Page 14A Saturday, May 28, 2016 OFF PAGE ONE DISTRACTED: 58 fatalities from 2010-14 in Oregon East Oregonian Continued from 1A Contributed photo Thomas’ father and a friend returned to spot of the attack and found the remains of the bear had been picked apart by scavengers. BEAR: Thomas does not plan to quit hunting Continued from 1A “I just love the mountains, and the thrill of being out there,” he said. “I love to get up close and personal with the animals.” But even he admits this encounter was a little too close. Thomas’ girlfriend, Lacey Caldera, ights back tears as he tells the harrowing story of his trip into the Grande Ronde Valley. Spring season for hunting bears is April 15 through May 31 in the Starkey Unit outside La Grande, and Thomas had gone out by himself to ill his tag. Thomas parked near Tony Vey Meadows and ventured into the woods from there. That’s as speciic as he’ll get about his exact location. The entire area is thick with timber, so Thomas used a predator call to lure bears into the open where he could take a shot. Morning turned to after- noon before an adult male, maybe ive and a half feet long, sauntered out within range. Thomas pulled the trigger and hit the bear in its shoulder, which startled it and sent it bolting downhill. Thomas followed, grabbing his pack and rile, to look for the body. After zig-zagging around trees for about a hundred yards, Thomas said he looked up and was bum-rushed. The bear grabbed him by his right arm and pulled him down before he could even take the safety off his gun. “I’m just kicking and punching as hard as I can,” he said. “It grabbed me by my left leg, and picked me up and started shaking.” Thomas tried forcing the bear’s head down long enough to grab his semi-au- tomatic pistol. The bear bit him numerous times on both legs, shredding the front of his pants. Fortunately, he said the shin-high boots he was wearing kept him from possibly breaking his ankles. Finally, Thomas said he was able to kick the bear hard enough to knock him back and grab the pistol. Just as the bear went for his leg again, he ired two shots: the irst did nothing, but the second pierced the animal’s gut and forced it to retreat. Battered and bloodied, Thomas got to his feet and scrambled back to the top of the ridge where he could use his cellphone, which still worked despite being damaged. “I knew I had to get out of there while I still could,” he said. “Once the adrenaline wears off, sometimes you just fall in a pile.” With blood now pouring out of his legs, Thomas managed to call his step- mother and friend back in Pendleton to tell them what happened. They both called 9-1-1 as Thomas hiked a mile back to his utility vehicle and drove another seven miles back to his truck. Thomas actually passed the Union County sheriff’s deputy and an ambulance on the highway, which were on their way to look for him. They checked his vitals on the road, and allowed him to follow them back to Grande Ronde Hospital in La Grande. Meanwhile, Caldera said she had no idea if her boyfriend was safe or even alive until two hours later. “I don’t know if my heart’s ever going to go back to normal,” she said. “I’m just glad to be able to hold his hand.” “It’s times like this I’m glad he’s stubborn,” she added with a chuckle. Bear attacks are extremely rare in Oregon. Wildlife oficials say it’s only happened four other times, “I don’t blame the bear at all. The bear was fighting for its life, just like I was.” — Shane Thomas, Pendleton hunter and none have been fatal. Two such cases came under similar circumstances, where a wounded bear retaliated against a hunter. “I don’t blame the bear at all,” Thomas said. “The bear was ighting for its life, just like I was.” Doctors at the hospital pumped Thomas full of antibiotics and cleaned his wounds to avoid an infection. Thomas said he’s still sore a week later, and walks with a bit of a limp. He later learned the bear bit down just an inch away from the main arteries on both his thighs, which could have killed him. Despite this, Thomas said he has no intention of quitting hunting — though he said Caldera made him promise to hunt with a partner next bear season. He said he plans to be back at work next week. “I feel pretty dang good, considering the fact,” he said. “I’ll be a lot more cautious when I go to retrieve my next bear.” As for the bear, Thomas said his father and a friend returned to the site and found the animal, which had managed to crawl about 400 yards before it died. They packed up the skull and paws for Thomas to keep as a reminder of the experience. “I was lucky, obviously,” he said. “But I’ll be back up there again next year, doing the exact same thing.” ——— Contact George Plaven at gplaven@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0825. Oregon State Police investigated and deter- mined Alexxyss was using her smartphone throughout her trip. Shannon, 42, now is