East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 08, 2016, Page Page 5A, Image 5

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    RECORDS
Friday, April 8, 2016
DEATH NOTICES
Mark K. Galleciez
Hermiston
Aug. 5, 1947-April 6, 2016
Mark K. Galleciez, 68, of Hermiston died Wednesday,
April 6, 2016, at his home. He was born Aug. 5, 1947, in
Niagara Falls, N.Y. A family celebration gathering will be
held. Burns Mortuary of Hermiston is in care of arrange-
ments. Sign the online guest book at burnsmortuaryherm-
iston.com
Richard K. Macauley
Milton-Freewater
April 29, 1935-April 6, 2016
Richard K. Macauley, 80, of Milton-Freewater died
Wednesday, April 6, 2016, at his home. He was born April
29, 1935. Munselle-Rhodes Funeral Home in Milton-Free-
water is in charge of arrangements.
UPCOMING SERVICES
FRIDAY, APRIL 8
BLACK, JEANE — Graveside service at 2 p.m. at the
Athena Cemetery.
COSNER, LEWINE — Service at 11 a.m. at Munselle-
Rhodes Funeral Home, 902 S. Main St., Milton-Freewater.
GUTIERREZ, PAT — Recitation of the rosary at 10
a.m. followed by funeral mass at 11 a.m. at St. Patrick’s
Catholic Church, 525 N. Gale St., Heppner. Burial will
follow at the Heppner Masonic Cemetery.
SATURDAY, APRIL 9
HALDORSON, LEN — Funeral service at 10 a.m.
at United Church of Christ, 114 S. East St., Condon.
Concluding service and burial will follow at the Condon
Masonic Cemetery.
PALMER, TRAMPIS — Graveside funeral service at
10 a.m. at the Hermiston Cemetery. A celebration of life
service will follow at 2 p.m. at the Hermiston High School
commons, 600 S. First St.
POTTER, DOROTHY — Graveside services at 11
a.m. at the Milton-Freewater Cemetery. A potluck dinner
will follow at Valley Christian Center, 800 N. Main St.,
Milton-Freewater.
SAMPLE, HARVEY — Celebration of life at 2 p.m.
at the Milton-Freewater Elks Lodge, 611 N. Main St. A
potluck will follow the celebration.
OBITUARY POLICY
The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can in-
clude small photos and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge.
Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style.
Expanded death notices will be published at no charge. These in-
clude information about services.
Obituaries and notices can be submitted online at www.eastorego-
nian.com/obituaryform, by email to obits@eastoregonian.com, by fax
to 541-276-8314, placed via the funeral home or in person at the East
Oregonian office.
For more information, call 541-966-0818 or 1-800-522-0255, ext. 221.
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
WEDNESDAY
8:34 a.m. - A man in the Hermiston area reported his nephew
came to his house and threatened to beat him. The man asked
to talk to a Umatilla County sheriff’s deputy.
12:30 p.m. - A woman on Klaus Road, Hermiston, caught a
dog trying to eat her chickens. She said she called Pet Rescue
Humane Society of Eastern Oregon, Hermiston, but it charges
$25 to take the dog, She said it would be cheaper to kill the dog
and asked for a Umatilla County sheriff’s deputy to call her.
SP6WDQ¿HOGSROLFHUHFHLYHGDFRPSODLQWDERXWDQ
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workers use.
3:35 p.m. - A Pendleton-area woman reported her husband
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,QWHUVWDWHQHDU%RDUGPDQZDVUHDGLQJDQRYHODQGGULIWLQJ
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DGYLVHGWKH0RUURZ&RXQW\6KHULII¶V2I¿FHDQG2UHJRQ6WDWH
Police.
6:04 p.m. - Four people on Bensel Road, Hermiston, had a
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SP3HQGOHWRQSROLFHDQGHPHUJHQF\VHUYLFHV
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fought. One took off and the other was conscious but not getting
up.
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hitting a mother in the face, and at least one person was using
heroin.
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
Wednesday
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DQG$OH[DQGHU/\QQ3HUH]IRUWKLUGGHJUHHDVVDXOW
harassment and second-degree disorderly conduct.
