145TH YEAR, NO. 134 ONE DOLLAR WEEKEND EDITION // FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 2018 PRIMER ON MEASURE 101 PAGE 5A FRIENDS IN COURT WEEKEND BREAK • 1C Warrenton police carry overdose kits Officers are more aware of opioid risks By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — The Warrenton Police Department has become the first police agency in Clatsop County to start equipping officers with opioid overdose kits. Each kit includes a two-dose nasal spray version of naloxone, a medication designed to rapidly reverse opioid overdose, along with a CPR emergency breather, rubber gloves, masks and other safety equipment. The kits cost $95 each and were funded by a grant from Lines for Life, a drug abuse prevention group. The first 10 doses of nal- oxone were donated by Columbia Memorial Hospital. The precaution is meant to protect drug users, those with opioid prescriptions and children exposed to drugs, as well as police, evidence technicians and others in law enforcement who regularly face the risk of exposure. The city also purchased a naloxone kit for its new drug-sniffing K-9, Gabe. BLUNT WARNING Photos by Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Cody Falk returns a jar of marijuana to a shelf after helping a customer at Sweet Relief in Astoria. Locals wait for clarity on federal marijuana policy See KITS, Page 7A By EDWARD STRATTON and CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE The Daily Astorian L Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Warrenton Police Chief Mathew Work- man displays the kit which includes doses of naloxone that officers will car- ry with them in their vehicles. Top Oregon politicians were quick to respond to news from Attorney General Jeff Sessions regarding enforcement of federal marijuana laws. Chief deputy to run for DA Brown is an experienced litigator By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian When Clatsop County Chief Deputy Dis- trict Attorney Ron Brown interviewed for his job in 2003, he may also have been audition- ing for his next one. During the interview, District Attorney Josh Marquis asked him if he would be inter- ested in being the county’s top prosecutor. After a startled Brown double-checked to ensure he was still discussing the right posi- tion, Marquis confirmed that he was. Sweet Relief in Astoria is one of several businesses on the North Coast that sell medicinal and recreational marijuana. ocals in the marijuana industry were jolted Thursday when U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions directed prosecutors to more aggressively enforce federal drug laws. The announcement reversed a Presi- dent Barack Obama-era memo, written by then-Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole, discouraging prosecutors from pursuing marijuana-related charges in states — including Oregon and Washing- ton — where it has been legalized. It came days after California became the sixth and largest state so far to legal- ize the drug for recreational use. “I feel at this moment there’s still just a lot of questions to be asked,” said Oscar Nelson, co-owner of Sweet Relief Natu- ral Medicine. Opened in 2013, Sweet Relief was Clatsop County’s first medical marijuana dispensary and started selling to recre- ational customers with others in October 2015. But the emerging pot industry is rooted in shaky legal ground, complicating reg- ulatory, financial and advertising issues. State laws that legalize marijuana are in conflict with federal law, which classifies marijuana as a Schedule 1 drug, the same category as heroin and LSD. Nelson made calls to the offices of Gov. Kate Brown and Clatsop County District Attorney Josh Marquis, but cau- tioned patience. “Until I get more information, this is just not something to react to,” he said. “I feel that this is just part of this indus- try, and I feel hopeful that logic will prevail.” See WARNING, Page 7A See BROWN, Page 7A Private sleuth tries to crack D.B. Cooper’s code Colbert believes he has ‘smoking gun’ By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian An obscure code written in a court-released D.B. Coo- per letter may be the smoking gun that reveals the iden- tity of the mysterious 1970s skyjacker. The letter surfaced late last year after a Freedom of Information Act request from Thomas Colbert, a pri- vate sleuth. He believes his Associated Press This undated sketch shows the skyjacker known as D.B. Cooper from recollections of the passengers and crew of a jet he hijacked. chief Cooper suspect, Robert Wesley Rackstraw Sr. — a Vietnam paratrooper and ex-convict now residing in the San Diego area — lived in Astoria under the alias “Norman de Winter” in the months before the infamous hijacking of a Pacific North- west flight. On Nov. 24, 1971, a man wearing a dark business suit, tie and sunglasses seized a Northwest Orient plane from Portland to Seattle with a supposed briefcase bomb. Once the passengers debarked, the man ransomed $200,000 and four para- chutes, then ordered the crew to fly him to Mexico. While passing over the Oregon-Washington wilder- ness, the thief skydived into See SLEUTH, Page 6A Associated Press Three members of the crew of a jet that was hijacked in 1971 discussed the experience in a news conference in Minneapolis. They are, left to right: First Officer William Rataczak; Capt. William Scott and Stewardess Tina Muck- low, all of the Minneapolis area.