3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 2017 Arsonist found liable in $2.8 million verdict By NATALIE ST. JOHN EO Media Group CATHLAMET, Wash. — When convicted arsonist Sam Valdez made an unprecedented attempt to attend his trial Mon- day from a payphone at the Clal- lam Bay Corrections Center, it created confusion in Wahkia- kum County Superior Court. Court staff had to figure out a tedious payment system on speakerphone while an audience watched and 60 potential jurors waited in the wings. Fellow prisoners hounded the defen- dant while he tried to get his case dismissed, and a recorded announcement kept interrupting Judge Doug Goelz. Valdez, 65, did not ask to be brought to his trial, and he did not get a reliable phone or video connection before the start of the trial. So when he ran out of phone time, his trial proceeded without him. At the end of the day, the jury ordered the one- time Altoona, Washington, resi- dent to pay his former neighbors Fred and Cathy Cantrell almost $2.8 million in damages for the raging July 2014 arson fire that destroyed their home and prop- erty, and killed both of their dogs. Arson, drug-dealing, murder and fraud In early 2016, Valdez was convicted of drug manufac- turing, murder conspiracy and arson, after a confidential infor- mant secretly recorded three conversations in which he dis- cussed his hash-oil business, plans to hire a hitman to kill his ex-wife and the fire at the Cantrell home. He was sen- tenced to about 20 years in prison. The fire occurred shortly after the Cantrells briefly testi- fied on behalf of his wife in the divorce trial. Though police sus- EO Media Group/File Photo Former Altoona resident Sam Valdez looked up during his criminal trial in Wahkiakum County Superi- or Court in March 2016. pected Valdez of setting the fire, the Cantrells couldn’t sue Val- dez and his sister Valerie Val- dez until he was convicted. The Cantrells’ Longview, Washing- ton, attorney Duane Crandall said Valerie Valdez didn’t have anything to do with the fire, but she may have helped her brother conceal his assets after his August 2015 arrest. The court is now handling her alleged involvement in a separate case Trial-by-phone Getting Valdez on the phone took up the first hour of the trial. Washington prisoners — or their callers — must pay for phone time. Calls automatically end after 20 minutes. Goelz kept his sense of humor as he tried to connect the call. Valdez immediately tried to get the lawsuit dismissed, say- ing his criminal case was still under appeal and he couldn’t adequately participate from prison. “To have a fair and impartial trial, I believe I would need to be present,” Valdez said. “I don’t understand how anybody could think I would have a fair trial.” Other prisoners began pres- suring Valdez to hang up, and the din in the prison became increasingly disruptive. “I’m getting a lot of heat here, just trying to use this phone,” Valdez said. In criminal cases, the state must provide attorneys for defendants who can’t afford them and must transport pris- oners to their trials. Crandall pointed out that those rules don’t apply to civil cases. When Val- dez decided to be his own attor- ney, Crandall said, he assumed responsibility for making the arrangements. “It’s our second trial date. We have 60 jurors, I understand, cooling their heels for an hour and a half now,” Crandall said, and asked Goelz to proceed. Goelz agreed. “We’ve been on the phone for 10 minutes,” a frustrated Valdez said. “We have 10 min- utes to go.” More time dwindled away, because Valdez couldn’t hear the judge and kept asking him to repeat himself. With only a couple of min- utes left, Goelz urged Valdez to call back and tried to launch into jury selection. He didn’t get far, because a recorded voice cut in and chirped, “You have one min- ute remaining.” Goelz laughed and pressed on. The automated voice interrupted again. “You have 30 seconds remaining!” The line went dead. When Valdez still hadn’t called back 10 minutes later, Goelz said the trial would proceed without him. Later, longtime Court Clerk Kay Holland said it was the first time in her career someone had attempted to stand trial via phone. Crandall, a veteran attor- ney, said he’d never seen it done either. Prosecutor Dan Bige- low, who stopped in to watch the action, called it a “once-in-a- lifetime” event. Water district will not seek mediation with city over dam By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — The Skipanon Water Control District will not pursue mediation with Warrenton in a dispute over control of the Eighth Street Dam. Last year, the two sides discussed the possibility of working with Portland State University’s National Pol- icy Consensus Center. Infor- mal talks were planned for December, but the water dis- trict withdrew because board members were not prepared for substantive negotia- tions given