•Oregon State Police arrested Christopher Anthony
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UHFNOHVVGULYLQJ
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misdemeanor and felony fourth-degree assault.
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‡0LOWRQ)UHHZDWHUSROLFHDUUHVWHG$UWXUR0RUHQR$OFDQWDU
39, for possession of methamphetamine and on a misdemeanor
warrant.
Thursday
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+HUPLVWRQIRU¿UVWGHJUHHDWWHPSWHGEXUJODU\
MEETINGS
FRIDAY, APRIL 8
No meetings scheduled
MONDAY, APRIL 11
PENDLETON
SCHOOL
BOARD, 6 p.m., Pendleton
Early Learning Center, 1308
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HERMISTON
SCHOOL
DISTRICT, 6:30 p.m., district
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M I LT O N - F R E E WAT E R
SCHOOL BOARD, 6:30 p.m.,
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AT H E N A - W E S TO N
SCHOOL BOARD, 7 p.m., Ath-
ena Elementary School library,
375 S. Fifth St.
HEPPNER CITY COUN-
CIL, 7 p.m., Heppner City Hall,
10DLQ6W
HERMISTON CITY COUN-
CIL, 7 p.m., City Hall, 180 N.E.
Second St.
IRRIGON FIRE DISTRICT,
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M I LT O N - F R E E WAT E R
CITY COUNCIL, SP 0LO-
ton-Freewater Public Library
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PILOT ROCK FIRE DIS-
TRICT, 7 p.m., 415 N.E. Elm
St.
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541-449-1123).
WESTON
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East Oregonian
EU threatens to put sanctions
on Panama, other tax havens
By FRANK JORDANS
AND RAF CASERT
Associated Press
BERLIN — A European
Union of¿cial threatened
Thursday to sanction Panama
and other nations if they
don’t cooperate fully to ¿ght
money laundering and tax
evasion, after a leak of data
showed the small country
remains a key destination
for people who want to hide
money.
The
11.5
million
documents from the Pana-
ma-based law ¿rm Mossack
Fonseca showed it helped
thousands of individuals and
companies from around the
world set up shell companies
and offshore accounts in
low-tax havens. Because
such accounts often hide the
ultimate owner of assets, they
are a favored tool to evade
taxes, launder money or pay
bribes.
So far, the scandal has
brought down the leader of
Iceland and raised questions
about the dealings of the
presidents of Argentina and
Ukraine, senior Chinese
politicians, famous actors,
athletes and the circle of
friends of Russian Vladimir
Putin, who some allege has
pro¿ted indirectly from such
accounts. On Thursday,
British Prime Minister David
Cameron acknowledged he
pro¿ted from his father’s
investments in an offshore tax
haven before being elected.
“People are fed up with
these outrages,” said Pierre
Moscovici, who heads ¿nan-
cial affairs for the 28-nation
EU. He took to task countries
like Panama that facilitate
such secretive, low-tax
accounts.
“The amounts of money,
the jurisdictions and the
names associated with this
affair are frankly shocking,”
he said.
Panama is listed by the
EU as a country that is not
cooperative on tax issues, and
Moscovici urged the country
to “rethink its position in this
regard.” The EU has to “be
ready to hit them with appro-
priate sanctions if they refuse
AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco
Partner of the Panama-based law firm Mossack
Fonseca, Ramon Fonseca sits in his office in during an
interview in Panama City, Thursday.
Argentine prosecutor wants president
probed in Panama leaks
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — An Argentine
prosecutor on Thursday asked for an investigation into
President Mauricio Macri’s role in offshore companies,
adding to the global fallout from a massive leak of
documents from a Panama law ¿rm.
Federal prosecutor Federico Delgado made the
request to Judge Sebastian Casanello, according to a
court document obtained by The Associated Press. Under
Argentine law, such a request is the precursor to charges,
which must be decided on by a judge.
Delgado argued that an investigation is necessary to
see whether Macri “maliciously” omitted his role in two
offshore companies in his annual tax declarations.
Macri’s press of¿ce did not immediately return requests
for comment.
