3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 2017 Arsonist gets five years after plea High pesticide level Victim lost ‘everything’ By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian A man convicted on two counts of attempted arson after setting an Astoria apart- ment building on fire last year was sentenced Monday to five years in prison. Christopher Ray Young, 45, set the two-story, fourplex Emerald Heights apartment building ablaze last June. He reached a deal with the Dis- trict Attorney’s Office, plead- ing no contest in February. He originally faced up to 30 years in prison after being charged with four counts of first-degree arson. Young, who was under the influence of a number of drugs — including metham- phetamine — and alcohol, lit a gas can on fire while he was a guest at an apartment in the building. Prior to lighting it on fire, he huffed and also drank gas from the tank. He then sustained a con- cussion after jumping from the building before standing up and attempting to rescue other people still inside, his lawyer said. The sentencing hearing was originally scheduled for Feb- ruary, but Circuit Court Judge Dawn McIntosh was unable to commute to the courthouse because of a landslide on U.S. Highway 101 south of Cannon Beach. At the second scheduled hearing, Young said he wanted to retract his no-contest plea, claiming he was under the influence of methamphet- amine when he agreed to it. He later decided to move forward with the original plea deal. Young apologized Mon- day for the incident, saying his drug addiction led him to com- mit the crimes. He said he lost all of his possessions in the fire, including photos of his children. “I deserve every moment I’ve spent in here,” he said. “I ask everyone here, human-to- human, to give me a chance once I’m back in the outside world.” Ann Carsner, a 59-year-old woman who lived in and was inside the building at the time of the fire, provided her own testimony before Young spoke. “I’m having a very hard time even looking at you,” she told Young. “I almost died that day. Everything I earned in 58 years was gone.” Carsner then read a list of the items she had lost in the fire. It included a picture of Marilyn Monroe her daughter gave her, a Chinaware set her husband brought home after serving in the U.S. Navy and a new $1,200 couch. “I hope that while you’re in prison you better yourself, but 90 percent of the things I lost are irreplaceable,” she said. Judge McIntosh said while she sympathized with the dif- ficulty of drug addiction, other people with similar addictions do not choose to commit vio- lent acts. But while speaking to Cars- ner, she also pointed out an observation she had made. “He’s been in this court- room several times,” McIntosh said. “I don’t think he’s ever listened to me as clearly as he’s listened to you.” Bill would seal names of sex crime victims Designed to protect victims and families By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — Civil rights activists, defense lawyers and journalists voiced concern Monday over legislation that would give pseudonyms to sex crime victims and witnesses in grand jury indictments and keep their names out of public court records. District attorneys and vic- tim advocates say the legisla- tion is designed to protect vic- tims and their families who might otherwise refuse to tes- tify in front of a grand jury out of fear of retribution from the defendant. They said that is especially true in the case of accused sex traffickers who may have multiple victims. “The fear of victims testi- fying against their traffickers cannot be over exaggerated,” said Nita Belles, executive director of In Our Backyard, a Bend-based anti-human traf- ficking nonprofit organiza- tion. “They and (their fami- lies) have been threatened, and the traffickers have carried out enough threats against them in the past to make believers out of them.” However, opponents argued during a hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee that the proposal would violate the public’s con- stitutional rights to open courts and an open press. Journalists are “sympa- thetic to those victims of sex crimes who are often required to relive their experiences multiple times throughout the trial process,” said Keith Ship- man of the Oregon Associa- tion of Broadcasters. “How- ever, our member stations are concerned about the unusu- ally broad nature of Sen- ate Bill 248, particularly the recently released … amend- ments and that they may adversely impact the public’s right to know, particularly if that person involved is a pub- lic trustee.” fusa, deputy district attorney with Multnomah County, who spoke on behalf of Oregon District Attorneys Association Several other states, including Minnesota, New Jersey, Maine and Texas, have similar laws or legislation, Ujifusa said. The bill would provide the same information to the defense as they receive now, ‘The fear of victims testifying against their traffickers cannot be over exaggerated.’ Nita Belles executive director of In Our Backyard Allow pseudonyms The legislation would allow prosecutors to use pseud- onyms for sex crime victims and witnesses during grand jury indictment proceedings. Once a suspect was arraigned, the defendant’s attorney would receive the names of the vic- tims and witnesses, but those names would still be sealed from public records. “All this bill would do is protect victims’ names from public record, associates and family members in case after case that I see where fam- ily members and associates intimidate victims and try to prevent them from coming to court, knowing that their testi- mony is key, especially in sex- ual assault crimes,” said Jr Uji- but that information would come several days later at the time of arraignment, he said. The Oregon legislation is unique in that it shields the names of witnesses and not just victims, said Gail Meyer of the Oregon Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. “I don’t know of any other state law — I haven’t seen one — that would allow for secrecy in respect to the wit- nesses who testify before the grand jury,” Meyer testified. “We don’t have a clue of what goes on in a grand jury except by the name of the wit- nesses that appear on the indict- ment,” Meyer said. “That is our only clue. The clue is a big one for us because it can tell us how broad and how narrow of a focus the government is mak- ing out of the allegations.” Meyer and several private investigators gave examples of sex crime cases in which the name of the accuser helped investigators to find infor- mation that exonerated the defendant. “By enshrining the details of an indictment from public view in other cases, severely impacts the ability of the defense to marshal and get going on other facts as they might be dis- closed,” Meyer said. The bill is sponsored by state Sen. Kathleen Taylor, D-Portland, and Rep. John Huffman, R-The Dalles, and came out of a work group on victim safety. The Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. prompts pot recall By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Bureau SALEM — The Oregon Liquor Control Commission issued its first recall of recre- ational marijuana after testing of a brand sold at a Mapleton store showed it contained a level of pesticide residue that exceeds the state limit. The commission, which oversees retail sales of rec- reational cannabis, said sam- ples of Blue Magoo mari- juana failed a test for pyrethin levels. Pyrethins are a mix- ture of six chemicals that are toxic to insects, according to the National Pesticide Infor- mation Center based at Ore- gon State University. Pyre- thins are found in some chrysanthemum flowers, and in some cases can be used on organic products. The recall points out some of the complications that accompany the legalization of recreational cannabis. Grow- ers, like all other agricultural producers, now face a regu- latory structure they may not have dealt with before. Pesticide use has been particularly thorny, because the federal government still considers cannabis illegal and has not established allow- able tolerances of pesticides in pot. As a result, states that have legalized cannabis are figuring it out themselves. Oregon tests cannabis for 59 active ingredients. “It’s a big struggle, for sure,” said Sunny Jones, can- nabis policy coordinator for the Oregon Department of Agriculture. The Oregon Health Authority oversees medical marijuana, the liquor com- mission oversees recreational marijuana, and the Depart- ment of Agriculture regu- lates aspects that range from food safety regarding can- nabis edibles to pesticides, water quality issues and com- mercial scales used to weigh the product. The recalled pot was grown by Emerald Wave Estate, based in Creswell, and sold at Buds 4 U in Mapleton, a small town west of Eugene. The liquor commission said people who bought the pot should dispose of it or return it to the retailer. Mark Pettinger, spokes- man for the commission, said the retailer has fully cooper- ated in the recall. It sold 82.5 grams of Blue Magoo to 31 customers from March 8 through March 10. The store noticed the failed pesticide reading in the state’s Can- nabis Tracking System on March 10 and immediately notified the commission, Pet- tinger said. “The retailer was great,” he said. “They get the gold star.” Pesticide application would have been done at the grower level, which is the province of the Department of Agriculture. Pettinger said the distribution system break- down occurred when a whole- saler, Cascade Cannabis Dis- tributing, of Eugene, shipped the pot to the Mapleton store before pesticide test results were entered in the state’s tracking system. The test- ing was done by GreenHaus Analytical Labs, of Portland, which is certified by the state to test cannabis for potency, water content and pesticide residue. The mistake might qual- ify as a violation under Ore- gon administrative rules, Pet- tinger said. Failure to keep proper records is a Class III violation; the first offense is punishable by up to 10 days of business closure and a $1,650 fine. Four violations within a two-year period can lead to license revocation. The rest of the grower’s nine-pound batch of Blue Magoo marijuana flower has been placed on administra- tive hold, meaning it cannot be lawfully sold pending the outcome of additional pes- ticide testing. Pettinger said the pot is in the grower’s possession. C elebration of L ife Shrouded in secrecy Grand jury proceed- ings already are shrouded in secrecy. Testimony is not required to be recorded, though SB 248 in the Senate Judiciary Committee would change that. 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