Visit the Pendleton Round-Up Gift Shop for a free keychain MARILYN LUTGEN OF ARLINGTON SEAHAWKS READY FOR CAMP FROOME BOOSTS LEAD NFL/1B TOUR DE FRANCE/3B FRIDAY, JULY 22, 2016 140th Year, No. 200 Your Weekend One dollar WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Wheeler Co. judge faces recall Perry accused of relationship with young subordinate • • • Pendleton Bike Week rolls on through weekend The Fire Scottish Quartet in Pendleton Portland Biennial Art Exhibit, artist receptions For times and places see Coming Events, 5A By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Wheeler County Judge Patrick C. Perry is the latest elected offi cial in Eastern Oregon to face a recall. A petition to recall Perry received 169 valid signatures, which were more than enough to place it on the ballot in rural Wheeler County — population 1,381. Perry has indicated he will not resign, and a special recall election will be held Monday, Aug. 15. Seven county offi cials already called on Perry to resign in April: Treasurer Sandra Speer; Clerk Barbara Sitton; Assessor Donald Cossitt; Justice of the Peace Robin Ordway; Commis- sioners Lynn Morley and Robert Ordway; and Sheriff Chris Humphreys. They cited “serious allegations” that have tainted Perry’s leadership, but did not go into details. The Wheeler County Sheriff’s Offi ce and District Attorney’s Offi ce forwarded allegations to the Oregon Department of Justice on April 29. A spokeswoman for the DOJ confi rmed there is an investigation into Perry, but could not provide additional See PERRY/10A Perry Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun 82/54 84/53 90/58 Warning shot fi red at EOCI to stop inmate brawl By East Oregonian Correctional offi cers at EOCI fi red a warning shot Thursday after dozens of inmates brawled in the west recreation yard. No injuries to inmates or guards were reported by press time. According to a press release from the Oregon Department of Correc- tions, a number of inmates engaged in a “series of fi ghts” about 2:30 p.m. in a yard at Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution in Pendleton. Staff fi rst deployed pepper spray on the inmates, but the fi ghting continued. Later “a warning shot was fi red into a designated safe area,” said the DOC. After the shot was fi red, the inmates stopped fi ghting, according to the release. A total of 47 inmates were placed in special housing for their involve- ment in the altercations. The institution remains on full lockdown, and visiting is canceled until further notice. The fi ghts and gunshot is under investigation, according to the DOC. The cause of the brawl is unknown at this time. Inmates will be interviewed in order to determine how many were involved in the fi ght, EOCI spokesperson Jackie Peck said. Mystery on the Columbia Human skeleton found along riverbank, identity unknown U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Offi cer 1st Class Levi Read This March 21 fi le photo shows the Columbia River near Cathlamet, Wash. 4,000 new unidentifi ed remains are found every year in the U.S. By NATALIE ST. JOHN EO Media Group CATHLAMET, WASH. — Wearing Levi’s, a red button-down shirt, gaiters and hiking boots, the skeleton recently found on the bank of the Columbia River looked like it was dressed for a hike. By the time a boater discovered him in late May a remote area near Pillar Rock, about 27 river miles upstream from the Pacifi c, the unidentifi ed man’s only possessions were a 1999 penny and a lens cloth in his jeans pocket. But he still had his teeth, complete with good-quality, modern dental work. To Wahkiakum County Coroner Dan Bigelow, it seemed like a decent starting point for an investigation. But two months later, he is still trying to fi nd the man’s name. While his list of possible identities for the middle-aged man keeps growing, his list of promising leads has dwindled to practically nothing. “Just about anybody who disap- peared anywhere in the Columbia River basin could credibly be this person,” Bigelow said in early July. Despite these setbacks, Bigelow is still trying to fi nd out who the man was, and how he ended up in Wahkiakum County. He recently delivered the remains to the state’s only certifi ed forensic anthropolo- gist, and he is taking a closer look at missing persons cases from across the Northwest and beyond. “It’s a hell of a shame,” Bigelow said. “I can’t help thinking there is somebody out there looking for this guy.” Bones on river banks The source of so much life, the Columbia’s deep waters and swift currents are also implicated in a lot of deaths. According to an ongoing Oregonian analysis, at least 36 people have drowned in the Columbia since August 2006. The river also inevitably tempts individuals faced with the pressing dilemma of where to dispose of a body. In September 2006, a couple found a large bag fl oating in the river near Portland. It contained the dismembered remains of Doug Adamson, 52. In August 2012, Grant County, Wash., deputies recovered 75-year-old Toshio Ota, a missing Seattle man. He was the victim of a homicide by blunt-force trauma. In January 2015, boaters discovered the body of Jessica Newton, 40, on Bachelor Island near Ridgefi eld. She too had died a violent death. Bigelow knows all about the misfortune that can wash in with the tide. In 1998 — well before he was elected — a local found a dead woman on a small island in the river. To his regret, no one has ever been able to identify her. See COLUMBIA/10A Trump says America in crisis — and he’ll fi x it ‘fast’ By JULIE PACE and ROBERT FURLOW Associated Press AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite Republican Presidential Candidate Donald J. Trump, speaks during the fi nal day of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Thursday. CLEVELAND — Declaring America in crisis, Donald Trump pledged to cheering Republicans and still-skeptical voters Thursday night that as presi- dent he will restore the safety they fear they’re losing, strictly curb immigration and save the nation from Hillary Clinton’s record of “death, destruction, terrorism and weakness.” Confi dently addressing the fi nale of his party’s less-than-smooth national convention, the billionaire businessman declared the nation’s problems too staggering to be fi xed within the confi nes of traditional politics. More inside Ivanka Trump raises issues father rarely mentions PAGE 9A “I have joined the political arena so that the powerful can no longer beat up on people that cannot defend themselves,” Trump said. The 70-year-old celebrity businessman’s acceptance of the Republican nomina- tion caps his improbable takeover of the GOP, a party that plunges into the general election united in opposition to Clinton but still divided over Trump. Underscoring his unorthodox candidacy, Trump doubled down on the See TRUMP/10A