Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 11, 2015)
Page 2A NORTHWEST East Oregonian Saturday, July 11, 2015 Kitzhaber email leaker lied to police By HILLARY BORRUD Capital Bureau SALEM — A state employee who leaked former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s emails to the Willamette Week news- paper lied to State Police who investi- gated the incident this spring. When Oregon State Police asked Michael Rodgers how the newspaper obtained the emails, Rodgers said he suspected the leaker was someone in the Kitzhaber administration, according to a state police report released on Friday. Rodgers, the interim director of the state data center where Kitzhaber’s emails are stored, admitted in a May 26 Willamette Week article that he leaked Kitzhaber’s emails, and also said he was the source who alerted the news- paper when a staffer in the Kitzhaber administration asked state information technology employees who worked with Rodgers to delete the emails. Rodgers released roughly 6,000 emails to the newspaper. Among the 1,500 pages of investi- gatory records the state police released Friday was an email from Rodgers’ attorney to police, in which the lawyer explained that Rodgers “at all times acted in good faith” and was concerned he would have obstructed justice if he complied with the request to delete Kitzhaber’s emails. District attorneys in Marion and Yamhill counties announced in early -XQH WKH\ ZRXOG QRW ¿OH FULPLQDO charges against Rodgers. Kitzhaber used a Gmail account for state business and the state set up a system to archive those emails on government computer servers. However, state employees realized earlier this year they had also been archiving emails from a separate account which Kitzhaber considered personal. Employees discovered the situation after The Oregonian and Willamette Week QHZVSDSHUV ¿OHG public records requests on Feb. 2 for emails from Kitzhaber’s accounts. At the time, Kitzhaber and his ¿DQFHH&\OYLD+D\HVIDFHGDQLQÀX- ence peddling scandal and state ethics investigation into Hayes’ consulting contracts. Hayes was hired by organi- zations with interests in state policy, to work on the same environmental and economic topics on which she advised the governor. On Feb. 5, a staffer in Kitzhaber’s RI¿FHFDOOHGWKHVWDWHGDWDFHQWHUKHOS desk and asked employees to delete emails from the governor’s private email account that had been saved in the data center archive. Managers at the center emailed about the situation throughout the evening, and ultimately decided not to delete the emails. Rodgers told detectives he learned of the situation the next morning. The Willamette Week newspaper “I have no comment on any of that because I know they’re trying to pin that on me but it’s not true.” — Now admitted leaker Micheal Rogers On a phone call with a coworker that was recorded by Oregon State Police reported Feb. 12 on the Kitzhaber administration’s request that state data center employees delete archived emails from the governor’s private account, and the newspaper followed RQ)HEZLWKWKH¿UVWLQDVHULHVRI stories based on those emails. It was the same day Kitzhaber resigned as governor. The U.S. Justice Department served the Department of Administrative Services on Feb. 13 with a broad subpoena for records related to Hayes and Kitzhaber. Michael Jordan, the state’s chief RSHUDWLQJ RI¿FHU DQG GLUHFWRU RI WKH Department of Administrative Services where the state data center is housed, asked the Oregon State Police to inves- tigate the leak on Feb. 18. Jordan has since resigned. Rodgers and another manager at the data center, Technical Engineering Manager Marshall Wells, were soon placed on administrative leave pending a human resources investigation and were still on leave as of Friday afternoon according to Matt Shelby, a spokesman for the Oregon Department of Administrative Services. 6WDWHSROLFH¿UVWPHWZLWK5RGJHUV on Feb. 19. They walked through the events leading up to, and immediately after, the emails were leaked to Willa- mette Week. “Towards the end of the interview, Captain Worthy asked Mike Rodgers how the Willamette Week got the Governors’ private emails,” the police wrote in a report. “Mike Rodgers responded he did not think it was his staff, he thought someone at the *RYHUQRU¶V RI¿FH SURYLGHG LW 0LNH Rodgers went on to say that he did not think the state email archive server had been hacked.” By the time state police started to investigate, Kitzhaber’s emails had been distributed to multiple employees at the Oregon Department of Admin- istrative Services and the Governor’s 2I¿FH ZKHUH VWDII KDG LQLWLDOO\ planned to determine which emails were personal in nature and should be deleted from state computer servers. Detectives scoured Willamette Week articles for references to Kitzhaber’s leaked emails, and made a list of those emails. They cross-referenced the list with batches of Kitzhaber’s emails provided to various state employees, and soon narrowed the list of suspects to four state employees. One of those employees was Rodgers, and state police obtained a log of activity on Rodgers’ work laptop. It revealed that someone had inserted two new thumb drives into the computer soon after Rodgers received two thumb drives onto which another state technology employee had uploaded Kitzhaber’s emails. “Based on this ... and the totality of the other information that we learned from our other investigative efforts to this point, I suspected that Mike Rodgers was the individual who provided copies of John Kitzhaber’s personal emails to the Willamette Week,” Lt. Jonathan Harrington wrote in a report. Next, the police would try to get Rodgers to confess that he leaked the emails. State police contacted Julie Bozzie, who was a top IT administrator at the Department of Administrative Services until December 2014 and currently works for the Oregon Health $XWKRULW\ %R]]LH ¿OHG D WRUW FODLP notice with the state in April, alleging WKDWWKHVWDWHSODQQHGWR¿UHKHUEHFDXVH she blew the whistle on contracting and IT problems related to Cover Oregon. Bozzie had previously leaked docu- ments to The Oregonian, but she told state police she was not involved in the leak of Kitzhaber’s emails. According to a police report, Bozzie speculated that Rodgers might have leaked Kitzhaber’s emails. State police asked Bozzie to call Rodgers and attempt to get him to admit that he released the emails. Bozzie agreed, and police recorded the March 19 call. ³-XOLH DVNHG LI KH FRSLHG WKH ¿OHV and he said ‘I, I, I have no comment on any of that because I know they’re trying to pin that on me but it’s not true,’” state police wrote in the report. Later in the conversation, Bozzie and Rodgers discussed what type of criminal charges Rodgers might face if “‘the State Police were able to pin this on him.’ Julie said that it seemed like it would be light.” According to the police report, Rodgers responded, “‘well right now I feel like .... I’m unemployable.’” On April 7, Rodgers’ lawyer emailed an offer to state police working on the investigation: Rodgers would sit down and “fully debrief” the situation, in exchange for a promise of immunity from prosecution. He wrote Rodgers’ superiors instructed him to delete Kitzhaber’s’ emails and “he believed to do so would make him guilty of crimes including obstruction of justice.” 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. Main St., Hermiston 541-567-6211 2I¿FHKRXUV0RQGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\DPWRSP &ORVHGPDMRUKROLGD\V SUBSCRIPTION RATES /RFDOKRPHGHOLYHU\ 6DYLQJVRIIFRYHUSULFH (=3D\ SHUFHQW ZHHNV SHUFHQW ZHHNV SHUFHQW ZHHNV SHUFHQW (=3D\ RQH\HDUUDWHZLWKDPRQWKO\FUHGLWRUGHELWFDUGFKHFNFKDUJH www.eastoregonian.com To subscribe, call 1-800-522-0255 or go online to www.eastoregonian.com and click on ‘Subscribe’ (DVW2UHJRQLDQ(USPS 164-980)LVSXEOLVKHGGDLO\H[FHSW6XQGD\0RQGD\ DQG'HFE\WKH(20HGLD*URXS6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25 3HULRGLFDOVSRVWDJHSDLGDW3HQGOHWRQ25Postmaster:VHQGDGGUHVVFKDQJHVWR (DVW2UHJRQLDQ6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25 Single copy price: 7XHVGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\6DWXUGD\ Copyright © 2015, EO Media Group SUNDAY MONDAY An afternoon shower or t-storm Pleasant with sunny intervals Partly sunny and pleasant 86° 61° 86° 62° TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Partly sunny Mostly sunny PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 84° 61° 84° 58° 85° 58° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 89° 60° PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yesterday TEMPERATURE HIGH LOW 91° 88° 106° (1975) 71° 58° 40° (1911) PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Trace Trace 0.10" 5.00" 7.49" 7.67" HERMISTON through 3 p.m. yesterday TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normals Records HIGH LOW 91° 88° 106° (1975) 73° 58° 46° (2009) PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Trace Trace 0.07" 3.16" 4.19" 5.77" SUN AND MOON Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today New First Full 88° 56° 5:16 a.m. 8:44 p.m. 1:58 a.m. 4:38 p.m. Last Spokane Wenatchee 83/61 89/67 Tacoma Moses 74/57 Lake Pullman Aberdeen Olympia Yakima 91/64 