»INSIDE DAY SDAY THURS THUR NOV. 11 2021 A VIEW FROM THE WATER R OFFERS NEW TUGBOAT TOU ASTORIA E OF PERSPECTIV WILD MUSHROOM SUMMIT IN LONG BEACH PAGE 6 S TO THEATER WORK HEAT TURN UP THE PAGE 10 HOW TO COOK SH DELICATA SQUA PAGE 12 PAGE 8 149TH YEAR, NO. 58 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2021 $1.50 Tsunami refuge facilities needed Study calls for dozens of elevated platforms By TOM BANSE Northwest News Network If you are on the Pacifi c Northwest c oast when the next Cascadia megaquake strikes, the standard advice is to run for higher ground as soon as the shaking stops. But in some low-lying places such as Ocean Shores and Long Beach, Wash- ington, and Warrenton and Seaside, the closest high ground could be a long walk away over buckled roads. According to a new state study, doz- ens of elevated evacuation platforms are needed along the Washington state coast to ensure people can escape a tsunami spawned by a major earthquake on the off shore Cascadia Subduction Zone fault . “There’s just no way for a lot of folks to get to high ground within time,” said Maximilian Dixon, the geologic hazards supervisor for the Washington Emer- gency Management Division. “It’s not physically possible given the 10 to 15 to 20 minutes before the fi rst wave arrives See Tsunami, Page A2 GEARHART ZIP code discussion points to divide Some residents depend on Seaside Post Offi ce By R.J. MARX The Astorian GEARHART — Is a package destined for Seaside or Gearhart? Postal workers and delivery drivers can’t always be sure. Both cities share the 97138 ZIP code, and each has addresses of numbered and let- tered streets. Mayor Paulina Cockrum and city councilors want the U.S. Postal Service to assign Gearhart a unique ZIP code, and came prepared to issue a resolution to that eff ect at last week’s City Council meeting. Erick Bengel/The Astorian Virginia Shepherd, with photographs of her husband, James D. Shepherd, an Oregon State Police offi cer who was murdered in 1980. A state trooper’s family wants killer to stay in prison ‘It never goes away’ By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian M ore than 41 years ago, Sgt. James D. Shepherd of the Oregon State Police was murdered in Knappa during an off - duty motorcycle ride. T his month, the Shepherd family plans to remind the Oregon Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision why the killer, Michael Edward Sture, should remain locked up. On Nov. 17, Sture has a parole hear- ing to determine whether his projected release date in May should be his actual release date. The default decision would be to release Sture unless the board fi nds reasons not to do so — for example, severe emotional disturbance, or a lengthy history of disciplinary reports, according to Dylan Arthur, the execu- tive director of the parole board. “They would need to fi nd a reason to hold him in,” Arthur said. On May 22, 1980, Shepherd, a 23-year veteran of the state police, was riding a neighbor’s dirt bike near his Knappa home. “Jim thought somebody was grow- ing marijuana,” his widow, Virginia Shepherd, recalled. “He didn’t know who it was, but he was going to go and check it out.” As Shepherd approached, Sture shot the offi cer in the chest, then twice in the head. The 23-year-old Sture had recently done time for stealing a vehicle and later said he was worried Shepherd would fi nd the marijuana he was growing. Fellow offi cer Brian Johnson dis- covered Shepherd’s body near a log- ging spur. He encountered Sture, who made the trooper lie on the ground at gunpoint and rifl ed through his wal- let, but left Johnson unharmed. Sture escaped with the borrowed bike, recov- ered near Williamsport Road. ‘We went bonkers’ Shepherd’s ambush-style murder rattled local law enforcement agencies. “We went bonkers,” said Mel Jas- min, a retired Astoria Police Depart- ment offi cer. Jasmin was one of several dozen offi cers who hunted for Sture in the Knappa woodlands. “When that happened, I was on patrol, and everybody and their brother headed for the hills where he (Sture) was supposed to be,” Jasmin said . “Everybody got really uptight, short-tempered,” he recalled. “They wanted to catch this guy. And then of course we found out that he wasn’t even there.” Sture had made it to c entral Ore- gon and was arrested while hitchhik- ing on a highway near Bend. He was sentenced to prison for “a period of his natural life.” But unless a convict’s sentence pre- cludes parole, there is the possibility of release. Although the Shepherd family is confi dent the outcome will not favor Sture, they make a point to show up at his parole hearings with as many peo- ple as possible, “just to make sure that we can remind the parole board that there’s people out there that are still aff ected by this greatly,” said Carolyn Shepherd, Jim Shepherd’s niece, who was in her mid-20s when he was killed. Sture’s lack of contrition and the way he justifi ed his crimes unnerves them. At his 2009 parole hearing, Sture said he had to kill Shepherd to save his own life. “I have my own life because he lost his,” Sture told them. “That brought me to a place that, even though it was a tragedy and it was wrong, it opened my eyes to my own self.” See Shepherd, Page A2 See ZIP code, Page A2 A boutique draws inspiration from Hollywood Galiardo has a history in fashion By KATHERINE LACAZE For The Astorian SEASIDE — Tommyg is as much of an artistic achievement as it is an upscale boutique . Each feature and decora- tion — from the “Breakfast at Tiff any’s” and “Arabesque” movie posters to stylized fash- ion illustrations and bird fi g- urines from Rio de Janeiro — reveals a piece of owner Tom Tommyg carries an assortment of classic, upscale clothing and accessories. Katherine Lacaze/For The Astorian Galiardo’s long history in fash- ion, as well as the experiences and ideas that infl uenced his taste and professional philoso- phy surrounding contemporary casual clothing and accessories. “You’re actually seeing parts of my life in here,” he said. “It’s not just random.” In his youth, Galiardo recalls watching the fi lms “How to Steal a Million” and “Break- fast at Tiff any’s,” both of which included wardrobes designed by Hubert de Givenchy, and being inspired by the fashions. “Those were great infl u- ences on me as a kid,” he said, adding the actress Audrey Hep- burn was singularly inspir- ing as well. Growing up in the 1960s, “She was everything: her clothes, the styles,” and her look is clearly woven into the collection of sweaters and out- erwear carried at Tommyg. Galiardo, who was born in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, also spent many years of his adolescence in Europe, trav- eling between Augsburg, Ger- many, and Rome, Italy. He then studied at the Fashion Insti- tute of Technology, major- ing in fashion illustration and merchandising. Galiardo’s career has spanned several decades and several companies — includ- ing Nordstrom, Saks Fifth Ave- nue and Neiman Marcus — and several jobs, from manager and buyer to selling designer salon shoes. “I have people say, ‘You turned out to be a merchant,’ and that’s exactly what happened,” he said, adding he’s fi lled nearly every role in the fashion indus- try except designer. “I will dis- play it, which I’ve done. I will advertise it . I will sketch it. I will promote it. I will sell it. I will merchandise it, and I will buy it. B ut I will not make it.” Galiardo spent time in New York and Dallas before migrat- ing to the West Coast and work- ing with I. Magnin & Co. in the 1980s. His last sales gig was with Chanel in Nordstrom in downtown Portland. See Boutique, Page A2