A6 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MAY 4, 2021 Wirkkala: ‘I’m still trying to take it all in’ Continued from Page A1 The water shut off sud- denly, leaving Wirkkala to take stock of his life. He was a convicted murderer shackled to a prison shower, covered with soap, shaking uncontrol- lably, experiencing the sen- sations of freezing and burn- ing at the same time, unsure if anyone was coming to get him. “I really didn’t want to be alive at that moment,” Wirk- kala recalled . Wirkkala’s experience with the criminal justice sys- tem was certainly a rare one. He was tried twice for mur- der on essentially the same facts, but with two diff erent outcomes: Guilty in 2014 for the death of his houseguest, David Andrew Ryder, 31, and not guilty in April after a retrial. Wirkkala never disputed that on Feb. 4, 2013, he shot Ryder at close range with a pump-action shotgun after a long day of drinking together. But he was adamant he’d killed Ryder in self-defense after Ryder had sexually assaulted him. When Wirkkala’s attor- ney argued that the origi- nal jury heard portions of a police interview after Wirk- kala had invoked his right to an attorney, the Oregon Court of Appeals ordered a retrial in early 2018. Most defendants who win an appeal opt for a plea deal or are again found guilty. But in this case, Wirkkala’s resolve paid off and he’s now back living on the c oast, where the Ilwaco High School graduate grew up, eight years after his odyssey through the justice system began. “I’m still trying to take it all in,” he said over tea at the Astoria Brewing Co . “I’m very easily overwhelmed these days.” Wirkkala, now 40, has had a few beers since his acquit- tal, but drinking for him can’t be like it was before, espe- cially if he returns to bar- tending as a side gig. He had drunk throughout the day of the shooting, a Super Bowl Sunday, starting with two glasses of white wine before the game. A forensic expert determined his blood alcohol level was between 0.18 and 0.38 when he killed Ryder. “Basically, I was an alco- holic before,” Wirkkala said. “I don’t want to go back to that partying lifestyle. It takes over a person’s life. I know it caused me to set aside things in life I’d wanted to do.” ‘All the little things’ Freedom can be over- whelming, Wirkkala has learned. In the weeks since his release, he’s had to sweat out a driving test, fi nd a replace- ment for his fl ip phone and an institution that will bank with a man with several expired IDs. “It’s all the little things,” he said. “A lot of people probably don’t think about all the hoops you have to jump through to re enter society.” Visiting a marijuana dis- pensary to purchase CBD was a bit surreal. But there’s plenty that’s stayed the same, like the calamari he likes to order at the Astoria Brewing Company. His cat, “Boots,” is still around at age 11. Wirkkala is concerned with a short list of priorities, like fi xing up a truck given to him by a cousin and com- pleting the formal process of getting his record expunged. He’s looking for a place to live so he can move out of his parents’ house, where all his possessions have sat boxed up since the case began. Along with sobriety, he hopes to continue with another good habit he prac- ticed in lockup: writing. Writing was a form of ther- apy for Wirkkala. The book he’s writing about his expe- rience helped keep him sane while in prison in Ontario, Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Luke Wirkkala wears a ‘Free Luke’ bracelet with a Bible verse from Matthew 17:20. though he paused that project after his transfer back to the Deschutes County jail for his retrial. He feared prosecutors might try to seize his notes as evidence. The tentative title: “And then came the Storm.” Justice is a theme in Wirk- kala’s writings, and came at a high cost for him. Finan- cially, he and his support- ers paid more than a quarter million dollars in legal bills and other costs. Reputation- ally, his name will always be linked to the killing in Bend. The experience also cost him his marriage. But perhaps most damag- ing of all was his loss of free- dom. He spent eight years in custody. As brutal as prison is, with its gangs and violence, it’s still preferable to life in the Deschutes County jail, he said. Paradoxically, there was a certain freedom to prison, he said. Prisoners are allowed to spend up to eight hours a day visiting in-person with their loved ones. They’re allowed to hold a job that earns them a small amount of