CURT & CAROL NEWBY OF HERMISTON WORLD/8A Visit Antiques and Art on Main in Pendleton for a vintage cookie cutter and $10 coupon ACTIVIST DISCOVERS iPHONE SPYWARE MUSTANGS READY FOR TITLE DEFENSE FOOTBALL/1B FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 2016 140th Year, No. 225 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Your Weekend Avoid, deny, defend CRASE trains civilians to respond to active shooters By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian • • Molly’s Revenge live at the Pendleton arts center Wheatstock at Quantum 9 Arena, Helix For times and places see Coming Events, 5A Catch a movie Staff photo by E.J. Harris Hermiston Police Sgt. Bill Osborne talks about mass shooters during a CRASE training Thursday in Hermiston. It’s one of the most high-stress situations a person can be in: A gunman enters a building, opening fi re on everyone in sight as crowds attempt to fl ee or hide. In the panic, it’s easy for people to freeze, or do other things that increase their chance of being harmed. The Civilian Response to Active Shooter Events course offered for free by the Hermiston Police Department gives people tools to reduce their chances of being harmed. “Nobody in here is helpless,” Sgt. Bill Osborne told Umatilla-Morrow Head Start staff members during a training on Thursday. The message shared over and over again during the three-hour course: In an See CRASE/10A 51 years later, Veteran receives Purple Heart Gordon Timpen/Sony/Screen Gems via AP “Don’t Breathe” The perfect heist goes awry when a trio of thieves break into the house of a wealthy blind man. For showtime, Page 5A Helicopter blade slammed into soldier’s head in Vietnam By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun 89/63 92/61 87/57 ODOT’s lax quality control raises questions of fraud By NICK BUDNICK Capital Bureau Potholes and ruts cost the average Oregonian driver hundreds of dollars in vehicle repairs every year. But as Oregon Department of Transportation Director Matt Garrett prepares to ask lawmakers for hundreds of millions of dollars in increased taxes and fees on Oregonians to fund new roads and bridge upgrades, documents show that his department has for more than a decade resisted basic quality improvements intended to stop construction fraud, combat premature potholes and make roads last longer. Federal highway offi cials have warned ODOT repeat- See ODOT/10A Decades after a helicopter blade struck Ron Esselstyn’s head, he fi nally received his Purple Heart. The Pendleton soldier almost died 51 years ago in Vietnam at age 22 after an Army helicopter carrying him and other soldiers landed in a rice paddy and Esselstyn hopped out. When a Viet Cong sniper popped up from the weeds, the soldier jumped off balance into the chopper’s moving tail rotor. The blade hit with such force that it mashed part of Esselstyn’s fi berglass helmet into his brain. His parents got a telegram calling their son’s prognosis “guarded.” When he awoke, speech eluded him. His doctors suspected he would never walk again. The Pendleton man, once called “The Cat” by basketball teammates, surprised everyone by not only walking, but eventually running more than 100 marathons. He fi nished college and started a career as a tax appraiser at the Umatilla County Assessor’s Offi ce. Esselstyn didn’t receive his Purple Heart. The veteran believed he wasn’t eligible because he was technically an “advisor,” not a combat troop. Possibly he was passed over because of a misunderstanding of Army regulation, which bars soldiers from receiving Purple Hearts for vehicular accidents that weren’t Staff photos by Kathy Aney TOP: Ron Esselstyn has tears come to his eyes as Oregon Department of Veterans Affairs Op- erations Director Ed Van Dyke pins a Purple Heart on his chest Thursday afternoon at the Jon- athan M. Wainwright Memorial VA Medical Center. The awards cer- emony comes 51 years after a helicopter blade hit him in the head during confl ict in Vietnam. LEFT: A Purple Heart was one of eight medals, badges and ribbons re- ceived by Ron Esselstyn 51 years after a helicop- ter rotor hit him in the head during confl ict in Vietnam. caused by enemy action. Last year, Oregon Depart- ment of Veteran’s Affairs Operations Director Ed Van Dyke began researching Esselstyn’s service record and found that he was eligible for the Purple Heart and seven other medals, ribbons and badges. On Thursday afternoon at the Jonathan M. Wainwright Memorial VA Medical Center in Walla Walla, the 73-year-old veteran fi nally got his medals in front of a crowd of about 75 gathered in the Outpatient Center Atrium. Esselstyn sat in his See VETERAN/10A PENDLETON Boy recovers from brain surgery with help from community Tumor removed from 3-year-old’s brain By WILL DENNER East Oregonian Life is returning to normal for Drew Gunnels and her family a month after doctors removed a tumor from her three-year-old son’s brain. Seamus, an outgoing boy, started showing symptoms in July when he would suddenly stop moving. The family fi rst thought he was acting, but soon found out that he was having seizures. An MRI revealed Seamus had a ganglioglioma tumor — usually benign — on his frontal lobe. Seamus under- went a six-hour operation at Portland’s Doernbecher Staff photo by E.J. Harris Children’s Hospital in Seamus Gunnels, 3, shows his mother, Drew Gunnels, a Lego action fi gure at which the whole tumor was their home Wednesday in Pendleton. successfully removed. A few weeks of recovery later, Seamus has rejoined his six-year-old brother, Atticus, at Lil Angels day care. Drew is back at her Columbia Care Services job, and the Pend- leton community continues to support the family. A scar on his scalp reminds the family of a whirlwind month, but also a lesson not to take life for granted. “We were very lucky in the sense that it wasn’t anything worse, but it could’ve been,” Gunnels said. “That’s a big eye opener.” Doctors told Gunnels there is a chance the tumor could return cancerous. Atticus was the fi rst person to tell Gunnels of See SEAMUS/10A