that the city had renewed a threat to sue. The water district voted Wednesday to take no action on mediation. One board member, Robert Stricklin, dissented. “We’re not looking at mediation now,” said Tessa Scheller, the chairwoman of the water district’s board. Mayor Mark Kujala, who initially questioned the value of negotiations with the water district, has said the city is willing to consider mediation. “We’re open for mediation,” the mayor said. The city declared an emergency over the dam in December and asked the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for guidance on whether the dam should be restored for flood control. The city has argued that the dam is an important compo- nent of the city’s levee sys- tem, which was built by the Army Corps. W A NTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber N orth w es t H a rdw oods • Lon gview , W A Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 The water district, which removed tide gates on the dam in 2015, believes the structure is no longer useful for flood control and should be removed. The water dis- trict maintains that the dam, built in the 1960s by an agency of the U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture, is under its jurisdiction. Clatsop Post 12 Ham Dinner with Mac-n-Cheese, Veggie, Salad and Garlic Bread Friday Mar. 3 rd 4 pm until gone 8. 00 $ 6PM “Karaoke Dave” ASTORIA AMERICAN LEGION Clatsop Post 12 1132 Exchange Street 325-5771 N e w Edward Stratton/The Daily Astorian Regional lender Craft3 recently consolidated offices from Ilwaco, Washington, and Pier 39 into the renovated first floor of the 114-year-old Fisher Bros. Building in As- toria. Craft3 consolidates in Astoria Fisher Bros. Building is lender’s home By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Regional lender Craft3 has opened its Astoria office, consolidating 20 staff from Pier 39 and Ilwaco, Washing- ton, inside the 114-year-old Fisher Bros. Building. Craft3, which announced the move last year, hired Palmberg Development & Construction to renovate the 114-year-old structure. The Fisher Bros. Co. occupied the building from 1906 to 2006, when its parent company, Englund Marine & Indus- trial Supply, consolidated into a new location on Hamburg Avenue at the Port of Astoria. Craft3 occupies the entire first floor of the Fisher Bros. Building, with four apart- ments upstairs renovated by developer Chester Trabucco. Palmberg tore out walls from the former storefronts, creat- ing a contiguous office space filled with cubicles reclaimed from a former warehouse on Astoria’s Pier 3, held together with fittings forged by Jacob’s Hammer Custom Metal Works in Chinook, Wash- ington. The entire office was wired for telecommunications to connect the lender’s distant locations around the Pacific Northwest. Craft3 will also have The Fisher Bros. Co. and The Linen Thread Co. murals on the outside walls of the building refurbished, likely next year. Chief Operating Officer Sonya Lynn said the consoli- dated offices in Astoria might be new, but not Craft3. “You can’t throw a stone in Astoria where we haven’t touched,” she said. Local lending Over its history, Craft3 has lent about $33 million in Clatsop County and $20 mil- lion in Pacific County. Carl Seip, a spokesman for Craft3, said that dollar-wise, about three-quarters of the lender’s business is commercial, with another 25 percent focused on consumer products. Clatsop County enti- ties receiving financing from Craft3 include Clatsop Com- munity College, Bridgewater Bistro and Fort George Brew- ery. Craft3 helped finance improvements by developer Floyd Holcom to Pier 39, Congratulations Graduates! 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Thank you to Lorenda Nakka for being our alumni speaker! Tourists, visitors, family & friends will love sending these! 949 Exchange Street, Astoria • 503-325-3211 along with the purchase of the Fisher Bros. Building by Joe Barnes. Seip said the majority of Craft3’s consumer lend- ing on the Lower Columbia has been in Pacific County, where a partnership with the county government offers clean water loans to help ren- ovate a failing sewer system. Craft3 recently expanded the program statewide in Ore- gon, through a partnership with the state Department of Environmental Quality, and has helped finance more than $340,000 in sewer system upgrades. Craft3 also helps finance loans to cover the living expenses of women attending the Ada Developer’s Acad- emy in Seattle, which helps women trying to enter the technology sector. “We are pleased to have found a great spot to con- solidate our presence in the lower Columbia” River, Craft3 President and CEO Adam Zimmerman said in a release. “The mouth of the river, both sides, has been home for 22 years, and we look forward to many more decades of making invest- ments in our friends and neighbors around the region.” www.himaniic.com