income each month. At “Snake,” there was an outdoor track and a weight room to keep fi t. days, but not for a lengthy stay. Wirkkala said he felt his body start to deteriorate despite a commitment to keeping fi t in his cell. In his second stint in the jail, three inmates died of suicide. Wirkkala thought about killing himself every day, and each jail suicide added to his despair. “When you’re locked in a concrete box 24/7, it’s not conducive to good mental health,” he said. After his 2014 conviction, Wirkkala held out hope that if he successfully appealed, newly elected Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel, a progressive and onetime defense attor- ney, would drop the charges. “Well, unfortunately, that’s not what happened,” Wirkkala said. “He talks a good game, but when the rubber meets the road, I’ve found there’s not much there.” Getting the truth heard In his time out of custody , Wirkkala has also spoken to a number of reporters, some- thing he wishes he would have done earlier. ‘IT WAS PRETTY DEVASTATING TO LOSE MY WIFE WHILE I WAS INSIDE. SHE HELPED ME SURVIVE THIS. SHE HUNG IN THERE FOR FIVE YEARS. LOSING HER WAS PRETTY HEARTBREAKING. THAT JUST MADE IT A LOT LONELIER FOR ME. I’M STILL TRYING TO FIGURE IT OUT MYSELF.’ Luke Wirkkala The jail, by contrast, is locked down like a supermax prison, Wirkkala said. From 2018 to 2021, while await- ing his second trial, Wirk- kala spent 18 hours each day in a cell . Surrounded by steel and concrete, he rarely saw the sun. Communicating with loved ones can be costly, he said. The telecommu- nications vendor for the Deschutes County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, Telmate, charges 25 cents to 50 cents per minute for calls. And as Wirkkala notes, it’s often the inmate’s family who pays, not the inmate. Jail inmates are fed a carb-heavy diet of processed food, which might be fi ne for people locked up for 30 MORE THAN YOU IMAGINED After he lawyered up in 2013, he urged his two attorneys to release an offi - cial statement, to “get the truth out there,” so the news media wouldn’t just run with the prosecution’s account, he said. His lawyers advised against it, and when he got to trial in 2014, the jury was told repeatedly by prosecutors that he was a “storyteller” who had a year and a half to think up his explanation for killing Ryder. “Look, I get it, lawyers are cautious by nature ... but if they had just put something out there, something basic, that whole argument could not have been made,” Wirk- kala said. “A top-tier attorney should not be afraid to talk to the press. They should view 3D Theater Lightship Tour Gift Store the press as what it is: a tool that should be used. If you’re not using it, you’re not provid- ing your client with the best possible defense.” To Wirkkala, lawyering factored heavily into the out- come of both trials. He has an active bar complaint alleging misconduct against the pros- ecutors from his fi rst trial, along with former Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty. Wirkkala also has no love for Walter Todd, the lead lawyer in his fi rst trial, whom he suspects thought he was guilty of at least manslaughter. “He is largely responsible for me going to prison,” Wirk- kala said. Todd didn’t return numer- ous requests for comment. Wirkkala wishes Todd had taken jury selection more seri- ously. In the fi rst trial, the pro- cess lasted half a day. In the second, it stretched a day and a half, with jurors polled about issues close to the case, like fi rearm use in home defense and alcohol consumption. “We just got so much more information about them, and I think we got a much better jury,” Wirkkala said. For his part, Hummel said he reviewed Wirkkala’s case after taking offi ce and deter- mined a murder charge was appropriate. He noted that 14 jurors in Deschutes County voted to convict Wirkkala over his two trials, while 10 supported acquittal. “People sometimes misun- derstand what an acquittal is,” Hummel said. “It’s an exam- ple of the system working.” Wirkkala had a few dates lined up in the coming weeks, but his ex-wife seemed to weigh heavy on his mind. Since his release, they’d tex- ted but hadn’t spoken to each other. He’d heard she’s dating someone else. Wirkkala met Rachel Ras- mussen in Astoria in 2011. He says he knew in short order it was a special relationship. In 2012, the couple moved from the cloud-shrouded coast to Bend and the promise of sun- shine and opportunity. Shortly after his conviction in 2014, Rasmussen