4 CapitalPress.com Friday, August 27, 2021 Judge nixes mass discrimination suit against Stemilt Capital Press File A federal judge Aug. 20 barred a class-action lawsuit alleging human trafficking and discrimination against Stemilt Ag Services. attorney Diana Garcia said Tuesday that no decision has been made on whether to continue with the suit. “Our clients still need time to pro- cess it,” she said. She criticized the ruling, saying Stemilt “walked off with a decision that pretty much let them off the hook.” Efforts to obtain com- ment from Stemilt were unsuccessful. Attorneys filed the law- suit last year on behalf of Gilberto Gomez Garcia and Jonathan Gomez Rivera. The suit alleges Garcia, Rivera and other workers were threatened with being sent back to Mexico if they didn’t pick at least three bins of apples a day. The quota was illegal because it wasn’t in the workers’ contract, the suit claims. Stemilt said it set the three-bin standard in a des- perate bid to increase pro- ductivity. The standard, however, was not enforced in all orchards, and manag- ers coached low-performing workers before disciplin- ing them, according to the company. The judge agreed with Stemilt that “complicat- ing matters” was an alleged scheme by two Stemilt employees who oversaw the company’s H-2A program. The two allegedly secretly formed a H-2A con- sulting business and farmed out their work to themselves, ODFW renews kill permit for Eastern Oregon wolves 1st - 1668 Industrial Way SW Albany, Oregon Holly Briggs, J030; Chelsea Donnelly, H049; Daniel Goodwin, F003; Gretchen Groesbeck, D017; Teyadorra Kobernik, Y014; Robin L McConnell, D001, H008; Lisa Moore, A031; Brandi Wiebe, D003 2nd - 1501 Hawthorne Ave NE Salem, Oregon Kristen Blyeth, 2C03; Camilla Cutsforth, 1G17; Windy L Davis, 1C40; Garrison E Horton, 1F43; Brian Ireland, 1C34; Randall Jordan, 2A77; Shaynie Kluth, 1C04; Natalie Krummen, 1H02; Joshua L Meeker, 1D27; Robert Mitchell II, 1H06; Michael Mulholland, RJ07; Matthew Nelson, 1A18; Hope Placencio, 2A56; Sarah Richel, 2D56; Angel M Rodgers, RF11; Candice Sullivan, 2C01; Kloie Wilson, Y1-7 S258044-1 By SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press Oregon authorities are investigating the mysterious death and mutilation of two bulls whose carcasses were found this summer: one in Harney County, the other in nearby Wheeler County. In the most recent case, a Black Angus bull, out of the Thomas Angus Ranch pure- bred line and worth about $4,500, was found dead and mutilated Aug. 14 at Greenbar Ranch in Wheeler County. Bodie Brown, whose brother Tanner owned the bull, and a friend were the first to find the carcass near a watering hole. Its nose, tongue, left cheek, ear, eye, reproductive organs and part of its tail were removed with clean cuts. The cause of death is unknown. The bull, when found, had likely been dead a few days and was already decompos- ing. The 24-hour window during which a necropsy could have been performed on the body had passed. Deputy Jeremiah Holmes of the Wheeler County Sher- iff’s Office is on the case. “It’s kind of a strange thing,” said Tanner Brown, who owned the bull and runs about 300 pair on 9,000 acres. “It’s unfortunate, but I think there are other people in the same spot I’m in.” Brown was right; he isn’t alone. This is the fifth case of a cattle mutilation in Wheeler County in the past 20 months. Nearby Harney County has had five cases in the past four years, two of which happened this year, in May and July. According to FBI records, it’s not just an Oregon prob- lem. Since the 1970s, thou- sands of killings and mutila- tions of cattle have happened across the U.S. The cases, officials say, usually look “eerily simi- lar:” A cow or bull is found dead in a remote area with no indication of how a sus- pect might have gained access to the property. Typ- ically, no footprints, tire tracks or fingerprints are found. There’s little to no spilled blood and no visible puncture wounds, bullets or strangulation marks. In other words — a mystery. Holmes, the deputy on Brown’s case, is also the pri- mary investigator on the four other recent mutilation cases in Wheeler County and said all five cases looked “about the same.” The deputy, however, declined to comment on fur- ther details about the August case, saying he’s tracing some specific clues and doesn’t want a suspect to know. As a hypothetical exam- ple, if suspects knew he rec- ognized their tire tracks, they might ditch their get- away car. “I’ve got a few leads I need to look into that I can’t talk about yet,” said Holmes. All five recent muti- lation cases in Wheeler County are still open and under investigation, as are the most recent five cases in Harney County. Holmes advises farmers and the public to be on the lookout for people or vehi- cles that appear suspicious and to write down license plate numbers and vehicle descriptions. In a recent statement, the Harney County Sher- iff’s Office similarly invited community members and livestock owners “to be vigilant and watch for sus- picious persons or vehicles where livestock (are).” LEGAL The Harney SWCD is accepting bids for the Beaver Tables aerial seeding, located approximately 35 miles south east of Burns, Oregon, within the Beaver Table mount range. The seeding consists of approximately 1,200 acres of aerial application. Seed mixture of 10 lbs of Siberian wheatgrass and 1 lb of forage kochia. There is a mandatory bid tour beginning at 8:30 am on Thursday, September 2, 2021.  