach Mobley, after being notifi ed by a jail employee that Abigail Mobley had been overheard having a recorded phone conversation with Morti- more, retaliated against the employee by ordering him to take two days of vaca- tion time. Furthermore, it was alleged that Mortimore had been transferred from the Grant County Jail to a facility in California, where he was wanted for a parole violation, before he had served his full sentence in order to get him away from Abigail Mobley. • Zach Mobley, after being informed by Hutchison that Abi- gail Mobley had sexually harassed him, responded by asking “Did you get a bang out of it?” and took no action on the sexual harass- ment complaint. • Zach Mobley trans- ferred his wife out of her corrections deputy assign- ment in the jail and created a new position for her as a training coordinator in the Sheriff ’s Offi ce. On April 22, 2019, less than a month after launching its investigation, the Deschutes County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce notifi ed Palmer it was suspending the inquiry because it had become a criminal matter. Investiga- tors believed it was “prob- able” that Abigail Mobley had committed the crime of custodial sexual misconduct with Mortimore. Eight days later, Car- penter referred possible criminal charges against Abigail Mobley to the Oregon Department of Jus- tice for investigation. Under the Oregon Revised Statutes, the crime of custodial sexual mis- conduct defi nes off enses against prisoners by those in authority over them. First-degree custodial sexual misconduct is a Class C felony. Second-de- gree custodial misconduct, which seems the more likely charge in the circumstances, is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail. After an 11-month inves- tigation, however, DOJ declined to prosecute. The state agency sent a letter to Carpenter stating that Abi- gail Mobley had engaged in multiple sexual conver- sations with Mortimore while he was in custody at the Grant County Jail, but there was “not a reason- able likelihood” the state could prove she had com- mitted the crime of custo- dial sexual misconduct. At that point, Palmer decided to resume an Newly released documents disclose discipline against ex-Grant County deputy for relationship with jail inmate Blue Mountain Eagle, File The disciplinary action of Abigail Mobley was the culmination of a 21-month investigation into Mobley’s inappropriate relationship with an inmate at the Grant County Jail, where she worked as a corrections deputy. During the probe, Mobley was on paid administrative leave from her job at a cost to Grant County taxpayers of well over $100,000 in salary and benefi ts. ijuana-related charges in Idaho (which were later dis- missed). The Idaho State Police had extracted data from Olson’s phone and had reportedly found “inter- esting information” about Smith and Olson. The report does not specify what sort of information that may have been. The Deschutes County Sheriff ’s Offi ce did not investigate Tyler Smith because the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce had not yet evaluated the data dump from Olson’s phone to determine if Smith had committed any serious policy violations. On Aug. 9, 2019, how- ever, Smith was placed on administrative leave “for issues related to the per- formance of his duties as a sheriff ’s deputy.” A month later he was arrested on charges of attempted rape and other alleged crimes involving his estranged wife; he has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him and is awaiting trial. On Dec. 17, 2019, Smith was fi red from the Sher- iff ’s Offi ce for reasons that county offi cials have refused to divulge. Since then, a fl urry of lawsuits have been fi led that make a multitude of claims and counterclaims about possible wrongdoing within the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce. In August 2020, Haley Olson fi led a federal law- suit against Grant County, Palmer and Carpenter for civil rights violations related to the data dump from her phone following her Idaho arrest. The suit claims that Carpenter, at Palmer’s request, accessed her phone records without a warrant and without sus- picion of criminal activity and that the two then shared those phone records, which included nude and sexually explicit images of Olson, with others. Some of the nude photos, the suit claims, were taken when Olson was a minor. Palmer countersued in Grant County Court on Oct. 8, 2020, claiming that Olson had made false and defamatory statements that damaged his reputa- tion. Palmer’s suit, which seeks $100,000 in damages, claims that Olson’s alle- gations were “made with actual malice and timed to have