Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, May 26, 1999, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page A2
May 26, 1999
(Hje ^ìorllauò (fìbseruer
P O L IC E
Senate Getting Tough on
N E W S Gun Control
C R IM E S T O P P E R S
W ANTED
SU B JECT
T he P ortlan d P olice B ureau, in
co o p eratio n w ith C rim e S toppers,
is asking for y o u r help in locating
and apprehending Leo John W ayne
H arland. F elo n y arrest w arran ts
are on file in U m atilla C ounty,
P olk C ounty, C lack am as C ounty,
a n d M u ltn o m a h C o u n t y , o n
charges ranging- from P ro b atio n
V iolation and U n au th o riz ed U se
O f A M otor V eh ic le , to F elon In
P o ssessio n O f A W eapon,
Leo John W ayne Harlan is a 31-
year-old white m ale, with a date o f
birth o f August 30, 1967. He is 6 ’3
tall and w eighs approxim ately
230 pounds, with brown hair,
brown eyes, and a tattoo o f a
m erm aid on his right forearm.
W hile Pendleton, Oregon is
considered Harland's hometown,
he usually stays somewhere in Port­
land or Clackamas County, Or­
egon, or Vancouver, Washington.
Crime Stoppers is offering a
cash rew ard o f up to $ 1,000 for
inform ation w hich leads to an
arrest in this case and you need
not give your name. Call Crime
Stoppers at (503) 823-HELP.
tran sit passes. The forged passes
had b een show ing up since M arch.
P o rtla n d P o lice o ffic e r Phil
H arp er and M ilw au k ie P olice o f­
ficer C raig S ten sru d headed up the
tw o-m onth in vestigation. T he su s­
pect is believ ed to have sold passes
to d istrib u to r for $20. B o n d ’s co m ­
p u te r and p rin te r, as w ell as o th er
item s used to cre ate the forged
p asses, w ere also co n fisc ated . T ri-
M et A ll-Z o n e m o n th ly tr a n s it
p asses sell for $49.
“T h ese tw o o ffic ers d e serv e a
lot o f cre d it for b rea k in g th is fo rg ­
ery ca se ," said T ri-M et S ecu rity
D ire c to r C ap t. L arry F in d lin g .
“ T hey w ere co m m itted to fin d in g
the su sp e ct an d fo llo w ed lead a f­
ter lead until they cleared the case.”
Police Watching
Construction Zones
SALEM . OREGON — Oregon
State Police have begun increased
traffic enforcem ent in work zones on
busy highways. More than 200 cita­
1 1 U I 1 3 were
W t l V issued
133U V U u
u n u u j v on
u u
v ij ,..»
tions
Sunday
an n eight
mile stretch o f the 1-5 freeway in the
Salem area. The highw ay includes a
construction zone. U nder Oregon
law. citations in construction zones
are ~ ~ doubled.
— ------------ Some fines can exceed
more than six hundred dollars. The
increased enforcem ent com es as the
sum m er traffic season gets under­
way... am id growing concerns about
more accidents on crowded freeways.
Drive-By Shootings Way Down
PO R TLA N D , OREGON
D riv e -b y sh o o tin g s in O re g o n ’s
la rg e st city are d ro p p in g -o ff s ig ­
n ific a n tly . In 1995 there w ere 168
d riv e-b y s. L ast year, ju s t 41... and
for th e first th ree m o n th s o f this
year, only eight. I f the tren d holds,
the n u m b e r o f d riv e-b y sh o o tin g s
in P o rtla n d w ill b e 32. P o lic e
c re d it tou g h m a n d ato ry se n ten c -
ing re q u ire d by B a llo t M e asu re
E le v en , an d a c o n s iste n t p o lic e
p re se n c e in the c ity ’s g a n g -a c tiv e
n eig h b o rh o o d s.
(©bserlring
Golf Tournament To
Benefit Retired and Senior
Volunteer Program
A m erican Express Financial A d­
visors and the City o f V ancouver
retired and Senior volunteer program
(RSV P) invite golfers to play for fun
and prizes at the 18lh annual RSVP/
Jim Chriss M em orial G o lf Tourna­
m ent at T ri-M ountain G o lf Course,
1701 N W 299,h St, in Ridgefield.
T he tournam ent is scheduled from 8
a m. to 2 p.m. Friday, June 25.
A prize raffle will feature a w eek’s
stay in W aikiki Beach sponsored by
Riverview Savings Bank (airfare not
included).
