STANFIELD ADVANCES IN FIRST ROUND WEEKEND EDITION ‘HACKSAW RIDGE’ STORMS DEMOCRATS COULD LOSE SUPERMAJORITY OREGON/10A INTO THEATERS REVIEW/3C FOOTBALL/1B NOVEMBER 5-6, 2016 141st Year, No. 15 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Trapped inside Transgender inmates report harassment, isolation behind bars Reed Former Herald owner dies at age 81 By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Born a boy, Michale James Wright realized early on that a physical body some- times doesn’t correctly depict the gender of the person inside. He felt he was really a she — with a bad wrapping job. Wright wrestled with how to change her male body to match her true self and started dressing in female clothing. As a teen, she fell into drugs and alcohol to dim her depression and fi nally committed a crime. In prison, Wright alleges she became the target of bullying and harassment from other inmates and sometimes even prison staff. Wright, who goes by Michelle and is incarcerated at the Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla, recently fi led suit against the Oregon Department of Correc- tions. Represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon Foundation, Wright, 25, says the state is withholding critical medical treatment. The denial of treatment, according to the formal complaint, violates the inmate’s right under the Eighth Amendment to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. According to the complaint, a prison physician diagnosed Wright in 2014 with gender dysphoria — when gender identity doesn’t match gender assigned at birth — but no hormone therapy was prescribed. Wright requested medical help nearly 100 times. Wright, in prison for attempted robbery, became increasingly discouraged and suicidal during the last couple of years. She slashed her wrist. She swallowed 14 pieces of a razor blade. She tried to self-castrate several times using a string from her mattress, a rubber band that was left in place fi ve days and fi nally a razor blade. She wrote “I am female” on her cell wall with her own blood. Prison staff, the complaint says, mocked her and told her to “man up.” “I have been aware for quite some time that I am a female inside, but quite clearly my insides aren’t really matched to my exterior,” she recently told ACLU legal director Mat Dos Santos during a video interview from prison. Dos Santos said the DOC is denying life-saving care. He describes Wright’s condition as a widely accepted medical diagnosis that has offi cial standards of care that weren’t met in Wright’s case. The standards, he said, are accepted by the American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association, U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Corrections and others. BY JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Gerald Michael “Jerry” Reed, 81, former owner and publisher of the Hermiston Herald, died Friday morning in Hermiston. Reed, who bought a minority ownership stake in the paper in 1969, became the sole owner in 1974, building the Herald’s staff, coverage and page count and garnering multiple awards, until selling the paper to Western Commu- nication Inc. of Bend in 1992. He was a past president of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association and American Newspaper Representatives and was one of the charter members of the Hermiston Development Corporation, which attracted employers and jobs to Herm- iston throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Around 1978 Reed brought the Hermiston Herald into a merger with Dick Nafsinger of the Hood River News and Denny Smith of the Blue- Mountain Eagle Newspaper Company, forming Eagle Newspapers Inc. Reed served as vice president of Eagle See REED/12A TRAVIS EYNON OF UMATILLA Enjoy a free double scoop of Tillamook ice cream at the SAGE Center See PRISON/12A Legislators support clawback of bad energy tax credits By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — Members of a legislative committee assessing the future of the state’s energy department agreed Friday that they would “encourage” the Oregon Department of Justice to fi nd ways to recoup money lost to renewable energy projects that may have improperly received tax credits. The Business Energy Tax Credit program, referred to by its acronym, BETC, has become the bane of the Department of Energy in recent years, after allega- tions that the program was improperly administered. All in all, about $1 billion worth of tax credits were issued to scores of wind, solar and other renewable energy projects, and more than $300 million worth of credits have been called into question after auditors labeled scores of projects “suspicious” or “concerning.” Although auditors hired to inspect the program this year See CREDITS/12A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Hammer out the details Jane Rodriguez, a fashion designer from Port Orchard, Wash., uses a maul and leather tool to work on a piece of leather art Friday at the Pendleton Leather Show. The leather show will continue Saturday from 9 a.m to 5p.m. at the Pendleton Convention Center.