Macri, a conservative who ran for of¿ce last year on
promises to crack down on corruption, has repeatedly said
they were family businesses and he was a ¿gurehead who
received no compensation. The former mayor of Buenos
Aires is son of Italian-born tycoon Francisco Macri, who is
one of the country’s richest people.
to change,” he said.
The Central American
country’s
government
is offering to cooperate
more.
On
Wednesday,
President Juan Carlos Varela
announced the creation of
an international committee
of experts to recommend
ways to boost transparency in
Panama’s offshore ¿nancial
industry.
But Varela defended
his country against what
he called a “media attack”
by wealthy nations that he
says are ignoring their own
de¿ciencies and unfairly
stigmatizing Panama.
Ramon
Fonseca,
a
co-founder of the law ¿rm at
Wednesday, April 6
Lucky Lines
03-05-11-14-FREE-18-24-26-30
Estimated jackpot: $25,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 8-0-0-9
4 p.m.: 8-5-0-7
7 p.m.: 2-6-4-8
10 p.m.: 8-3-2-4
Thursday, April 7
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 3-6-1-6
the center of the scandal and
until recently a top adviser
to Varela, said Thursday the
only law that has been broken
so far is the right to his
clients’ privacy. He said the
biggest source of secretive
shell companies is Europe
and the U.S.
“If a company in England
has problems nobody says
anything against England,
but when it happens to a ¿rm
in Panama it’s a big problem
and the entire world beats up
on poor Panama,” Fonseca
told The Associated Press in
an interview.
He said his ¿rm creates
about 20,000 shell compa-
nies annually but also rejects
about 70 to 80 clients every
year due to conÀicts that crop
up during due diligence.
“We’re not perfect and
some surely escape by,” he
said. “But in all our years in
business we’ve never been
accused or condemned by a
court.”
Europe also is home to
countries with a record of
acting like tax havens and
providing banking secrecy
— Luxembourg, Switzer-
land, Andorra, among others.
The United States has also
become a haven, with several
states including Wyoming
and Delaware now popular
places to open anonymous
accounts that are cheap to
maintain and pay little or no
local tax.
Since the ¿rst reports
based on Mossack Fonseca
documents were published
Sunday, prominent politi-
cians, celebrities and busi-
nesspeople have had their
offshore business dealings
dragged into the spotlight.
On Thursday, the German
newspaper that ¿rst obtained
what have been dubbed the
“Panama Papers,” said it
won’t publish all the ¿les,
arguing that not all are of
public interest.
Sueddeutsche
Zeitung
received the documents from
an unidenti¿ed source more
than a year ago and shared
at least parts of them with
dozens of other media outlets
around the world.
Fonseca said his ¿rm
has hired forensic experts to
investigate and have already
uncovered the method used
to penetrate its systems. He
said the hack was probably
carried out from Europe and
dismissed speculation it may
have been an inside job.
Sueddeutsche
Zeitung
and the Washington-based
International
Consortium
of Investigative Journalists,
which helped coordinate
reporting on the leak, have
said they won’t make the
complete set of 11.5 million
documents available to the
public or law enforcement
but rather mine the infor-
mation for details of public
interest.
COMING EVENTS
FRIDAY, APRIL 8
ADULT OPEN GYM, 6-7 a.m.,
Pendleton Recreation Center, 510
6: 'RULRQ $YH +DOIFRXUW EDV-
NHWEDOO
WALKING FOR WELLNESS,
8:30-9:30 a.m., Pendleton Rec-
UHDWLRQ &HQWHU 6: 'RULRQ
$YH
STORY TIME, 10:15-11 a.m.,
Hermiston Public Library, 235 E.
*ODG\V$YH
TODDLER STORY TIME,
10:15-10:45 a.m., Pendleton Pub-
OLF /LEUDU\ 6: 'RULRQ $YH

STORY & CRAFT TIME, 2
p.m., Echo Public Library, 20 Bo-
QDQ]D6W2FW0D\RQO\
AFTER SCHOOL STORY
TIME, 4 p.m., Pendleton Public
/LEUDU\ 6: 'RULRQ $YH
2OGHUVLEOLQJVZHOFRPH
0380).
