Page 12A NATION/WORLD East Oregonian One escaped killer fatally shot in woods, other still on the run MALONE, N.Y. (AP) — One of two convicted murderers who staged a brazen escape from an upstate maximum-security prison three weeks ago was shot and killed by a border patrol agent in a wooded area 30 miles from the prison on Friday, and the other was on the run, authorities said. Authorities tracked down and killed Richard Matt after a person towing a camper reported that there was a bullet hole through the back of it, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and state police said. David Sweat hasn’t been spotted, Cuomo said. The shooting of the FDPSHU OHG RI¿FHUV WR D cabin in Malone, where they discovered the smell of gunpowder, said Joseph D’Amico, superintendent of the New York State Police. There were indications someone had recently been WKHUH DQG ÀHG RXW WKH EDFN door, he said. While searching the prop- HUW\ RI¿FHUV KHDUG FRXJKV and detected movement, and tactical teams came upon Matt in the woods. “They verbally challenged him, told him to put up his hands. And at that time, he was shot when he didn’t comply,” D’Amico said. A 20-gauge shotgun was found on Matt, who didn’t ¿UH WKH ZHDSRQ '¶$PLFR said. Matt was shot by a border patrol agent from Vermont, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer said. It was unclear if Matt and Sweat were together at the time of the shooting, authorities said. The pair escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility together early June 6. Cuomo called them “dangerous, dangerous men.” Police blocked off roads LQWKHDUHDDVRI¿FHUVKXQWHG for Sweat on Friday. The search area for him was centered on Titusville Moun- tain State Forest in Malone and spanned 22 square miles, down from 75 square miles earlier this week, authorities said. Authorities have followed up on more than 2,400 leads, Cuomo said. Mitch Johnson said one of his best friends checked on his hunting cabin in Malone on Friday afternoon and noticed a liquor bottle that hadn’t been there the day before. Johnson said his IULHQGFRUUHFWLRQRI¿FHU%RE Willett, told him he immedi- ately alerted police, about an hour before Matt was fatally shot. Authorities sent a team to the camp area, and Willett and police later heard a gunshot in the woods, Johnson said. 2I¿FHUV WKHQ ÀRRGHG WKH woods, and then Willett heard more shots, Johnson said. “He heard: ‘Pop pop pop pop pop pop pop,”’ Johnson said. State police Maj. Charles Guess said earlier Friday that the search area had shifted slightly northwest to Malone after investigators found evidence left behind by the escapees. Items were found Thursday at a cabin and )ULGD\ PRUQLQJ LQ D ¿HOG both in Malone, he said. D’Amico cited numerous instances of break-ins and evidence left behind by the inmates in the area in the last week. On Wednesday, a screen was discovered cut out of a cabin and a window was broken into. On Friday morning, search teams found a camp, where candy wrap- pers and other items were seized, and saw evidence that someone had laid down there. MARRIAGE: Louisiana only state to not issue licenses as of Friday Continued from 1A long fought against same-sex marriage, said states can ¿JKWWKHUXOLQJDVWKH\KDYH decisions allowing slavery or abortion, and predicted that it would spark a national backlash from Christian conservatives. “They’ve just disregarded everything that precedent holds, and they’ve destroyed the foundation of our country which is family,” Moore said. In rural Alabama, Pike County Probate Judge Wes Allen said he would stop issuing all marriage licenses to avoid having to give them to gay couples. Allen said Alabama law gives judges the option of granting licenses, and “I have chosen not to perform that function.” Governors in Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas also railed against the ruling. And clerks in some of the affected states refused to issue licenses, citing a three-week grace period allowed by the Supreme Court or forms now out of date that specify “bride” and “groom.” %XW E\ )ULGD\ DIWHUQRRQ couples had received licenses in all but one of the 14 states, according to the Human Rights Campaign. In Louisiana, where Repub- OLFDQ *RY %REE\ -LQGDO LV running for the White House as a conservative Christian, same-sex couples were turned away. “It was kind of bitter- VZHHW´ VDLG (DUO %HQMDPLQ who waited with his partner for hours for a license and ZDV¿QDOO\WROGWKDWWKHVWDWH¶V ban on same-sex marriage remained intact — for now. In Texas, many counties held off on issuing same-sex marriage licenses until receiving guidance from Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton, who scolded the Supreme Court but left counties in limbo for hours. Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood said Friday that same-sex marriages cannot take place immedi- DWHO\%XWDPLGWKHFRQIXVLRQ over when weddings should legally begin, three couples received their marriage licenses in Hattiesburg, and took their vows on the court- house steps. Other clerks scrambled to issue licenses as gay couples UXVKHGWRWKHLURI¿FHV In Arkansas, Pulaski County Clerk Larry Crane held a hand to his heart after the Supreme Court’s ruling. “It is a special day,” he said, choking up. “I’m honored to be a part of it.” Jessica Dent and Carolee Taylor got married a few blocks from the courthouse in Montgomery, Alabama. “Never thought it would happen in our lifetime,” said Taylor. After their ceremony, they returned to the courthouse WR ¿OH WKHLU OLFHQVH PDNLQJ WKHPRI¿FLDOO\PDUULHGLQWKH conservative state that had fought back against efforts to legalize gay marriage. After a federal judge ruled earlier this year that the state’s gay marriage ban was unconsti- tutional, about 500 same-sex couples were married before the Alabama Supreme Court directly ordered probate judges to stop issuing the licenses. “We waited so long. When it came through, I can’t think of a better way to celebrate, the decision and our love,” said Dent, walking out of the courthouse holding a sign that said “All love is equal.” Some Southern politicians said they were concerned about the “religious freedom” of ministers, cake bakers and others who might be asked to participate in ceremonies. In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott issued a memo saying the government should not pressure people to violate their “sincerely held religious EHOLHIV´ +H ODWHU FODUL¿HG that he does not condone discrimination or authorize state agencies to deny bene- ¿WVWRVDPHVH[FRXSOHV Jindal also issued a statement vowing to never VWRS ¿JKWLQJ IRU ³UHOLJLRXV liberty.” “Marriage between a man and a woman was established by God, and no earthly court can alter that,” he wrote. Saturday, June 27, 2015 Obama sings and eulogizes victims of church massacre By JULIE PACE AP White House Correspondent CHARLESTON, S.C. — After a VWULQJ RI WULXPSKV 3UHVLGHQW %DUDFN Obama’s eulogy for those killed in a South Carolina church massacre was supposed to bring an extraordinary week to a somber close. %XWVRPHWKLQJFKDQJHG %HWZHHQ OHJLVODWLYH DQG OHJDO victories, Obama had spent hours privately grappling with the tragedy in this southern city, where nine people DWWHQGLQJ%LEOHVWXG\ZHUHNLOOHGLQD racially motivated attack. Their deaths sparked vexing questions about racial divisions, gun violence and the way $PHULFDJUDSSOHVZLWKLWVRZQGLI¿FXOW history. $W ¿UVW WKH SUHVLGHQW KDG SODQQHG to largely focus his remarks on remembering Rev. Clementa Pinckney, the slain pastor of Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, and the eight other victims. %XW WKDW¶V QRW ZKDW KDSSHQHG Maybe Obama was buoyed by a week that brought about the validation of his sweeping health care law, a win on trade and the Supreme Court’s DI¿UPDWLRQRIJD\PDUULDJHDFURVVWKH country. Maybe he was driven by the fearlessness he says he now feels as KHKHDGVGRZQWKH¿QDOVWUHWFKRIKLV presidency. As Obama took the stage to address the crowd of more than 5,500 packed into a basketball arena, he did speak movingly about Pinckney, a state lawmaker and popular pastor. Then the president issued a challenge, calling on the nation to not shy away from the “uncomfortable truths” about the racial prejudice that plagues the country. He revived his push for gun control legislation, despite staunch opposition AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster President Barack Obama pauses as he speaks during services honoring the life of Rev. Clementa Pinckney, Friday at the College of Charleston TD Arena in Charleston, S.C. in Washington. He called for the &RQIHGHUDWHEDWWOHÀDJWREHUHPRYHG from the grounds of South Carolina’s statehouse, a move that would repre- sent “one step in an honest accounting of America’s history.” He taunted the alleged killer of the Charleston churchgoers. While the