7A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2017 Inmate dies after meth-laden kiss; girlfriend gets 2 years Oregon standoff figure Thorn gets sentenced to prison Thorn’s lawyer, Jay Nel- son, filed a sentencing mem- orandum that includes some PORTLAND — A Wash- details of his client’s child- ington state man who joined hood after he was born to the Ammon Bundy-led take- a drug-addicted mother. over of an Oregon wildlife Thorn’s abusive stepfather refuge sought and received shackled him to a back porch leniency from a judge Tues- for hours on end, securing his day after saying he’s been ankle with a heavy chain and through “two years of hell” padlock, the memorandum since his arrest in February said. 2016. Thorn was 12 when finally U.S. District Judge Anna removed from the home and Brown cited Darryl Thorn’s placed in foster care, Nelson rough childhood and other wrote. factors in sentencing him Prosecutor Ethan Knight to 18 months in prison — agreed that Thorn’s upbring- at least six months less than ing was a mitigating fac- tor but sought a sen- federal sentencing tence of more than guidelines. Thorn two years, saying will also get credit Thorn’s role stand- for time he has off role was “sus- already served in jail. tained and dan- Thorn performed gerous.” Thorn armed guard duty, encouraged others to sometimes from a stay and fight authorities watchtower, during Darryl after the fatal shoot- the Malheur National Thorn ing by police of Wildlife Refuge spokesman occupation that lasted Jan. 2 occupation to Feb. 11, 2016. The group Robert “LaVoy” Finicum, sought the release of two Knight said. The judge urged Thorn to ranchers imprisoned for set- ting fires on U.S.-owned embrace mental health treat- ment while in prison and get land. Twenty six people were an education. indicted in the case. Most “You’ve got to find a way accepted plea bargains and to live in this world that does avoided prison. Bundy and not seem threatening to other six others were acquitted in a people,” she said. trial last year. Several supporters of Thorn was twice on the Thorn were outside the court- verge of accepting a plea house during the sentenc- bargain before changing his ing hearing, including Duane mind and going to trial earlier Ehmer, a co-defendant who this year. Jurors convicted starts his one-year prison him in March of conspiracy sentence in January. Ehmer showed up on the and possessing a firearm. “This has been extremely horse named Hellboy that he difficult — mentally, phys- rode during the standoff. ically, emotionally,” Thorn Inside the courtroom, told Brown. “I have a life. I Thorn was excited to hear have a family I would like that Ehmer arrived on the to go back to.” Thorn has horse. been in jail since June, when “That’s what I’m talking Brown revoked his condi- about!” Thorn told court tional, pre-sentencing release spectators before the sentenc- ing hearing started. because of suicidal threats. By GILLIAN FLACCUS Associated Press By STEVEN DUBOIS Associated Press PORTLAND — An Ore- gon woman whose inmate boy- friend died from a meth-laden kiss after a prison visit was sen- tenced to two years behind bars Tuesday on a drug conspiracy charge. Melissa Ann Blair and Anthony Powell shared a long kiss at the end of a visit last year at the Oregon State Pen- itentiary and she passed seven tiny balloons filled with meth- amphetamine into his mouth. Two of the balloons ruptured in Powell’s stomach a short time later and he died of metham- phetamine toxicity, prosecutors have said. U.S. District Judge Marco Hernandez said Blair’s actions were part of a scheme devised by Powell and others to get drugs inside the prison. There was a dispute as to whether Danielle Peterson/Statesman-Journal Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem is where an inmate died after a meth-laden kiss from his girlfriend Blair participated of her own free will, but Powell shared responsibility for his own death, Hernandez said. “It was tragic and sad but he shares responsibility for what happened,” the judge said. The 41-year-old was serv- ing a life sentence for aggra- vated murder in the stabbing death of his mother-in-law, according to court records. Besides two years in federal prison, the judge also ordered Blair, 46, to complete three years of post-release super- vision and participate in drug treatment and mental health programs. She did not make a state- ment in court. Her sister, who attended the hearing, declined to comment. Blair felt coerced by Pow- ell even though he was behind bars, her attorney, John Ran- som, said outside court. She used methamphetamine but was not addicted, he said. “It was a very Svengali-type situation where he had total control over her life,” Ransom said. “She had to do whatever he said.” Powell’s close friend, Brandy Pokovich, attended the hearing and said she became pen pals with him after he wrote to her husband — a for- mer inmate — and she replied to him instead. Over a dozen years, Pokovich said, they formed a deep bond through letters, phone calls and visits. She called herself Powell’s “sister by choice” and believed he felt remorse for his crime, she told the judge. Washington state panel outlines risk of oil-by-rail terminal ect since 2013 and released its environmental review a week before it is scheduled to vote to support or oppose the proj- ect in a recommendation that will go to Gov. Jay Inslee. Ins- lee, a Democrat, will decide whether to approve the facility or reject it. The proposed $210 mil- lion terminal for the small city of Vancouver would receive about 360,000 barrels of crude oil by trains a day. Oil would temporarily be stored on site for Vancouver Energy, a joint venture of Tesoro Corp. and Savage Cos., and then loaded onto tankers and ships bound for West Coast refineries. The study identified the four risks that could not be avoided as train accidents, the emergency response delays, negative impacts of the proj- ect on low-income communi- ties and the possibility that an By PHUONG LE Associated Press SEATTLE — A major oil- by-rail terminal proposed on the Columbia River in Wash- ington state poses a potential risk of oil spills, train acci- dents and longer emergency response times due to road traffic, an environmental study has found. Many of the risks could be decreased with certain mitiga- tion measures, but the study released Tuesday outlined four areas where it said the impacts are significant and cannot be avoided. The study said what while “the likelihood of occurrence of the potential for oil spills may be low, the consequences of the events could be severe.” The state’s Energy Facil- ity Site Evaluation Council has been evaluating the proj- earthquake would damage the facility’s dock and cause an oil spill. Measures could be taken to reduce the potential risk of oil spills by other causes, fires and harm to juvenile salmon, the study said. Critics say the project is a risk to the environment and people while developers pro- mote the terminal as an oppor- tunity to bring crude oil from North Dakota and other areas to a western U.S. port and bring jobs and money to the region. “Our initial assessment pro- vides confidence that EFSEC’s thorough evaluation of the facts will demonstrate our ability to build and operate the project safely and in an envi- ronmentally responsible way,” Vancouver Energy spokesman Jeff Hymas said in emailed statement late Tuesday. He labeled most of the impacts outlined in the report as “related to low-probabil- ity events not directly associ- ated with our facility that have the potential to occur today, such as a major earthquake or impacts related to the transpor- tation of products that move across the country on a daily basis.” Opponents said the report provided justification for the council to issue a recommen- dation against the project. 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