77/55 67/60 72/57 90/59 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 72/59 88/66 Lewiston 91/65 Astoria 82/65 68/58 Portland Enterprise Hermiston 76/61 Pendleton 71/56 The Dalles 88/63 86/61 82/64 La Grande Salem 77/57 76/58 Albany Corvallis 75/56 75/56 John Day 74/56 Ontario Eugene Bend 83/63 76/56 76/51 Caldwell Burns 81/59 74/48 Medford 83/63 Klamath Falls 73/50 July 23 July 31 Aug 6 Astoria Baker City Bend Brookings Burns Enterprise Eugene Heppner Hermiston John Day Klamath Falls La Grande Meacham Medford Newport North Bend Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem Spokane Ukiah Vancouver Walla Walla Yakima REGIONAL FORECAST Eastern and Central Oregon: Mostly cloudy today with a shower or thunderstorm. Eastern Washington: Some sun today; a thunderstorm near the Idaho border and in the mountains. Cascades: Sunny intervals today with a thunderstorm in spots. Northern California: Low clouds followed by sunshine at the coast today; partly sunny and cold elsewhere. Hi 68 73 76 65 74 71 76 81 88 74 73 77 72 83 63 66 83 91 86 76 77 76 83 75 75 88 90 Lo 58 51 51 56 48 56 56 55 63 56 50 57 51 63 55 57 63 65 61 61 51 58 61 54 60 66 59 NORWAY (AP) — Authorities say two people GLHGLQD¿UHWKDWGHVWUR\HG a mobile home in the community of Norway, Oregon. Coos County sheriff’s deputy John Cooper tells The Coos Bay WorldWKH¿UH was reported Friday at about 8 a.m., and the front end of the house was fully engulfed when a nearby Coquille SROLFHRI¿FHUDUULYHG )LUH¿JKWHUVMRLQHGWKH RI¿FHUDERXW¿YHPLQXWHV later but couldn’t enter the burning structure. The ÀDPHVZHUHVKRRWLQJPRUH than 20 feet in the air. County prosecutor Ryan Hughes says two adults died in the blaze. Their names were being withheld pending QRWL¿FDWLRQRIQH[WRINLQ The home was located between near Myrtle Point. Beijing Hong Kong Jerusalem London Mexico City Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Sydney Tokyo Lo 74 83 63 59 51 54 56 70 75 46 73 Corrections The Helix water supply has tested positive for E. coli twice since 2009, both in the last month. Incorrect information appeared on Page 1A of the Friday, July 10 edition of the East Oregonian. The East Oregonian works hard to be accurate and sincerely regrets any errors. If you notice a mistake in the paper, please call 541-966-0818. To submit community events, calendar items and Your EO News: HPDLOFRPPXQLW\#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRPRUFDOO7DPP\0DOJHVLQL LQ+HUPLVWRQDWRU5HQHH6WUXWKHUVLQ3HQGOHWRQDW To submit engagements, weddings and anniversaries: HPDLOUVWUXWKHUV#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRPRUYLVLWZZZHDVWRUHJRQLDQ FRPFRPPXQLW\DQQRXQFHPHQWV Real Estate Advertising: Jodi Snook MVQRRN#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP COMMERCIAL PRINTING Shane Weston VZHVWRQ#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP W sh t t pc t t pc t pc t pc t t pc sh c t pc t pc t pc t t pc t pc Hi 70 75 75 65 76 74 81 81 89 77 76 79 75 81 64 66 84 90 86 81 77 83 82 76 80 88 89 NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Sun. Lo 59 46 52 55 46 55 55 57 60 55 47 56 41 60 55 57 62 59 62 62 49 58 62 52 61 66 60 W c t t pc t t pc t pc t t t t sh c c pc pc pc pc t pc pc t pc pc pc W s pc s pc t sh s s pc pc pc Hi 102 94 84 71 73 60 77 89 80 59 82 Sun. Lo 76 83 65 59 53 47 59 71 74 46 75 W s c s sh t r c s r pc pc Today Sunday WSW 10-20 WSW 8-16 WSW 7-14 W 6-12 UV INDEX TODAY 1 4 6 NEWS To submit news tips and press releases:FDOO ID[HPDLOQHZV#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP To submit sports or outdoors information or tips: VSRUWV#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP WINDS Boardman Pendleton PORTLAND (AP) — The Oregon Country Fair will be a drug and alcohol- IUHHHYHQWEXWRI¿FLDOVVD\ they expect a certain number of violators this year just as they have previously. The Oregonian reports fair general manager Charlie Ruff says lots of people think of the fair as a free- for-all for marijuana use, but that’s not the case. Held on private land outside Veneta, event organizers warn violators and ask them to leave if they refuse to stop. Lane County district attorney Doug Harcleroad told the Oregonian in 1997 that drug use at the fair was VLJQL¿FDQWDQGWKDWLW¶VWKH responsibility of organizers. Sen. Floyd Prozanski VDLGSODFLQJRI¿FHUVDWWKH entrance then was a wake-up call. Legal Advertising:$PDQGD-DFREV DMDFREV#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP Today Hi 97 93 85 78 70 66 83 89 95 64 83 Highly ignored ban on pot at Country Fair to stay in place 2 die in Coos County mobile KRPH¿UH To submit a Letter to the