Sealed bids are due either by hand delivered or by mail no later than noon, Wednesday, September 15, 2021.  More information and bid packets can be obtained at the HSWCD office located 530 Hwy 20 South in Hines, or on the district website, HarneySWCD. org.  S256593-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2014 TOYOTA CAMRY 4DR VIN = 4T1BF1FK1EU861589 Amount due on lien $1455.00  Reputed owner(s) BRANDON KEITH HENSLER TOYOTA MOTOR CREDIT CORP LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2020 TOYT TAC PU VIN = 3TMCZ5ANXLM308529 Amount due on lien $1695.00  Reputed owner(s) RACHEL & WILLIAM MITCHELL TOYOTA MOTOR CREDIT CORP LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2018 RAM RAM PU VIN = 3C6UR5CL5JG380709 Amount due on lien $1515.00  Reputed owner(s) J SITTISUPACHOKE & D WILHITE CHRYSLER CAPITAL LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2008 BMW 750 4D VIN = WBAHN83568DT78061 Amount due on lien $1515.00  Reputed owner(s) VICTORY LANE INC/JAMAAL LANE TD AUTO FINANCE LLC LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2016 HOND ODY VAN VIN = 5FNRL5H36GB148871 Amount due on lien $1515.00  Reputed owner(s) KAPITOLINA & KASIYAM PIRFILI BORU LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2012 GMC SAVANA VAN VIN = 1GD374CG2C1905925 Amount due on lien $1455.00  Reputed owner(s) 3G CONTRACTORS LLC LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2020 TOYOTA RAV 4 LL VIN = 2T3RWRFV0LW079652 Amount due on lien $1455.00  Reputed owner(s) HIEP V NGUYEN & THUY T T VO TOYOTA MOTOR CREDIT CORP LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2020 MERZ GLC 4DR VIN = W1N0G8EB9LF819670 Amount due on lien $1435.00  Reputed owner(s) NICHOLAS M MARTINEZ DAIMLER TRUST/DAIMLER TITLE CO S257177-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2015 DODG DAR 4DR VIN = 1C3DFCB2FD2771263 Amount due on lien $1675.00  Reputed owner(s) STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTO INS CO S257178-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2018 NISS NV200 VAN VIN = 3N6CM0KN5JK702168 Amount due on lien $1535.00  Reputed owner(s) MOOSOO CORP / MI HEE AHN KIM NMAC S257179-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2011 DODG 250 CW VIN = 3D7TP2CL8BG509736 Amount due on lien $1515.00  Reputed owner(s) TIM MCCARTY S257184-1 Auction Starts Sept 7th 2021 storageauctions.com Ends Friday, Sept. 17, 2021 10am Mysterious cattle mutilations continue around Central and Eastern Oregon S257190-1 PUBLIC LIEN SALE U-STORE SELF STORAGE Deputy Jeremiah Holmes S257185-1 The Harney SWCD is accept- ing bids on a juniper treatment project located near Drewsey, OR approximately 46 miles east of Burns, OR.  There are 142 acres of cutting, lop and scattering, and hand pil- ing.  A mandatory bid tour will be held on September 10th @ 8:30 a.m. departing from HSWCD office. Contractors are required to meet all Ore- gon public contracting laws, maintain a $2.0 million dollar general liability insurance pol- icy, and be licensed to conduct business in Oregon. Sealed bids are due either by hand de- livery or by mail no later than noon, Friday, September 17, 2021.  More information and bid packets can be obtained at the HSWCD office located 530 Hwy 20 South in Hines, or on the district website, Harney- SWCD.org. S258040-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2006 SPRIN 28FT RT VIN = 4YDT2S6216K131719 Amount due on lien $1455.00  Reputed owner(s) ROGER W & LEE F ORR Officials are investi- gating the death and mutilation of this bull found in Wheel- er County, Ore., in August. S257191-1 S257188-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2007 TOYT FJC UT VIN = JTEBU11F070066527 Amount due on lien $1455.00  Reputed owner(s) SUNSHINE PANTRY/SHARON J STRAUS TOYT MOTOR CREDIT CORP LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2019 HYUN IONIQ 4D VIN = KMHC65LC1KU163424 Amount due on lien $1535.00  Reputed owner(s) FLEXDRIVE SERVICES LLC HYUNDAI MOTOR FINANCE S257186-1 S257182-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2016 FORD FUS 4D VIN = 1FA6P0HD3G5134629 Amount due on lien $1535.00  Reputed owner(s) ASHLEY & GENE PIRELLI FORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY where “chronic depreda- tion” is four confirmed attacks in six months. Most of Oregon’s 173 documented wolves are tightly clustered in the northeast corner of the state. The Lookout Moun- tain pack’s territory includes an area of eastern Baker County extending near the Idaho border. Environmental groups blasted ODFW for its man- agement of the pack. “We’re shocked that the Department of Fish and Wildlife wants even more dead wolves,” said Ama- roq Weiss, senior wolf advocate with the Cen- ter for Biological Diver- sity. “The assertion that the pups’ death resulted in a greater lag time before the next conflict occurred is not credible. Any scien- tist knows that correlation is not causation.” Sristi Kamal, senior Northwest representative