OPEN REGIONAL PHOTOG-
RAPHY EXHIBIT OPENING RE-
CEPTION, 5 p.m. judge’s critique,
5:30-7 p.m. reception, Pendleton
&HQWHU IRU WKH $UWV 1 0DLQ
St. Non-juried show featuring pho-
tographers from across the region.
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JRULHV LQ DGXOWV DQG RYHU DQG
WHHQV
VFW BINGO, doors open at 6
p.m., games start at 7 p.m., Herm-
LVWRQ9)::&KHUU\6W
GAMER’S NIGHT, 7-10:30
p.m., Pendleton Recreation Cen-
WHU 6: 'RULRQ $YH 7RXU-
QDPHQW JDPLQJ DQG DFWLYLWLHV IRU
WHHQV
SATURDAY, APRIL 9
LIL BUCKS OPEN GYM,
8:30-9:30 a.m., Pendleton Rec-
UHDWLRQ &HQWHU 6: 'RULRQ
$YH)RUVWXGHQWVLQ¿UVWDQGVHF-
ond grade and parents/guardians.
Free basketball skills and pickup
games.
TREE AND SHRUB GIVE-
AWAY, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. or while
supplies last, Roy Raley Park,
6:&RXUW$YH3HQGOHWRQ
6HYHQ KXQGUHG WUHH DQG VKUXE
VHHGOLQJV RQ D ¿UVWFRPH ¿UVW
VHUYHGEDVLV3ODQWLQJDQGSUXQLQJ
demonstrations.
WATERCOLOR
WORK-
SHOP, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Pend-
leton Center for the Arts, 214 N.
0DLQ6W-R\FH$QGHUVRQZLOOOHDG
students through the basics of
watercolor painting. Cost is $60
Contributed photos
A visitor views photos in the 2014 Open Regional
Photography Exhibit at Pendleton Center for the Arts.
This year’s exhibit opens Friday with a judge’s critique at
5 p.m. and a reception from 5:30-7 p.m.
for members, $65 for non-mem-
bers, plus $20 materials fee. Bring
a sack lunch or make arrange-
ments. Pre-registration encour-
DJHG
FREE FOR ALL, 9:30-10:15
a.m. Pendleton Center for the Arts,
10DLQ6W3HQGOHWRQ)DPL-
ly art experience for children up to
age 12. Children under 8 should
EHDFFRPSDQLHGE\DQDGXOW
278-9201).
CAR WASH FUNDRAISER,
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OHWRQ&RVWLVE\GRQDWLRQ%HQH¿WV
0LQDPLVRPD H[FKDQJH VWXGHQWV
IRU-XO\WULS
SAGE SATURDAY, 10 a.m. to
SP 6$*( &HQWHU 2OVRQ
Road, Boardman. Free admission
DQGDFWLYLWLHVIRUFKLOGUHQDQGSDU-
ents. This month, make a glow-in-
WKHGDUN3DFL¿F$OEXVGHFRUDWLRQ

HERMISTON FIRE DISTRICT
OPEN HOUSE, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Cable Station, 32590 Punkin Cen-
ter Road, Hermiston. Stop by,
PHHW ¿UVW UHVSRQGHUV DQG KDYH
your questions answered.
HIP & HANDMADE, 11 a.m.
to noon, Pendleton Center for the
$UWV10DLQ6W3HQGOHWRQ
Free drop-in art project class for
DGXOWV
RENEWAL OF MINISTRY
AND NEW RECTOR WELCOME,
11 a.m., Episcopal Church of the
Redeemer, 241 S.E. Second St.,
3HQGOHWRQ0HHWQHZUHFWRU5HY
&KDUORWWH:HOOVUHIUHVKPHQWVIRO-
ORZLQJWKHVHUYLFH
SATURDAY CRAFT TIME, 11
a.m. to 1 p.m., Hermiston Public
/LEUDU\ ( *ODG\V$YH &UDIW
projects for children ages 5th
grade and younger.