Editor:PDLOWR0DQDJLQJ(GLWRU'DQLHO :DWWHQEXUJHU6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25RUHPDLO HGLWRU#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP WORLD CITIES Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Coastal Oregon: A couple of showers today. NEWPORT (AP) — A ¿VKLQJERDWKDVUXQDJURXQG and broken up on the jetty while coming into the port of Newport on the central Oregon Coast, spilling 80 gallons of diesel fuel. The Coast Guard says it is investigating why the IRRW¿VKLQJYHVVHO6HD Pup ran aground Friday. &KLHI3HWW\2I¿FHUUG Class Katelyn Shearer says when a helicopter and motor lifeboat got on scene, the captain was safely on the jetty, and a rescue swimmer escorted him to shore. There were no others on the boat. Shearer says there was no immediate information on what caused the boat to run up on the jetty, but the incident is being investigated, and the captain could be cited for pollution. &ODVVLÀHG$GYHUWLVLQJ FODVVL¿HGV#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP Today (in mph) Western Washington: A shower today; clouds, then some sun in the afternoon. July 15 90° 57° Seattle 74/59 ALMANAC Yesterday Normals Records 87° 57° PORTLAND (AP) — Hillary Clinton is making a stop in Oregon next month to raise money for her presidential campaign. An invitation shows the fundraiser will be held Aug. 5 at the Portland home of Democratic Party insiders Win McCormack and Carol Butler. The event is dubbed “Conversation with Hillary.” Clinton was in Portland in 2014 for a speech to the World Affairs Council. McCormack is a magazine publisher and major donor to Oregon Democrats. He supported Barack Obama in the 2008 Democratic presidential primary. Butler is a political consultant who has worked for the campaigns of several Democrats, including Sen. Ron Wyden and U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici. REGIONAL CITIES Forecast TODAY Fishing boat runs aground on Newport jetty Multimedia consultants • Jeanne Jewett MMHZHWW#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP • Dayle Stinson 541-966-0806 • dstinson@eastoregonian.com • Terri Briggs WEULJJV#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP Didn’t receive your paper?&DOO EHIRUHSP7XHVGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\ RUEHIRUHDP6DWXUGD\ for same-day redelivery — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — Hillary Clinton to raise money in Portland ADVERTISING Advertising Director: Jennine Perkinson MSHUNLQVRQ#HDVWRUHJRQLDQFRP Subscriber services: For home delivery, vacation stops or delivery concerns: 1-800-522-0255 88° 63° BRIEFLY 5 3 1 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 0-2, Low 3-5, Moderate 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num- ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s showers t-storms 0s 10s rain 20s flurries 30s 40s snow ice 50s 60s cold front 70s 80s 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high low National Summary: Rain and thunderstorms will wet the southern mid-Atlantic today as the South sizzles once again. Drenching and gusty thunderstorms will target the Upper Midwest as heat builds across the Plains. Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 102° in Phoenix, Ariz. Low 32° in Tuolumne Meadows, Calif. NATIONAL CITIES Today Albuquerque Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Hi 84 94 81 82 90 96 84 83 98 81 80 79 95 87 83 93 74 85 89 92 82 95 90 96 96 77 Lo 66 74 68 65 62 75 64 68 74 63 69 61 77 59 66 72 53 69 77 76 69 72 73 75 76 63 W t pc pc sh pc pc t s t t t pc s pc pc t pc t sh t pc t pc s s pc Hi 88 93 83 87 87 95 83 88 91 84 86 80 97 91 80 97 75 92 90 93 86 94 93 101 97 80 Sun. Lo 65 74 68 67 61 76 65 70 75 68 70 68 79 61 67 73 54 66 77 75 71 72 76 78 77 64 W t pc s s pc pc pc s s t t t s s t s sh t sh s t s s s s pc Today Hi Louisville 87 Memphis 95 Miami 92 Milwaukee 78 Minneapolis 78 Nashville 92 New Orleans 93 New York City 86 Oklahoma City 91 Omaha 91 Philadelphia 88 Phoenix 103 Portland, ME 83 Providence 86 Raleigh 93 Rapid City 91 Reno 79 Sacramento 87 St. Louis 92 Salt Lake City 88 San Diego 73 San Francisco 72 Seattle 74 Tucson 99 Washington, DC 84 Wichita 95 Lo 73 78 77 65 69 74 76 72 71 72 69 83 63 66 69 63 56 62 76 68 66 60 59 76 70 73 W pc s pc t t pc pc s s t pc s pc s t s s s t pc pc pc pc pc sh s Hi 89 94 92 81 89 94 93 88 94 96 91 105 86 89 88 93 81 85 95 90 74 71 77 100 88 99 Sun. Lo 76 78 78 65 69 75 76 72 73 72 71 85 65 67 69 63 56 58 77 68 66 60 60 76 72 75 Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. W t s s t pc pc pc s s pc s s s s s s s s pc s pc pc c pc s s