visited him in jail, and he told her, “I was going to ask you to marry me,” meaning, had he been acquitted, as he’d expected, he would have proposed to her then and there. She told him “of course” she would marry him. She moved to be near the prison in Ontario and visited him four days a week, the maximum allowed. But some- time in 2018, she stopped tak- ing his calls. He thinks she fi nally reached her “break- ing point.” They divorced that year. Rasmussen asked to not take part in this story. As he recounted his experi- ences in the brewpub he wore a “Free Luke” bracelet and his wedding ring, accessories he wasn’t permitted as an inmate of the Deschutes County jail. “It was pretty devastating to lose my wife while I was inside. She helped me survive this. She hung in there for fi ve years,” he said. “Losing her was pretty heartbreaking. That just made it a lot lonelier for me. I’m still trying to fi g- ure it out myself.” As his second trial approached, Wirkkala wasn’t sure if Rasmussen would tes- tify again. But in March, she traveled to Bend and was called as a witness for the defense. She told jurors she was grateful to her ex-husband for defending their household that fateful night, which Wirk- kala thinks was crucial for the jury to hear. Following her testimony, she passed him at the defense table and they locked eyes for the fi rst time in years. His head tracked her movement the whole way she retook her seat. “I’m trying not to think about her too much, ” he said. County reports six new virus cases The Astorian Clatsop County on Monday reported six new coronavirus cases. The cases include two females under 10 living in the southern part of the county. The others live in the northern part of the county and involve a man in his 20s, a man and a woman in their 30s and a woman in her 60s. All six were recovering at home. The county has recorded 952 cases since the start of the pandemic. According to the county, 24 were hospitalized and eight have died. Director: ‘We’ve defi nitely seen more emphasis on historic preservation’ Continued from Page A1 The downtown associ- ation’s fi rst two directors were interns with Amer- iCorps. Heath replaced Alana Garner, the associ- ation’s fi rst salaried direc- tor. The association recently took over management of the Astoria Sunday Market and hired Shelby Meyers to oversee the weekly event and other promotions. Julie Kovatch, the pres- ident of the downtown association’s board, said interviews for a new exec- utive director will begin this month, with hopes of hav- ing one in place sometime in June. “Even just in the past year since we’ve had Sarah Lu, we’ve defi nitely seen more emphasis on historic preser- vation, and grant writing and trying to support businesses at a higher level,” Kovatch said. “And so the person we’re looking for isn’t just an event planner and orga- nizer for downtown events and memberships. We’re looking for grant-writing skills and management and trying to fi nd creative and new ways of revitalizing and maintaining a unique down- town Astoria. So this is defi - nitely a big position to fi ll.” Heath will stay in Asto- ria and work remotely coor- dinating programs for the economic development dis- Krista Schram Sarah Lu Heath is departing as executive director of the Astoria Downtown Historic District Association for a position with the Columbia-Pacifi c Economic Development District. trict, which covers Clatsop, Columbia, Tillamook and western Washington coun- ties. She said she is excited to continue working on eco- nomic development eff orts that will benefi t the region, such as master planning at the Port of Astoria and help- ing develop more aff ordable housing. “Col-Pac is pleased to welcome Sarah Lu to our team,” Ayreann Colombo, the executive director of the district, said in a statement. “Her background, skills and professional network in our region will be great assets as we look to grow our orga- nization and strengthen the resources and services we bring to the region and our economic development partners.” ith an W h t Pa Forge Your Own n a o L e Adventur Now more than ever, you’re ready for a vacation. Kick off your journey with a low-rate loan on the RV, boat, motorcycle, ATV, or wave runner you've always wanted. 4.74 % APR* We practice Rate Equality, so every qualified member gets the same low rate. We’ll even refinance loans from other lenders so you can save big. Apply Online or in a Branch Today! 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