raising awareness of the dangers of distracted driving. “This is my new project,” she said. “I don’t want any other family to have to go through this.” ——— Shannon was at her apartment in Richland, Washington, plowing through loads of laundry. She had not had a night off in two weeks, she said, when she got a text message from her boss. Both mother and daughter worked at the Tri-Cities Residential Services in Kennewick, Shannon as a counselor and Alexxyss as a caregiver, helping people with disabil- ities improve their social skills. Shannon said only a few people at work knew Alexxyss was her daughter, and the supervisor was texting to ask if they were related. Shannon said she suspected Alexxyss missed work, maybe even quit. After all, she was still a teen. While talking to her boss, she received a voice mail from a police oficer. When she called back, the oficer asked to verify her address. Less than 15 minutes later, a police car arrived. Then a second. And then a third car, and out stepped the county coroner. “I knew at that point there was not good news coming,” she said. She igured her father, Rick Moulton of Herm- iston, had died. He is the brother-in-law of Herm- iston Police Chief Jason Edmiston. That makes Shannon his niece through marriage. She said a Richland police oficer asked to talk with her inside her apart- ment. She pushed back and wanted to know why they were at her home. “They told me Alexxyss was in a car accident and was killed at the scene,” she said. ——— Oregon State Police used Alexxyss’s phone records to determine a time line leading up to the fatal crash. Lt. Mike Turner, commander of the Pendleton ofice, said based on the records and Umatilla County Historical Society Presents: The Old Iron Show Friday - Sunday, June 3 - 5 Experience the sights, sounds and mechanical marvels of an earlier time • Vintage cars, tractors, machinery and early engines • Demonstrations throughout the weekend • Rides for the kids in our tractor train • Old-fashioned, hand-made ice cream In Roy Raley Park (Pendleton) Free Admission for All The Boys are back! Don’t miss this great Portland area band! driving time, Alexxyss never stopped the car when she handled the phone. “Everywhere she had coverage, she was texting, sending and receiving texts, taking calls, sharing and reviewing Facebook pages,” Turner said. Six minutes before the crash, she shared a post on Facebook, he said, and one witness reported Alexxyss was on the phone as she left her lane. “We don’t know she was on her phone at the moment of the crash,” Turner emphasized, “but she was certainly distracted from the roadway and not paying attention, and that led to her crash and death.” The Oregon Department of Transportation deines distractions as “anything that diverts your attention away from focusing on your primary task — oper- ating your vehicle — and responding to what is going on around you.” The agency considers distracted driving an epidemic in Oregon. From 2010-14 in Oregon, according to the department, distracted driving resulted in 16,987 crashes with 14,186 injuries and 58 fatalities. Drivers reported to be using a cellphone at the time of the crash caused 1,419 of those wrecks with 1,175 injuries and 15 fatalities. Drivers 16 to 18 account for 131 crashes in that subset, which resulted in 120 injuries but no deaths. Convictions in Oregon for distracted driving during the same period totaled 88,626. The transportation department contends there should be more, but the distracted driving law, Oregon Revised Statue 811.507, does not take into account how people are using modern technology while driving. The law prohibits drivers from communicating on a hand-held device while driving, but the law says nothing about using a smartphone to listen to music, for example, or as a navigation system or to check social media. The Court of Appeals of Oregon on Aug. 19, 2015, ruled a state trooper did not have probable cause to pull over a driver after seeing her look down at a mobile device in her hand because he never saw her “put the device up to her ear, move her lips as if she were talking, or push any buttons.” The appeals court found the state law applies only to “use of a mobile communication device for the purpose of voice or text communication.” Merely looking down at a mobile device, according to the appeals court, does not violate the law. Offenders in court then, according to ODOT, can claim they used the phone as a music device and avoid legal consequences. The new speed limit on Interstate 84 in Eastern Oregon and on some other state roads is 70 mph. Cars at that speed cover almost 103 feet in one second. The Virginia Tech Transportation Institute in 2009 found drivers who text take their eyes off the road 4.6-seconds over a six-second interval. ——— Shannon said while Alexxyss was not living with her at the time, she has not changed her daughter’s room. She said she