East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 24, 2016, WEEKEND EDITION, Page Page 7A, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    RECORDS
Saturday, December 24, 2016
East Oregonian
Page 7A
Berlin attack suspect slain in
WARRANTS shootout with Milan police
Saturday, Dec. 24, 2016
Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office
Judith Geraldine Enick
Age: 28 Sex: F
FTA, DUII
Bail: $5,000
Last known location: Pendleton
Steven Matthew Fullerton
Age: 55 Sex: M
FTA, Theft
Bail:$1,250
Last known location: Pendleton
Michael Frank Harer
Age: 67 Sex: M
FTA, DUII
No bail
Last known location: Dale
Shane Michael Mahoney
Age: 45 Sex: M
FTA, Criminal Trespass
Bail: $2,000
Last known location: Kooskia, ID
Petronilo Mendoza Fabian
Age: 26 Sex: M
FTA, DUII, Failure to carry/present license
Bail: $20,000
Last known location: Kennewick, WA
NO
PHOTO
Alfredo Orozco Nieto
Age: 30 Sex: M
FTA, Possession of Forged Instrument,
Forgery
Bail: $30,000
Last known location: Jerome, ID
Michael Joe Reynolds
Age: 38 Sex: M
FTA, Harassment
Bail: $10,000
Last known location: Athena
Kevin James Richards
Age: 60 Sex: M
FTA, Failure to Appear
Bail: $10,000
Last known location: College Place, WA
Michael Joseph Rodgers
Age: 34 Sex: M
FTA, DUII
No bail
Last known location: Lewiston, ID
Edward Lee Sellers
Age: 57 Sex: M
FTA, Resisting Arrest, Disorderly Conduct,
Harassment
Bail: $5,000
Last known location: Milton-Freewater
Warrants on the above persons were active at the time the list
was created, however wanted status is subject to change at any-
time. If whereabouts are known, please report immediately to
law enforcement by calling our 24 hours dispatch center at 541-
966-3651 or by calling 911 if an emergency.
COURTS
SUITS FILED
PENDLETON — The follow-
ing suits have been filed in
Umatilla County courts:
•Ray Klein Inc. dba Profes-
sional Credit Service vs. Ri-
cardo Galan: seeks $744.88
plus interest, costs and fees.
•Credits Inc. vs. Carlynn I.
and Jonathan Stowers-Pells:
seeks $3,848.98
•Discover Bank vs. Timothy
W. Mullanix: seeks $4,379.31
•Discover Bank vs. Erica V.
Sandoval: seeks $1,719.41
•Ray Klein Inc. dba Profes-
sional Credit Service vs.
Yvonne Webster: seeks
$511.75
•Midland Funding LLC vs.
Gray Leclair: seeks $1,663.49
•Kara Martin vs. Carrold An-
derson: seeks $47,855 plus
costs and fees.
•William Barrett vs. Carrold
Anderson: seeks $333,877
plus costs and fees.
•Colette Barrett vs. Carrold
Anderson: seeks $68,373.34
plus costs and fees.
•Imelda Coria Madrigal
vs. Carol T. Grover: seeks
$181,000 plus costs and
fees.
JUDGMENTS
PENDLETON — The follow-
ing judgments have been
rendered in Umatilla County
courts:
•Portfolio Recovery Associ-
ates LLC vs. Agustin Torres:
judgment for $2,689.97
•Credits Inc. vs. Joseph and
Lisa (fka Potter) Day: judg-
ment for $1,403.21
•Professional Service Bu-
reau vs. Ryan Gordan Mc-
Laren and Tammie K. Mings
Gordan McLaren: judgment
for $1,094.54
•Credits Inc. vs. Heather and
Jody Collins: judgment for
$502.65
•Credits Inc. vs. Kyle L. and
Tessie Shelley; judgment for
$1,780.07
•Credits Inc. vs. Mitchell Har-
mon: judgment for $3,713.41
•Credits Inc. vs. Daniel and
Charmayne M. Szulewski:
judgment for $2,643.42
•United Finance Co. vs.
Cathy Garcia Rodgers: judg-
ment for $2,196.05
SENTENCES
PENDLETON — The follow-
ing felony sentences have
been imposed in Umatilla
County courts:
•Bryson Steward Azure, 21,
Pendleton, pleaded guilty
to Assault IV: sentenced to
3 years probation, 180 sanc-
tion units, 90 maximum jail
units, 160 hours community
service and $2,000 fine-sus-
pended; pleaded guilty to
Recklessly Endangering An-
other Person: sentenced to
180 days jail-suspended, 3
years probation, 40 hours
community service and
$1,000 fine-suspended, plus
court costs and fees.
DIVORCES
PENDLETON — Divorce de-
crees were signed in Umatil-
la County Courts for:
Murandalee Cate and Roy
Elbert Cate; Guadalupe San-
doval and Alvaro Sandoval;
Shanda Jo Zessin and Greg-
ory Ivan Zessin.
