Ernie Warren arrested, charges police brutality Ernest Warren spent six years as an E xplorer Executive fo r the Columbia Pacific Council o f Boy Scouts and state coordinator for the Explorers’ La» Enforcement pro­ gram. In this position he encouraged high school young people to seek careers in la» enforcement and to vie» police as a positive force in the com m unity, established Explorer career training programs in la» en­ forcement and coordinated police sponsored Explorer groups. On September 18th, Warren says, he found himself on the ground with a policeman’s knee in his back and a policeman's hand in his pocket. W’arren said he went to the home o f a white family on N.E. Cleveland to attempt to find his 16 year old daughter who had run away. He had been informed that she was at that address w ith her 20 year old boyfriend. “ I knocked on the door and was invited in ,” W’arren said. “ My daughter was sitting on the daven­ port but when she saw me she ran out the back d o o r." W arren said he went through the house to try to catch her but when he saw she had gone he walked back through the house and talked to the young man. Unknown to him, someone in the house had called the police. As he went out the front door, three police cars drove up. Warren stated that two police officers ran up to him and without saying a word one grabbed his arm and the other grabbed him around the neck from behind, choking him. After wrestling him to the ground they handcuffed him, pulling and jerking his arms from behind. During the time I was lying on my face, with the officer kneeing me in the back and pulling up on my arms, this little animal the boy had tied to the porch - a racoon, I think - kept getting in my face. The police thought that was fu nn y. They laughed and joked and said, ‘ Oh, you seem to have a friend’ .” W’arren was put in the police car by the same officers and taken to the M ultn o m a h C ounty H o ld in g Facility. On the way he attempted to talk to the officers, to find out why he had been arrested. “ You seem to th in k I'm the enemy,” he said, “ I ’ m on your side.” He explained that he was lo o kin g fo r his daughter and questioned police procedures. He th ro a t h urt where he had been choked and it hurt to talk, but he tried to explain that he is a good citizen and would cooperate i f he knew what they wanted. Finally he was told that it was a citizen’ s arrest for tresspass and that the officers were not interested in the daughter; runaways are a low priority. " I t boggled my m in d ,” he ex­ plained. " I couldn’ t believe what (Please turn to page 2 col. 1) PORTLAND OBSERVER Volume 9 No 38 Thursday. October 4, 1979 10 cents per copy U S P S 9 5 9 680 Owen sues city, asks discipline Ernest Owen, juvenile counsellor and law student, is filing a law suit against the Portland Police Bureau charging b ru ta lity and false im ­ prisonm ent. “ I had heard about police brutality in our community for years but I didn’ t pay much at­ tention: I didn’ t really believe it , ” Owen told the Observer. “ But now I have experienced it myself and I'm going to fight it. We need to get this type o f police o ffice r out o f the community and out o f the Police Bureau.” Owen is asking $85,000 damages and d is c ip lin a ry measures to be taken against the police officers. This May, Owen was called to visit a youth center where a staff problem was delvelping. He went to the home late in the evening, drove one staff member home, then drove up Killingsworth toward his own home. “ 1 was driving down Killingsworth at about 2:00 or 2:30 in the morning when I saw the Hashing light behind me. I immediately pulled over. Next they Hashed the spot light on me and 1 saw two officers running up with guns pulled. One yelled, ‘ D on ’ t move or I’ ll blow your head o f f .” Owen said one o fficer grabbed him from the car and threw him to the ground, handcuffed him, kneed him in the back. In the meantime two additional cars drove up. Fie asked one officer if he could get up, but that officer lifted him up and let him fall to the ground. Then they threw him in the back o f a police car and drove him around u n til ap­ proximately 6:00 a.m. Owen said throughout the alter­ cation he was never told why he was stopped. He said his driver’ s license, registration and other ID were taken. He was told he was not “ Ernest Owen” and that the license did not belong to him. He said his keys were taken and his car trun k opened. Police went through his belongings including the legal and confidential papers on juveniles he cour.sels that were kept in his briefcase. Owen was taken to the police station, he said, then later to the M ultn om ah C ou nty H o ld in g Facility. At that time he was told he had been arrested fo r wreckless driving, misuse o f operator’ s license and open container. He was never given his rights. Owen refused to accept bail but stayed in jail over the weekend. On Monday he appeared before Judge Edwin York. Judge York said he did not know why he had been jailed on a driving charge and released him. Owen said that about two weeks later he was driving down Union Avenue at about 6:00 p.m when the same tw o o ffic e rs stopped him , arrested him and took him to jail. Again the charge was misuse o f operator's license. This time Owen posted $5,000 bail. When he ap­ peared before Judge York again, the judge returned his bail and stated again that he did not understand the imprisonment. On M ay 30, Gregory K afoury, Owen's attorney wrote to one o f the officers enclosing identification af­ fidavits and asking that the arrests cease. On September 21, Owen went to court on the tra ffic charges. The police did not show. The charges were dismissed. Owen, who works closely with the police and other law enforcement agencies in his work as a juvenile counsellor said he had never had any conflict with the police and never harbored any feelings against (hem. " I have a right to drive my car any time I want to. I pay taxes out o f every paycheck. I have my rights and the police have theirs. There right is to enforce the law, not to beat me.” Owen said he intends to persue his rights in the courts. "W hen I said 1 would file a complaint about the way they treated me, one officer said, ‘ That’ s what y’ all say but you don’ t do anything about it.’ I ’ m going to do something about it. We can't allow this kind o f brutality to go on. Somebody has to do som ething about it, so I'm going to be (he one to do it.” Ambassadore speaks on Africa Donald F. M cHenry, newly ap­ pointed U S. Ambassador to the United Nations, will participate in a Great Decisions Conference -- “ Southern Africa Faces the 80s” - in Portland October 12th. McHenry will speak at 12:45 on “ Southern A frica: Negotiation or Violence” at the M em orial C o li­ seum. The all day conference will begin with a welcome by Marcy Marks, Great Decision chairperson. At 9:00 a.m. John Marcum, Vice Chancellor and Professor o f Politics, University o f C a lifo rn ia , Santa Cruze, w ill speak on “ Southern A frica : The Roots o f Crisis". A panel discussion w ill feature: John Banda, medical economist fo r the Kaiser Foun­ dation, from Malawi; Chief Justice A rn o Denekc, Oregon Supreme C o u rt; Ted Feather, local businessman, from Zambia; Mazisi Kunene, professor o f A fric a n Literature and Languages, U C LA, from South Africa. F ollow in g the noon lunch, Dorothy Weaver, former USIA o f­ fice in Zaire and the Cameroon, will discuss the Great Decisions program. Mazisi Kunene w ill speak on "Dynamics o f Culture, History and P o litics in Southern A fric a ” . A panel discussion will include: Penny A u ila , Poetry E d ito r, The Oregonian; Fungai Kumbala, lec­ turer in Black Studies, PSU, and columnist for the Portland Observer, from Zim babwe; D r. D arrell Millner, Professor in Black Studies, PSU; and G ordon M atzke, Professor o f Geography, GSU. The m orning and afternoon sessions will be held at Willamette Center, 121 S.W. Salmon, with the noon meeting at the Coleseum. Ambassador McHenry, a former State Department official, has repre­ sented the United States on various United Nations bodies concerned with Africa and with human rights. He has been a ffilia te d w ith Georgetown University. Mazisi Kunene is a poet and foun­ der of the Anti-Apartheid Movement in Britian. He has served as chief Representative o f the A fric a n National Congress in the U.S. and Europe. New rules regulate utility shut-off Public U tility Commissioner John I obdell has adopted new rules to guide electric and gas utilities on procedures they must follow prior to term inating service to residential customers. The rules include a ban on ter­ mination o f service at any time if it would sign ifican tly endanger the physical health o f a residential con­ sumer or any member o f the con­ sumer’ s household. The rules will be effective on Oc­ tober 1st. The 1979 Legislature passed a law requiring the Commissioner to adopt rules prohibiting termination during winter months. Lobdcll said he ex­ panded the directive since it is possible that (he health o f a customer -- such as one receiving kidney dialysis treatment at home - could be significantly endangered at any time o f the year. Certification of a health problem could be made orally to a utility by a physician, registered nurse, nurse practitioner, physician's assistant, or a public or private agency providing physical or mental health care ser­ vices. The rules also provide: - The u tility must give 15 days written notice to the customer prior to termination, the termination date must be specified. - A clear explanation o f the reason fo r the te rm in a tio n must be provided. - If the customer is unable to pay the bill in full, he may enter into a payment agreement to bring the ac­ count in balance within 10 months. - If the customer is unable to pay, the u tility must provide a list o f public and private social services agencies that may be able to provide help. - The utility must make an effort to contact the customer in person at least 72 hours before termination, and once again immediately before termination takes place. - If a customer appears unable to comprehend the consequences o f the notice o f term ination, the u tility must n o tify the Departm ent o f Human Resources and extend the termination date by five days. - Customers may appeal a notice o f termination and may ap­ peal for restoration o f service bv contacting the Consumer Assistance Section o f (he Office o f the Public- U tility Commissioner. The utilities will be required to provide customers with the toll-free telephone number o f the Consumer Assistance Section. I f an appeal is made before ter­ m ination, service may not be ter­ minated w ithout approval o f the Public U tility Commissioner. If ter­ mination has already taken place, the Com m issioner may order restoration. The proposed rule d ra fte d by Lobdell’s staff included a provision that notice o f termination must con­ tain advice in the Spanish, V iet­ namese and Russian languages. W it­ nesses pointed out that there are as many as 40 languages used by Oregonians and it would not be reasonable to lim it the advisory to three languages. As a result, Lobdell revised the rules to place responsibility on the u tilitie s fo r determ ining i f the customer is unable to understand the termination notice for language or any other reason and to bring a social service worker into the case prior to termination. 1 1 F DARREN BRIGGS DWAYNE BRIGGS Good News Brothers: Champs By Allen Jones I f there is a sport older than wrestling in the history o f the world, it is yet to be recorded! Since its glorification during the Roman Em­ pire that offered a soldier, workman, or a mere commoner a chance for fame and wealth based solely on physical strength and endurance W restling continues to be the worlds’ s most participating sport. It isn’ t as visable as many o f the modern day sports are around the world today, but the physical and mental demands are just as necessary - if not more so. A victory is not based on just mere brute strength and muscles - but style and more im ­ portantly - technique. Take the Briggs brothers for an example Darren, 9 years old, and Dwayne, I I years old, have had the train in g , technique and desire to become national champions in their respective weight classes and did it! Both young men have been pounding the canvas for three years now And according to their coach o f 2 years, (Please turn to page 2 col 4)