some- times expects a call from her or to see her at home. She also has helped her other daughter understand the loss. Ashlynn Ther- whanger, 21, is autistic and lives in Hayden Lake, Idaho. Shannon said she wanted a way for Ashlynn to remember her sister, “I told her she has a guardian angle who now lives in her heart,” Shannon said, “and we protect out heart.” They talk about once a week, and Ashlynn brings up Alexxyss each time. And each time, Shannon Paid Advertisement Rogers Toyota of Hermiston 1550 N. First St. Hermiston OR 97838 HUGE INVENTORY SELL DOWN Now Through Tuesday, May 31, 2016 Residents of Hermiston, Oregon and surrounding areas, Here at Rogers, we have recently had a huge inlux of New Toyotas and Quality pre-owned vehicles. Our future inventory levels rely greatly on how quickly we can sell this inventory. In effort to make sure we can continuously provide you with the best selection of new Toyota’s and Quality pre-owned Vehicles, WE MUST SELL ALL OF OUR EXISTING INVENTORY NOW!! In order to do this we are going to provide you with our biggest savings of the year by offering every vehicle on our lot at EMPLOYEE PRICING plus $1. That means you pay $1 over what our 30 employees pay and what I pay when purchasing one of our vehicles. Plus, you get to couple that with some of the biggest rebates, special leases, and lowest interest rates from Toyota that we have seen all year. There are no exceptions: New Rav4, Camry, Corolla, Prius, Tundra, Sienna, Sequoia, Avalon, Highlander, 4Runner, Prius C, Tacoma, Prius V, Yaris, Land Cruiser, Certiied Toyota, or one of our 100 pre-owned vehicles, you pay what employees pay plus $1. Not only do you pay $1 over employee price, but if you have a pre-owned vehicle of your own that you would like to trade in or would like to sell you will get to take advantage of one of the strongest used car markets we have seen in the last decade. That means you get more for your trade. • Huge inventory • Used cars from $4,995 Sat. May 28, 2016 8:00 pm said, she tells Ashlynn her sister is in her heart. Then she asks, “What do we do.” Ashlynn answers, “We protect out heart.” Shannon also hears from Alexxyss’s friends who ask if they can stop and visit. “It’s fun hearing the stories from her friends,” she said, “but it’s hard, too.” Shannon divorced from the girls’ father, Tobby Therwhanger, of Lubbock, Texas, less than a year after giving birth to Alexxyss. But in March 2015 he reached out to Alexxyss, and she grew curious. Shannon said that her daughter then lew to Texas a year ago to meet her father. After that, they stayed in touch about every over week. Shannon said it was good they were rebuilding their relationship. She said she cherishes every memory she has of Alexxyss. ——— Shannon was in Pend- leton about two weeks ago to help the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation and Oregon State Police make public service ads on the dangers of distracted driving. Alexxyss’s story is central to the campaign. Turner said those ads could start airing in the next week or so. Shannon said since her daughter died, she has stopped messing with her phone when she drives, and she sees it everywhere she goes. She said she gets on relatives, friends and co-workers who do it. “Just pull over if it’s that important,” she said. A few seconds of distraction can change your whole world, she said, and her daughters were her world. “ ... My world kind of crashed,” Shannon said. “I have only half a world.” Saturday would have been Alexxyss’s 20th birthday. ——— Contact Phil Wright at pwright@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0833. • New car payments from $99/mo ** • 0% interest on 10 new Toyota models * • 2 years or 25,000 miles No Cost Maintenance and Roadside Assistance on all new Toyotas In summary, come in today to take advantage of the our lowest prices, your highest trade-in values, and the best inancing of the year! Sincerely, Glenn Silaski Glenn Silaski General Manager Rogers Toyota of Hermiston New and Used Car Inventory Tundra • Tacoma • Rav4 • Corolla • Sienna Camry • Highlander • Prius Family • 4Runner Over 100 Quality Pre-Owned Vehicles *Stk# 16T381A 2005 Buick Rendezvous $4,995. **Stk #16T394 2016 Toyota Corolla S Plus. MSRP $21,125. Now $19,046 after $1,000 lease cash from Toyota Financial Services. 3yr/12k mile year lease. All payments plus ttd. LEV $13,309. $2,999 cash or trade up front. Vehicles eligible for 0% on 60 months on approved credit are as follows: 2016 Camry, 2016 Camry Hybrid, 2016 Prius Liftback, 2016 Prius V, 2016 Avalon, 2016 Avalon Hybrid, 2016 Sienna, 2016 Rav4 and 2016 Rav4 Hybrid. No security deposit required. A documentary service fee of $75 may be added to vehicle price or capitalized cost. Does not include taxes, license, title, processing fees, insurance and dealer charges. For questions or more information go to www.toyotaofhermiston.com or call 541-567-6461