MARRIAGES
PENDLETON — Marriage li-
censes have been registered
in Umatilla County for:
Christian John Albrecht, 25,
and Danielle Elizabeth Harp-
ster, 23, both of Kennewick,
Wash.
Alvaro Ramirez Salas, 45,
and Martha Garcia Solis, 46,
both of Hermiston.
Gilberto Temiquel Roman,
35, and Shanice Danae
Friend, 23, both of Pendle-
ton.
MILAN (AP) — A routine
request for ID papers outside
a deserted train station in
Milan at 3 a.m. Friday led to
a police shootout that killed
the Tunisian fugitive wanted
in the deadly Christmas
market attack in Berlin.
While
authorities
expressed relief that the
search for Anis Amri was
over, his four-day run raised
fresh questions about whether
he had any accomplices and
how Europe can stop extrem-
ists from moving freely
across its open borders, even
amid an intense manhunt.
Italian police said Amri
traveled from Germany
through France and into Italy
after Monday night’s truck
rampage in Berlin, and at least
some of his journey was by
rail. French officials refused
to comment on his passage
through France, which has
increased surveillance on
trains after recent attacks in
France and Germany.
Italian Premier Paolo
Gentiloni called for greater
cross-border police coopera-
tion, suggesting some dismay
that Europe’s open frontier
policy had enabled Amri to
move around easily despite
being its No. 1 fugitive.
Amri, whose fingerprints
and wallet were found in
the truck that plowed into
Christmas market outside
Berlin’s Kaiser Wilhelm
Memorial Church, killing 12
people and injuring 56 others,
was caught seemingly by
chance after eluding police
for more than three days.
“He was a ghost,” Milan
police chief Antoio de Iesu
said, adding that Amri was
stopped because of basic
police work, intensified
surveillance “and a little
luck.”
Like other cities, Milan
has been on heightened alert,
with increased surveillance
and police patrols. Italian
officials stressed that the two
young officers who stopped
Amri didn’t suspect he was
the Berlin attacker, but rather
grew suspicious because he
was a North African man,
alone outside a deserted train
station in the dead of night.
Amri, who had spent
time in prison in Italy, was
confronted by the officers
AP Photo/Michael Sohn
People walk past candles and flowers after the reopening of the Christmas market
at the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in Berlin, Germany, Thursday, three days
after a truck ran into the crowded market killing 12 people and injuring 56 others.
ANSA via AP
Anis Amri, a 24-year-old Tunisian, was shot dead
early Friday by police conducting a routine stop in Milan
after he opened fire on them.
in the Sesto San Giovanni
neighborhood of Milan. He
pulled a gun from his back-
pack after being asked to
show his ID and was killed
in an ensuing shootout.
One of the officers, Chris-
tian Movio, 35, was shot in
the right shoulder and had
surgery for what doctors said
was a superficial wound. His
29-year-old partner, Luca
Scata, fatally shot Amri in
the chest.
The suspect had no ID or
cellphone and carried only a
pocket knife and the loaded
.22-caliber pistol he used to
shoot Movio, police said. He
was identified with the help
of fingerprints supplied by
Germany.
The Islamic State group
has claimed responsibility
for Monday’s attack. On
Friday, it noted his death in
Milan and released a sepa-
rate video showing Amri
swearing allegiance to the
group’s leader, Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, while vowing
to fight non-Muslims.
The
video,
which
appeared to have been taken
by Amri himself, showed
him on a footbridge in
northern Berlin, not far from
where the truck used in the
attack was hijacked. It was
not known when the video
was taken.
German authorities were
suspicious of Amri and
had put him under covert
surveillance for six months
following a warning from
intelligence agencies that he
might be planning an attack.
But the surveillance ended
in September after police
found no proof of his alleged
plans.
Separately,
German
authorities tried to deport
Amri after his asylum
application was rejected in
July but were unable to do
so because he lacked valid
identity papers, and Tunisia
initially denied that he was
a citizen. Authorities said he
has used at least six different
names and three nationali-
ties.
Even as she voiced relief
at the news from Milan,
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel ordered a compre-
hensive investigation to
determine whether mistakes
had been made and legal
hurdles had hampered the
authorities’ handling of the
case.
“We can be relieved at
the end of this week that
one acute danger has been
ended,” she said in Berlin.
“But the danger of terrorism
as a whole remains, as it has
for many years — we all
know that.”
Bundy wants hearing to challenge detention status
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The eldest
son of jailed Nevada cattleman Cliven
Bundy asked again Friday for a chance
to argue that he’s no threat to others and
wouldn’t skip town if he’s released from
custody ahead of his trial on
charges stemming from an
armed standoff with federal
agents at his family’s ranch.
“They are holding me, and
have been holding me, for
almost a year based on lies,”
Ryan Bundy told U.S. Magis-
trate Judge George Foley Jr.
“The truth will set me
free,” the defendant said — in Bundy
an apparent echo of a biblical
passage.
Foley said he’ll make a written deci-
sion soon but didn’t say when.