gunman wanted to incite fear and deepen divisions, Obama noted the unity Charleston has shown in the past week and said: “God works in myste- rious ways. God had different ideas.” Then Obama sang. As Obama neared the close of his 40-minute remarks, he unexpectedly sang out the opening words of the hymn “Amazing Grace.” The crowd of 5,500 leapt to its feet to join the president in song. It was a stirring emotional moment for a president who can often seem detached and distant. The president has been in this position before, called upon to ease the pain of a community grieving after gun violence. %HIRUH&KDUOHVWRQWKHUHZHUH1HZWRZQ Conn., Tucson, Ariz., Fort Hood, Texas, Aurora, Colo., Washington. After each incident, the nation’s eyes are sporadically open, Obama said. He challenged the nation to keep itself from slipping back “into a comfortable silence,” saying that doing so would be “a betrayal of everything Rev. Pinckney stood for.” Oil spill gushed like hose ‘without a nozzle’ LOS ANGELES (AP) — )LUH¿JKWHUV LQYHVWLJDWLQJ D reported petroleum stench at a California beach last month didn’t take long WR ¿QG D VSLOO ² RLO ZDV spreading across the sand and into the surf. Tracing the source, they found crude gushing from a bluff like a ¿UHKRVH³ZLWKRXWDQR]]OH´ records show. %XW FULWLFDO WLPH ZRXOG elapse before the operator of DQHDUE\SLSHOLQHFRQ¿UPHG that it had ruptured and spewed the oil. An employee at the scene for Plains All American Pipeline initially VXJJHVWHG WR ¿UH¿JKWHUV that the spill “was too big to be from their pipeline,” according to the documents obtained by The Associated Press. The description of what ¿UH¿JKWHUV IRXQG 0D\ DW5HIXJLR6WDWH%HDFKZDV detailed in records Santa %DUEDUD &RXQW\ ¿UH¿JKWHUV ¿OHG ZLWK VWDWH RI¿FLDOV ,W LQGLFDWHV WKDW ¿UH¿JKWHUV who arrived just before noon quickly recognized that “some sort of leak or spill had occurred.” A Plains company spokeswoman would not comment Thursday on why it took until later in the AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File In this May 21, 2015 photo, a bird covered in oil flaps its wings at Refugio State Beach, north of Goleta, Calif. afternoon for its workers to FRQ¿UPWKHOLQHZDVFUDFNHG and spilling thousands of gallons of oil onto the sand and water west of Santa %DUEDUD Plains is facing scrutiny from federal regulators and lawmakers over the spill, which washed up goo on beaches as far as 100 miles away. The failed pipeline released up to 101,000 gallons, and an estimated 21,000 gallons reached the water. The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee opened an investigation Thursday and asked the company for detailed information on maintenance of the line, including how it addressed corrosion. The panel also wants the company to explain what it did in the hours leading up to the break and how it reported the problem. A key issue has been how long it took the Texas-based company to relay infor- mation on the break to the federal government. Internal planning documents stress the importance of notifying the government of a leak as quickly as possible. Federal regulations require the company to notify the National Response Center, a clearinghouse for reports of hazardous-mate- rial releases, “at the earliest practicable moment.” State law requires immediate QRWL¿FDWLRQRIDUHOHDVHRUD threatened release. Company employees at WKHVFHQHGLGQRWFRQ¿UPD leak until about 1:30 p.m., and it would be nearly 3 p.m. before the company would contact the response FHQWHU %\ WKHQ WKH IHGHUDO response led by the Coast Guard was underway. The federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration is investigating the cause of the accident. The agency UHOHDVHG SUHOLPLQDU\ ¿QG- ings earlier this month that the break occurred along a badly corroded section that had worn away to a fraction of an inch in thickness. In a separate letter Thursday, the House committee asked the pipeline administration for an update of what it called long overdue pipeline safety rules. The panel said the California spill raised questions about the agency’s oversight of pipeline safety and added that the agency had failed to complete 17 of 42 requirements Congress outlined in 2011 to help prevent spills. Place a Yard Sale Ad 25 words, 3 days, private party only $20.00 East Oregonian & Hermiston Herald Yard Sale Kits - $5.00 Includes 2 signs, stakes & price stickers. Call Paula 541-278-2678