Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Oregon) 1937-current, September 29, 2010, Page 6, Image 6

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    Page A-6
(Editor’s Note: Factual
information for ‘Blotter’ is
provided by official law
enforcement agencies. All
persons listed are innocent
until proven guilty in a
court of law. Charges can
be amended or dismissed.)
* * *
Wednesday, Sept. 15
*Videotape will be re-
viewed to attempt to locate
missing keys to lottery ma-
chines at a Cave Junction
business. The cost to replace
eight keys is $109.45.
*Someone doesn’t re-
spect others’ boundaries,
and removed a certified sur-
vey marker worth $200
from property on Caves
Hwy.
*Anita Savio and her
border collie were enjoying
a hike on the trailhead on
Westside Road until she
became disoriented. Anita
spotted a Forest Service
truck, and a BLM employee
kindly gave her a ride back
to her vehicle.
*Damien M. Clark, 17,
Noah James Reyelts, 29,
and Ralph Christopher
Rowden, 44, were warned
regarding trespassing at 406
S. Redwood Hwy.
Thursday, Sept. 16
*The Oregon Racing
Commission received a re-
port stating that it appeared
a woman’s horse had been
sexually abused. No viable
suspect info at this time.
*Although it appeared
suspicious for a 33-year old
man in a black sports car to
be picking up a student at
the high school, there was
no evidence of a crime,
since she turned 18 that day.
*Doreen L. Miller, 36,
and Mikel A. Haynes, 45,
denied any disorderly con-
duct and did not know of
any others being disorderly
in front of the Josephine
County building in Cave
Junction. They were just
loitering.
Illinois Valley News, Cave Junction, Ore. Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2010
*It was a camo tarp, not
a camo tart, that was located
along with a sleeping bag,
Carheart vest, camo shirts,
coats and a black hoody on
Bear Camp Road.
*Bryan James French,
33, was arrested for menac-
ing and pointing a firearm at
another after an incident on
Hummingbird Road.
*An audible alarm at
Cavenet TC Computers/gun
shop may have been acti-
vated by a falling price tag.
Must have been a drastic
reduction.
*No soliciting in the 50-
plus complex on Honeylo-
cust Drive, including the
man who identified himself
as being with the Daily
Courier.
Friday, Sept. 17
*Someone screamed “I
don’t care” before a gun
shot was heard near the
transient camp at the end of
Hussey Ave. Robert Charles
Breakfield, 46, was cited
and released for carrying a
concealed “slungshot” ac-
cording to police offense
report log. Is a slungshot a
slingshot that has been
slung?
*According to police $8
-10,000 worth of medical
marijuana was stolen from
Fish Hatchery Road.
*An extra day-time pa-
trol or two was requested by
a resident on Rockydale
Road who had not received
mail for two weeks. He was
advised to contact the post
office.
*Phillip Yves Fraser,
56, and Jimmy Richard Del-
zell, 56, were warned about
trespassing at 319 S. Red-
wood Hwy.
*Xenia Marina Velasco,
17, was cited for failure to
maintain lane and careless
driving after a traffic acci-
dent temporarily closed
Hwy. 199 near the Madrone
Motel. Her three passengers
were transported to Three
Rivers Hospital.
*Grants Pass airport
had to detour an airplane
due to two large dogs on the
runway.
*His persistence raised
suspicions when a man in
his early 20s tried to sell
security systems, but had no
badge or current identifica-
tion.
*Deputies were flagged
down at 10:06 p.m. by a
woman whose 16-year-old
daughter was educated re-
garding the rules of being a
child.
Saturday, Sept. 18
*Three adult males
were using the Cave Junc-
tion City Hall as their local
watering hole.
*Garbage strewn along
Airport Drive seemed to
indicate that a man is living
in an extra-long, blue and
gray Chevy van in that area.
Sunday, Sept. 19
*Someone could end up
in a crock of trouble if she
continues to disregard re-
straining orders.
*Water in phone lines
may have been the cause of
static and a 911 hang-up call
from Takilma Road.
*An alert neighbor,
worried because he had
been an auto-theft victim,
reported a car being stolen
at Valley Village apart-
ments. The suspected thief
was actually towing his own
car to I.V. High School for
repairs.