Ryan Bundy, 44, is serving as his
own attorney in Nevada, just as he did
during a six-week federal trial in Port-
land, Oregon, where a jury acquitted
him, his brother, Ammon Bundy, and
five other people of conspiracy and
weapon charges in a 41-day occupation
of a federal wildlife refuge.
In Oregon, Bundy sometimes
clashed with the judge about what she
termed “frivolous matters”
and issues that had been previ-
ously decided. He said during
closing arguments that injus-
tice anywhere is a threat to
justice anywhere — echoing
the words of the Rev. Martin
Luther King.
Ryan and Ammon Bundy
both refused earlier this month
to enter a federal courtroom
in Las Vegas for a lengthy
pretrial and date-setting
hearing before a different magistrate
judge.
The brothers and their father are
among 17 people jailed while awaiting
trial on conspiracy, obstruction,
weapon, threat and other charges. Two
other defendants have pleaded guilty
and remain in federal custody awaiting
sentencing.
Trial is slated to begin Feb. 6 in Las
Vegas for the first six defendants, who
prosecutors characterize as “followers
and gunmen” in the tense 2014 show-
down that blocked a federal Bureau of
Land Management round-up of Bundy
cattle from public land.
Trial for the accused conspiracy
leaders and organizers — Cliven,
Ammon and Ryan Bundy, and co-de-
fendants Peter Santilli and Ryan Payne
— is set to start 30 days after the first
trial ends.
Ryan Bundy on Friday labeled
the incident outside Bunkerville as
“the so-called standoff” and called it
“completely non-violent.”
He said he believes that if he gets a
chance to question prosecutors, char-
acter witnesses and his family members
under oath, he can convince the judge
that he’s not a threat and would attend
future court appearances.
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
THURSDAY
12:34 a.m. - Echo residents on North
Prescott Street reported a possum was behind
their refrigerator and they could not get it out of
the house.
3:11 a.m. - A caller told Pendleton police his
mother in Weston threatened to kill his animals
because he did not give her a ride to work. He
said he was in en route to her house.
8:09 a.m. - A woman told Hermiston police a
male sent her threatening text messages.
8:23 a.m. - Hermiston police responded to a
woman who said she had to go to neighbors to
get away from domestic abuse.
9:30 a.m. - Two large sheep stood in the
road at Tutuilla Road and Southwest Nye
Avenue, Pendleton.
9:56 a.m. - Hermiston police looked for a
car a caller said inched by her on West Theater
Lane while she unloaded items from her
pickup.
10:32 a.m. - The Umatilla County Sheriff’s
Office received a report of possible animal
neglect at a residence on Echols Road,
Hermiston.
11:05 a.m. - A Pendleton resident at
apartments on Southeast Byers Avenue told
police she was out of hot water for 11 days
after her landlord went to the hospital, one unit
was without electricity for most of the month,
and someone may have stolen her electricity
because her power bill went from $70 to $220.
12:21 p.m. - A Umatilla resident on
Columbia Boulevard reported the theft of items
from her apartment.
5:31 p.m. - Morrow County Sheriff’s Office
and other emergency services responded to
the Boardman area of Interstate 84 on reports
of multiple wrecks, including a second-hand
report that an 18-wheeler tipped over.
11:43 p.m. - A woman told police a man in
his 50s is stalking and harassing her.
11:56 p.m. - Fire destroyed a semi-tractor
after it came off Cabbage Hill about seven
miles east of Pendleton.
Oregon State Police reported the west-
bound 2013 Freightliner lost braking power due
to going too fast. The driver, Scott Burkman,
46, of Odgen, Utah, pulled over at milepost
217, and the semi ignited. He detached the
trailer, though, before flames fully engulfed the
semi.
The fire and smoke shut down the west-
bound lanes for about 45-50 minutes while the
Umatilla Tribal Fire Department extinguished
the fire.
FRIDAY
12:43 a.m. - A man on East Juniper Avenue,
Hermiston, reported he woke up and found “a
bunch of stolen items in his house,” and his two
roommates could be the thieves.
12/23-12/27
Cineplex Show Times
$5 Classic Movie
12/28
SECRET OF NIHM
Rogue One (PG13)
2D 1:00* 7:00
3D 4:00 10:00
Assassins Creed (PG13)
2D 12:30* 3:40* 6:40
3D 9:30
Sing (PG)
2D 11:20* 2:20 6:50 9:40
3D 4:20
Passengers (PG13)
2D 11:30* 4:50 7:20 9:50
3D 1:50*
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
Friday
•Hermiston police arrested Robyn Lynn
Zook, 35, of Boardman, for possession of
heroin, possession of cocaine, and tampering
with physical evidence.
•Oregon State Police arrested Bakhtiyer
Ayatdinovich Sayfatov, 47, no address
provided, for driving under the influence of
intoxicants.
Collateral Beauty (PG13)
12:20* 2:30* 4:40 7:10 9:20
Credit & Debit Cards accepted
Cineplex gift cards available
* Matinee Pricing
wildhorseresort.com
541-966-1850
Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216