INSIDE OSU EXTENSION’S FOOD SAFETY AND PRESERVATION HOTLINE OPEN | HOME & LIVING, B1 lagrandeobserver.com | $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION July 19, 2022 Car chase involved gunfi re in Island City Two arrested in connection to the chase; one suspect remains at large The Observer ISLAND CITY — Law enforcement arrested two people and one suspect remains at large after a car chase Sunday, July 17, out of Island City that involved gunfi re. Deputies from the Union County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce responded around 12:45 p.m. to Bullseye Muzzleloaders and More, 10201 W. First St., Island City, for a reported burglary, according to a press release. Law enforce- ment was called again to the same busi- ness shortly before 2:30 p.m. with reports describing three people wearing gloves and masks approaching the business, the release said. While law enforcement was on its way to the scene, a Bullseye Muzzleloaders and More employee confronted the sus- pects. During the confrontation, shots were fi red, the release said. The suspects fl ed in a vehicle, and sheriff ’s deputies immediately began a pursuit. During the course of the pursuit, occupants in the fl eeing vehicle fi red rounds at the pursuing law enforcement vehi- cles, disabling one. An Oregon State Police trooper was set FIRE SEASON Creeping higher Vale District Bureau of Land Management/ Contributed Photo, File The Willowcreek Fire burns in northern Malheur County on Wednesday, June 29, 2022. Triple-digit heat dries out the region; agencies have yet to impose campfi re, other restrictions See, Chase/Page A3 Lee murder trial underway Ronald Lee faces charges stemming from 2019 shooting of ex-wife, Loretta Williams By ISABELLA CROWLEY The Observer LA GRANDE — The murder trial of Ronald Lee is underway in Union County Circuit Court, more than three years after his arrest for the slaying of his ex-wife, Loretta Williams. Union County District Attorney Kelsie McDaniel opened her case against Lee the afternoon of Thursday, July 14. The state has charged him with one count of second-de- gree murder and one count of conspiracy to commit murder. The 74-year-old Lee has pleaded not guilty to both charges and remains in the Union County Jail. By JAYSON JACOBY • Baker City Herald AKER CITY — The wildfi re season has been pretty tranquil in North- eastern Oregon, but Al Crouch and Nathan Goodrich are beginning to detect the potential for boisterous days to come. B They see it in the grass, nourished by plentiful spring rain but now curing into tinder beneath the July sun. ring into tinder beneath the July sun. And in the heat that has fi nally arrived, pushing temperatures to triple digits at lower elevations, and humidity levels below 20%. “It’s defi nitely drying out,” Goodrich, fi re staff offi cer for the Wal- lowa-Whitman National Forest, said. “Things have changed quite a bit in the last two weeks.” Crouch, the fi re mitigation spe- cialist for the Bureau of Land Manage- ment’s Vale District, concurred with his fellow federal fi re manager. “The drying is happening fast,” Crouch said. That’s especially so in Baker County and points south, he said. The lush crop of grass, including invasive cheatgrass, that grew this spring has already dried in much of Malheur County, and the trend is moving north, Crouch said. Conditions are still comparatively damp, and the fi re danger somewhat lower, to the north, he said. After the soggy spring, the Baker City Airport has been relatively parched, measuring just 0.05 of an inch of rain since June 6. Thunder- storms that doused other parts of the region mostly missed Baker City. Meacham, by contrast, has had 3.12 inches of rain during that span, most of it coming from a couple of June cloudbursts. The Eastern Oregon Regional Air- port in Pendleton has recorded 1.33 inches since June 6. The Willowcreek Fire, which started on private property north of Vale on June 28, rapidly spread to about 40,000 acres, propelled by gusty winds on a day when temperatures reached 100 degrees in north Malheur County. That fi re shows the potential for fast-moving fi res given a combustible combination of weather conditions, Crouch said. Yet that blaze, which is still under investigation, is also a conspicuous anomaly. The Blue Mountain Interagency Dispatch Center at the Union County Airport, which oversees much of Northeastern Oregon — although not Malheur County — has recorded just 17 fi res this year, which burned a scant 2.7 acres. See, Fire/Page A3 See, Trial/Page A3 Vintage truck turns heads at car show 1926 Mack Model AB was once used by La Grande’s public works department By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — Kenrik Neustel, a photographer for the annual car show at La Grande’s Crazy Days cel- ebration, encountered a problem over the weekend that no cutting-edge digital camera equipment could address. Neustel found that one of the oldest vehicles at the show, a 1926 Mack Model AB truck, was among the most challenging to shoot pictures of due to its popularity. “It was hard to take pho- tographs of it because so many people were crowding around it,” Neustel said on Saturday, July 16, after get- ting high-quality photos of the 1926 truck. The truck, used by the La Grande Public Works See, Truck/Page A3 WEATHER INDEX Classified ......B2 Comics ...........B5 Crossword ....B2 Dear Abby ....B6 Department to haul dirt, rocks and water in the 1920s, stopped foot traffi c on Adams Avenue during the car show. “It is like a piece of time,” said Todd Carter, who judged the 1926 Mack Model AB truck for the car show. Its features — which include a hand-crank starter, a 28.9-horsepower engine, a four-speed trans- mission, a steel open-air cab, hard rubber tires and a solid metal frame — look Home .............B1 Horoscope ....B3 Local...............A2 Lottery ...........A2 Obituaries .....A5 Opinion .........A4 Region ...........A6 Sudoku ..........B5 Dick Mason/ The Observer Ray Clements, of the La Grande Public Works Department, on Tuesday, July 12, 2022, checks on the department’s vintage Mack truck. Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 60 LOW 97/60 Clear Very warm CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 86 2 sections, 12 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4.