for Defenders of Wildlife, said ODFW should prior- itize coexistence tools and methods, “especially as our vulnerable wolf population is already facing threats from the ongoing drought and water crisis.” Gray wolves were removed from the federal Endangered Species list in early January, though a coalition of wildlife advo- cates is petitioning to have the protections reinstated. The Biden administra- tion, however, appears to be sticking by the delist- ing decision. According to The Associated Press, on Aug. 20 attorneys for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice asked a federal judge in California to reject the environmentalists’ lawsuit. S257192-1 S256338-1 LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87  Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be  sold, for  cash to the highest bidder, on 08/30/2021.  The sale will be held at 10:00am by  COPART OF WASHINGTON INC  2885 NATIONAL WAY WOODBURN, OR  2013 AUDI Q7 UT VIN = WA1LMAFE1DD011706 Amount due on lien $1435.00  Reputed owner(s) MEGHAN L & BRIAN J MALENSKY ONPOINT COMMUNITY C.U S257180-1 BAKER CITY, Ore. — The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has renewed a permit allowing ranchers to kill two more wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack in Baker County following repeated attacks on livestock. ODFW first issued the permit on July 29 after confirming the pack killed or injured five cows in 14 days — well above the “chronic depredation” threshold outlined in the state’s Wolf Conservation and Management Plan. The permit, which expired Aug. 21, allowed killing up to four sub-adult wolves from the pack. On Aug. 1, the department announced it shot two wolf pups spotted from a helicopter, sparking out- rage from environmental groups. Depredations stopped for 18 days after the two pups were killed, though on Aug. 19 ODFW con- firmed the pack once again killed a 3-month-old calf in the same area. As a result, the depart- ment announced it is issu- ing a new permit that will run for three more weeks, expiring Sept. 14. It autho- rizes three different live- stock producers to kill up to two more wolves from the pack on land where they legally graze their animals. The pack’s collared breeding pair is excluded from the permit, though ODFW has stated it may consider other options if depredations continue. “ODFW has a responsi- bility to address continued chronic livestock depreda- tion by wolves and strives to first pursue incremental lethal control rather than removing entire packs to strike a balance between protecting livestock and wolves on the landscape,” the agency wrote in a statement. Eastern Oregon falls under Phase III of the state wolf plan, which defines “chronic depredation” as two confirmed attacks in a nine-month period. Ranch- ers must also be using approved non-lethal deter- rents, such as range riders to haze wolves and remov- ing bone piles or other attractants from pastures. Wolves living west of highways 395, 78 and 95, meanwhile, are still in Phase I of the wolf plan, S257187-1 By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press collecting from Stemilt their salaries and consulting fees, according to court records. Late in the harvest, Stemilt uncovered the scheme and fired the two workers. Some H-2A work- ers purportedly left with the two fired employees and violated their visas by seek- ing another job in the U.S. Piece-rate apple pick- ers were guaranteed at least $107 a day in hourly wages. Stemilt blamed low produc- tivity on one of the fired employers telling work- ers they didn’t need to worry about how much they picked, even though the con- tract required a “sustained” and “bona fide” effort. Rivera, one of the two named plaintiffs, was an especially poor performer, frequently picking between a half and 1.5 bins a day, according to Stemilt. S257183-1 Human trafficking and discrimination claims by two ex-farmworkers can’t form the basis of a class-ac- tion lawsuit against Wash- ington fruit company Stemilt Growers, a federal judge has ruled. The two workers’ com- plaints are “plagued by individual issues,” disqual- ifying them from represent- ing 1,200 Mexican nation- als who picked for Stemilt in 2017, U.S. District Judge Salvador Mendoza Jr. ruled. “The sprawling physi- cal and factual landscape of this case ... render this case generally too unwieldy and unfit for class treatment,” Mendoza wrote in a ruling released Aug. 20. Columbia Legal Ser- vices and a Seattle law firm, Keller Rohrback, sought to recover damages for the alleged abuse of H-2A workers in 36 orchards oper- ated by Stemilt Ag Services, owned by Wenatchee-based Stemilt Growers. Mendoza denied let- ting the most serious claims alleging intimidation and racism go forward as a class-action suit. The judge allowed one complaint related to disclos- ing the terms of employment to be pressed as a class-ac- tion suit. Workers received the dis- closure form in January, but were not given the identi- cal form in August when they started a second H-2A contract. Mendoza said he wasn’t ruling on the merits of the complaint, only that it quali- fied as a class-action suit. Columbia Legal Services S257189-1 By DON JENKINS Capital Press