SATURDAY
SEMINAR:
LIGHTEN UP, 11 a.m. to noon, Irri-
JRQ0DULQD3DUN,QIRUPDWLRQDQG
demonstrations on relaxing and
gentle ways to release all types
RILQÀDPPDWLRQ$JHVDQGROG-
er only; refrain from smoking or
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COUNTRY HOEDOWN, 1-4
SP 0LOWRQ)UHHZDWHU 1HLJKERU-
KRRG 6HQLRU &HQWHU 1 0DLQ
6W/LYHPXVLFGDQFLQJDQGVLQJ-
ing. Admission $2, refreshments
DYDLODEOH IRU SXUFKDVH
3311).
EVOLUTION GAME ZONE, 1
p.m., Tamastslikt Cultural Institute,
:LOGKRUVH %OYG 3HQG-
leton. Three stations challenge
Destiny
Theatres
Fri - Tue, April 8 - April 13, 2016
Subject to change. Check times daily.
Hermiston Stadium 8
LOTTERY
Megabucks
08-18-27-35-39-42
Estimated jackpot: $3.8 million
Powerball
04-28-49-60-65
Powerball: 25
Power Play: 2
Estimated jackpot: $148
million
Win for Life
02-27-40-75
Page 5A
Hwy 395 & Theatre Ln - 567-1556
MoviesInHermiston.com
Mike Stratton
G OD ’ S N OT D EAD 2
T HE B OSS
Business
Health
Farm
Life
Mike Stratton, CIC/CFP
541/276-2302 • 800/225-2521
The Stratton Agency
Pendleton / Hermiston • stratton-insurance.com
4/8 - 4/10
Cineplex Show Times
$5 Classic Movie
4/13  12:00 PM
THE LOST BOYS
BATMAN V SUPERMAN:
DAWN OF JUSTICE (PG13)
2D: 12:30* 6:50
3D : 3:40* 10:00
HARDCORE HENRY (R)
12:00* 2:20* 4:30 7:00 9:20
ZOOTOPIA (PG)
2D : 11:40* 4:40
3D : 2:10* 9:40
7:10
THE BOSS (R)
12:10* 2:30* 4:50 7:20 9:50
H ARDCORE H ENRY
(R-17)
M EET T HE B LACKS
(R-17)
GOD’S NOT DEAD 2 (PG)
1:20* 4:00 6:40 9:30
(PG-13)
M Y B IG F AT G REEK W EDDING 2 (PG-13)
M IRACLES F ROM H EAVEN
Z OOTOPIA
SUNDAY, APRIL 10
SPECIAL NEEDS OPEN
GYM, 12 noon to 1:30 p.m., Pend-
OHWRQ5HFUHDWLRQ&HQWHU6:
'RULRQ$YH)UHHIRUVSHFLDOQHHGV
FKLOGUHQ DQG IDPLOLHV
8100).
ADULT OPEN GYM, 6:30-
8:30 p.m., Pendleton Recreation
&HQWHU6:'RULRQ$YH)UHH
DFFHVVIRUDJHVDQGXS
276-8100).
(PG)
(R-17)
B ATMAN V . S UPERMAN
One Responsible Source Agent
gaming skills and knowledge of
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LHV FRPSDULQJ ERQHV DQG '1$
and looking for fossils; competing
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scope. Free and suitable for all
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BLUE MOUNTAIN A’S 40TH
BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION, 2-3
SP3HQGOHWRQ&RQYHQWLRQ&HQ-
ter Happy Canyon rooms 1 & 2,
:HVWJDWH 7KH SXEOLF LV LQ-
YLWHGWRHQMR\WKHPHPRUDELOLDDQG
YLQWDJHFDUVRQGLVSOD\)UHH3DW-
ti Hutchins 541-276-2045).
BINGO @ THE GRANGE,
SP :KLWH (DJOH
*UDQJH:KLWH(DJOH5RDG
3HQGOHWRQ EHWZHHQ 3HQGOHWRQ
and Pilot Rock on Highway 395
South). Cards are 50 cents per
JDPHH[FHSWIRUSURJUHVVLYHMDFN-
SRWDQGODVWJDPHEODFNRXWSHU
FDUG*DLO:LOVRQ
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Check ONLINE for more information!
Credit & Debit Cards accepted
Cineplex gift cards available
* Matinee Pricing
wildhorseresort.com
541-966-1850
Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216