*After being advised of
complaints and the county’s
noise ordinance, a man on
Caves Hwy. agreed to dis-
connect an outside speaker.
*New “Lo-Jac” technol-
ogy may help a woman on
Jeannie Way retrieve her
Dell Inspiron laptop, but it
probably won’t do much
good finding her trash can
stolen two weeks ago.
*Michael Jason Phil-
lips, 39, and Grace Helen
Polk, 35, were detained after
a car was sideswiped. Phil-
lips was arrested for proba-
tion violation, and Polk was
lodged at county jail for
assault, reckless endanger-
ing and driving under the
influence charges.
*Clothing items includ-
ing two women’s shirts, two
pairs of shorts, a sports bra,
a video cassette tape and
over the counter meds were
found at Lake Selmac. The
retrieved property appears
to belong to a female, ac-
cording to police offense
report log.
Monday, Sept. 20
*There was one less
deer on Deer Creek Road,
and a woman was limping
home in her vehicle after
she hit a deer around 6:30
a.m.
*Llamas on Hogue
Drive are lucky to have a
concerned neighbor, who is
feeding them and giving
them water after they were
abandoned when their own-
ers moved.
*A GMC Yukon
backed into a three-wheeled
2010 Can Am Spider at the
C.J. 76 gas station and car
wash.
*A bartender set off the
alarm at Michelle’s Family
Restaurant when he took
trash out the wrong door.
Tuesday, Sept. 21
*Some folks didn’t get
the memo and were ticketed
for failure to wear seat belts.
*A Stihl gas leaf blower
was found on Takilma Road
around Sept. 15 and brought
to the city of C.J. Officials
there, then turned it in to the
C.J. substation.
*The naked man stand-
ing at the school bus stop on
Rockydale Road/Pine Cone
Drive caught the eye of a
woman driving by, but no
one else called to complain.
*Stolen from S. Junc-
tion Ave., the red 1988 Nis-
san 4x4 pickup should be
easy to spot, it has a large
hand-carved bench in the
back.
*Windows were broken
out of two vehicles belong-
ing to Shop Smart employ-
ees, according to a witness.
*Someone ran into a
building in the 100 block of
S. Redwood Hwy., then
fled, leaving behind a gas–
spilling homemade motor-
cycle with no license plates.
*Gunshots were heard
just after midnight, but
deputies were unable to lo-
cate anything unusual on
Lone Mountain Road.
I.V. Airport Board...
(Continued from page 1)
Buck, former smokejumper
Gary Thornhill, who was
sitting in the audience, and
Board member Steve Lyons.
Lyons stated that he has
“tremendous respect” for
the smokejumpers and their
legacy, but added that the
board is so “dysfunctional”
that it can’t agree on the
fence after nine months of
deliberations.
“There is no deliberate
intention to delay anything,”
Brandt said.
Brandt denied that the
smokejumper group ob-
tained an attorney, and said
the group was “providing
information” to Atkin.
Board member Ed Rus-
sell read from a letter that he
sent to the commissioners
regarding the proposed Air-
port Layout Plan (ALP).
“I was on the committee
that ‘unanimously’ voted to
recommend this ALP draft,
and I know it shouldn’t be
accepted,” Russell said.
“Now that I read this report,
and consider the conse-
quences, I am sorry for
‘caving,’ not doing what I
knew was right and opting
to support what I was told
‘was possible.’”
If the ALP is imple-
mented as planned, Russell
warned, “tourists on Hwy.
199 will go abruptly from
the world class view into the
Kalmiopsis Wilderness,
along Rough & Ready
Creek, at the Botanical
Wayside, immediately into
rows of large metal shed
buildings blocking a trade-
mark I.V. view of sunsets
over the Kalmiopsis.”
“Do the right thing, the
best thing for the people of
this valley and county, at
least really look into this,
fight for our unanimously
preferred plan, and demand
the opportunities only the
west side taxiway, our rec-
ommendation, can provide,”
Russell said.
Toler left so that Cas-
sanelli could return to dis-
cuss the ALP. Board mem-
bers then went over the first
three chapters of the six-
chapter document before
adjourning. Cassanelli said
that she wanted the airport’s
users and tenants to look at
the ALP prior to any more
action being taken.
The last three chapters
of the ALP will be dis-
cussed during the board’s
next meeting, scheduled for
Oct. 25.