The entry fee is $65 per person or
$260 per foursom e. G olfers can sign
Environmental
A rtist
Displays
M ixed Media
V a n c o u v e r’s W ater R esources
E d u ca tio n C e n te r w ill host “ R e­
se ed in g G a ia ” a w ork o f m ixed
m edia, ac ry lic and ink on p ap er by
A lice D u b iel, a S eattle e n v iro n ­
m en tal artist. H er w ork w ill be
d isp la y e d on the second floor art
g allery at th e C e n te r from June 1
to Ju ly 31. H ours are 9 a m. to 5
p.m . M o n d ay through S aturday.
A n a r tis t’s rec ep tio n is sched u led
from 5 to 8 p.m . T hursday, June 3.
D ubiel brings a sense o f social
im portance to her mixed m edia work
through brilliant colors, vibrant im­
ages, and a sense o f new and diverse
responses to the environment.
F o r m o re d e ta ils c a ll M aya
Jones, W ater R esources E ducation
C e n te r, 6 96-8478.
up as individuals to be matched with
other players, or sign up as a team.
Entry fee includes g o lf cart, g o lf ac­
cessories. door prizes, refreshments,
lunch buffet and awards.
Bi LAURIE K ELLM A N ______________
C I
Transit Police teak
Forgery Ring
T ri-M e t T ran sit P olice officers
h av e a rre s te d a su sp e ct on 13
counts o f fo rg ery , 1 count o f co m ­
puter crim e and 10 counts o t crim i­
nal p o sse ssio n o f a forged in stru ­
m ent. D ennis Ray Bond (D O B
M arch 14, 1961) w as arrested in
S outhw est P o rtlan d and charged
w ith c re a tin g an d d is trib u tin g
forged T ri-M et A ll-Z one m onthly
Lawmakers Vote to Require Safety Locks on Handguns
Players o f all ages and abilities
are welcome. Proceeds from the tour­
nam ent will benefit RSVP.
To register for the tournam ent
call Judy Davis at 576-9985.
hi
A sso cu tud P m »
WASHINGTON (May 19)-Chum-
ing through a juvenile-crime bill. Sen­
ate Democrats declared new victories
when Republican leaders allowed votes
on measures that would impose addi­
tional restrictions on gun sales.
But Republicans immediately at­
tacked Sen. Frank Lautenberg’s re­
tooled gun-control amendment, which
wouldclose loopholes in firearms sales
at gun shows and pawn shops.
• ’The goal very sim ply is to satisfy
the A m e ric a n p e o p le ,” sa id
Lautenberg, D-N.J. ‘’It’s their belief
that anybody who buys a gun ought
not to be anonymous in that purchase.
Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., said the
amendment opens the door for a new
tax and does little to encourage more
prosecutions. " I s this ju st show ?”
Sessions asked on the Senate floor.
The mass killing at a Littleton,
Colo., school loomed large over the
proceedings as senators tried to deal
with a host o f gun-control am end­
ments in a seventh day o f debate on
the crime measure Tuesday. At the
end o f the day, Senators voted 78-20,
to require safety locks or secure con­
tainers to be sold with every handgun.
The amendment also would provide
liability protections for a gun owner
who uses a safety lock and whose gun
is stolen and used in a crime.
"Littleton was the last straw. De­
mocracy works,” said Sen. Charles
Schumer, the first-term Democrat from
New York who had been the H ouse’s
most vocal gun-control activist. ‘ ’The
public mood has changed.
Shortly before the vote, the new
House speaker, D ennis H astert, a foe
o f previous gun control legislation,
entered the fray by suggesting in an
interview that the m inim um age for
handgun purchases be raised from
18 to 21 for handguns and that back­
ground checks be required for all
sales at gun show s - a position the
Senate first rejected and then ap­
proved in voting last week.
The com m ents by the top Repub­
lican in the H ouse, coupled with a
recent series o f votes in the GOP-
controlled Senate, underscore how
the political landscape has shifted in
the m onth since tw o students at C ol­
umbine High School killed 12 stu­
dents and a teacher before turning
their guns on them selves.
" I think there needs to be unifor­
mity in what they do at gun shows
and w hat they do in a retail busi­
ness,” Hastert, R-I1L, said in an in­
terview in his Capitol office.
Sim ilarly, he said, " I ’m ju st say-
in g 2 1 is basically a standard o f adult­
hood, and th ere's probably a unifor­
m ity that fits there.”
Republicans acknowledge that the
April 20 shootings in Littleton have
influenced the Senate debate, with
some in the GOP lamenting that the
issue reached the floor o f the chamber
while emotions still were running high.
• ’ W e probably should have waited
until w e could have addressed this in
a thoughtful m atter as opposed to an
em otional response to the Colorado
tragedy,’ ’ said Sen. Tim Hutchinson,
R-Ark.