maximum eff ect on the November 2020 elec- tion in which (Palmer) is a candidate.” On Dec. 21, 2020, Smith fi led suit in U.S. District Court in Pendleton seeking monetary damages for wrongful discharge, whis- tleblower retaliation and violation of his constitu- tional rights. The suit names Grant County, Palmer, Car- penter, and the Mobleys. Smith’s lawsuit claims the Mobleys and Palmer orchestrated a plan to get him arrested and removed from the Sheriff ’s Offi ce in retaliation for allegations against Abigail Mobley that he reported to the Oregon Department of Justice in July 2019. The allegations were that Abigail Mobley, while she was still employed as a deputy, had used illegal drugs and was having a sexual relationship with an inmate. Meanwhile, a hearing in Smith’s criminal trial was scheduled for Wednesday, April 13, on a motion to have the charges against him dismissed on the basis of his claims that the charges are false and were made as part of the alleged plot to get him fi red. That hearing was can- celed and was to be resched- uled at a later date. Asked for a comment, McKinley noted the events in question took place before he became sheriff and added that he hopes the department can now move on. “I look forward to get- ting past this chapter of our history and writing a new one. That is why I chose to run for this offi ce (in 2020),” McKinley said. “We are working hard here to change the face of this offi ce, and I believe we have made a good start in the last year.” inmate under her authority investigation into possible has been thoroughly inves- policy violations within his tigated, she was disciplined department. But Deschutes by former Sheriff Palmer County no longer had per- for her policy violations and sonnel available for the job, she is no longer with the so the probe was handed over to the Umatilla County department. But a number of unre- Sheriff ’s Offi ce. solved allegations For reasons that about possible mis- are not explained conduct by employees in the documents of the Grant County released by Judge Sheriff ’s Offi ce during Powers, Umatilla Palmer’s tenure con- County did not look tinue to hang over the into any claims of Mobley department. misconduct by Zach For instance, it Mobley but focused has never been pub- exclusively on the licly disclosed whether actions of Abigail the claims that Zach Mobley. Mobley retaliated On Oct. 7, 2020, against a jail employee the Umatilla County for reporting his wife’s Sheriff ’s Offi ce con- phone calls with Mor- cluded its investi- Palmer timore and failed to gation with a nine- act on Hutchison’s claim page report. of sexual harassment were The agency determined that Abigail Mobley violated investigated and, if so, if he was ever disciplined. the Grant County Sheriff ’s Nor has there ever been a Offi ce policy in regard to public explanation for Mor- the Prison Rape Elimina- timore’s transfer out of the tion Act, or PREA, by sex- Grant County Jail before his ually harassing Mortimore sentence was complete or while he was an inmate in the creation of a new posi- the Grant County Jail. tion in the Sheriff ’s Offi ce Sgt. Abel Zamudio, who for Abigail Mobley. led the investigation, wrote In addition, when Palmer in his report that “Deputy asked the Deschutes County Mobley made repeated verbal comments of a sexual Sheriff ’s Offi ce in March 2019 to investigate allega- nature to Inmate Morti- tions of possible miscon- more” in recorded phone duct by the Mobleys, he calls that Mortimore made also asked them to look to her from the jail. into a situation involving She also acknowledged Tyler Smith, who was then that the two had phys- a patrol deputy with the ical contact on one occa- Sheriff ’s Offi ce. Smith’s sion, in the doorway to girlfriend, Haley Olson, the dry storage area of the had been arrested on mar- jail kitchen, according to the report. “I asked what kind of physical contact was that,” Zamudio wrote in the report. “Deputy Mobley said, ‘He grabbed the back of my head and kissed me.’” When asked if she made PLEASE JOIN US FOR A RETIREMENT PARTY HONORING sexual comments to Mor- timore during the phone calls, “Deputy Mobley stated that once she started talking to Mortimore on the phone she was drinking all the time and does not remember anything about the conversations, but she Union County Senior Center heard that she did talk sex- 1504 N. Albany Street ually,” the report states. Adventure Awaits Margaret Davidson Friday, April 22, 2022 at 3 pm La Grande, OR 97850 Unanswered questions For the most part, the newly released public records appear to bring the “sex talk” scandal to a close. 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