Though he believes it is the right
time for the bill to com e to a vote, its
sponsor. Judiciary Com m ittee Chair­
man Orrin Hatch, acknowledged Tues-
day that he had misjudged the effect
o f the shootings on the legislation.
"1 thought (the shootings) would
get it passed a lot faster than it is,”
Hatch, R-Utah, told reporters.
The wide-ranging, $5 billion bill,
w hich w ould make it easier to pros­
ecute violent juveniles and make it
harder for kids to get guns, has been
mired in partisan wrangling fora week.
The five-year bill includes $435
million a year for juvenile crime pre­
vention; $450 million to help states
and cities build detention centers and
perform drug testing; $75 million for
grants to states to upgrade juvenile
felony crim inal record-keeping and
to m ake those records available na­
tionwide; and $40 million for research
into the effectiveness o f juvenile de­
linquency prevention programs.
Republicans last w eek reversed
an am endm ent that w ould have made
background checks at gun shows
voluntary. Dem ocrats, m eanwhile,
have been forced to pare dow n their
list ofdozens o f am endm ents under a
threat from Sen. M ajority Leader
Trent Lott, R-M iss., that he would
pull the bill from the floor.
Betw een the shooting spree in
Colorado and the 2000 elections,
both parties w ant to avoid blam e for
the death o f a bill designed to keep
m ore guns out o f children’s ’ hands.
But the bill has been a public
relations nightm are for Republicans,
w ho have backed o ff previous op­
position to tighter governm ent con­
trol on guns, senior congressional
aides acknow ledge.
H astert suggested tightening gun
sale restrictions as part o f what he
described as an emerging bipartisan
House response to Littleton. He said the
spec i fics have yet to be vented by H ouse
Republicans.
I he Chieagivarea congressmans oted
against the Brady Law in 1993, which
instituted a three-day waiting period for
handgun purchasers and established the
system of ins tant background checks that
supplanted it Healso voted against 1994
legislation to ban certain types ofassault-
style weapons.
In the in terv iew , H astert re­
sponded to a question about the age
o f possession for handguns, although
an aide later said the speaker was
referring to raising the age for pur­
chases, not possession.
" I want to reiterate my support for
legislation that closes legal loopholes
which allow people under the age o f 2 1
to purchase handguns at gun shows,”
the Illinois Republican said in a written
statement." I do not believe that people
under the age o f 21 should be allowed
to purchase handguns.”
He also called for greater enforce­
ment o f existing laws, saying, "It
does the country no good for the Con­
gress to pass gun laws if the executive
branch fails to enforce them .”
INTERSTATE MAX
PUBLIC HEARING
Share your comments about the Supplemental Draft
Environmental Impact Statement on light rail along
N. Interstate Ave., Rose Quarter to Expo Center.
Tuesday, June 1,1999
5-8 pm
Metro Regional Center
600 NE Grand Ave., Portland
(Tri-Met bus 6, 8, 10 or MAX)
Other ways to comment
Mail: Ross Roberts
Metro Transportation Dept.
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
Fax.797-1929
Phone message: Transportation
Hotline at 797-1900
E-mail: interstatemax@trimet.org
TDD: (telephone device for the
deaf) 797-1804
Comment deadline:
5 pm, June 14,1999
For more information
Copies o f the Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement are available at Metro,
Tri-M e t, the Interstate M A X field office, by calling 797-1900, or read it at your local library.
The Interstate M A X information office at 5101 N Interstate is open 1 lam -7 pm Monday-
Thursday and 11 am-5 pm Friday. For information call 962-2499.
€ a ®
METRO
TRI-MET
***
Della Frazier is a staffing administrator
for Pacific Power; she matches job applicants to job
openings. The days are plenty full - but when Della
leaves the office, she's not through. The job description
she's written for herself means she then goes on to
mentor at-risk kids, helping with their studies or
preparing them for job interviews.
And the office isn't always her first stop at the start of
the day, either. One morning a week, Della goes to King
School and volunteers with project SMART - the Start
Making a Reader Today program. She's worked with
the same first-grader and kindergartner throughout the
'98-99 academic year. They've come to know and trust
u
and
itu v
even
v v ii u
depend
e p e iiu upon v one
n v d another.
iiu m e r .
Though Della
is modest about it,
there's more.
Like helping
graduating college students prepare for real-world job
interviews. And going to Kit to help save the Jefferson
High School program which trains and places students
not bound for college, into trades professions. Raising
funds for scholarships. And helping students find
summer internships.
Della Frazier. Teacher, mentor, volunteer, and, for 23
years, part of the team at Pacific Power. In the community.
She writes a mean job description.
# PACIFIC POW ER
A PacifiCorp Company
Making it happen.