WOLVES KILL ALPACA IN UNION COUNTY TRAIL BLAZERS BREAK 5-GAME LOSING STREAK OREGON/2A SPORTS/1B 33/26 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2017 142nd Year, No. 41 WINNER OF THE 2017 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD One dollar HERMISTON Hit-and-run leads to discovery of large illegal marijuana stash East Oregonian Rhoades An investigation following a failed traffi c stop early Wednesday morning led police to fi nd an illegal marijuana operation in a Hermiston apartment. Hermiston arrested Richard Rhoades, 27, of Hermiston, and confi scated 75 pounds of mari- juana, distribution paraphernalia and multiple guns, including one that had been reported stolen. The case began when police attempted to stop a car for a traffi c violation at 1 a.m. near the inter- section of South 1st Street and West Highland Ave., according to a press release from Hermiston police. The driver sped off and eluded offi cers after a short pursuit. With the help of Oregon State Police, offi cers later found the vehicle crashed into a house on SW 16th Street where it had also hit an electrical supply box. No one was injured. But the driver, who police now believe was Rhoades, was nowhere to be found. See MARIJUANA/8A Photo contributed by Hermiston Police Department About 75 pounds of marijuana, packaging material, scales and other paraphernalia, two rifl es and two handguns — including one reported stolen — were recovered from an apartment during the investigation into a hit-and-run in Hermiston. HEPPNER PENDLETON DA confi rms identities of offi cers, victim in shooting By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian of three. Shuffl ed to 38 foster homes throughout her youth, she fell out of a tree when she was 14, and her injuries left her paralyzed from the waist down. Workman ran into another challenge about three years ago, when Les, her husband of 29 years, passed away. “It breaks my heart,” Workman said. “I loved him Baker County District Attorney Matt Shirtcliff confi rmed Wednesday the identities of the offi cers and suspect in the recent Pendleton police shooting. Shirtcliff said Sgt. Tyler Reddington shot Matthew Hoisington Nov. 29. Cpl. Jon Lehman also was involved in the incident but did not fi re his gun. Shirtcliff said he was reviewing records and reports and hoped to release details soon. The shooting happened the night of Nov. 29 on Southwest 20th Reddington Street near the intersection with Court Avenue. Pendleton Police Chief Stuart Roberts is out of the offi ce but has said offi cers chased a theft suspect from the Walmart store, Lehman and the suspect had a “dark colored pistol.” Roberts earlier this week advocated for releasing the names of the offi cers and the suspect and said the offi cers passed psychological evaluations in the wake of the shooting. Both offi cers returned from administrative leave on Wednesday, said city attorney Nancy Kerns. The East Oregonian independently confi rmed Hoisington was the shooting victim and was working on identifying Reddington and Lehman when Shirt- cliff called. He is handling the shooting investigation because Umatilla County See WORKMAN/8A See SHOOTING/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Lelia Workman, who is paraplegic and deaf, has been without the use of her powered wheelchair since Thanksgiving. The Heppner resident has also been sleeping at nights in the broken power chair due to not having a proper bed. Hoping for a helping hand Paraplegic deaf widow struggling with home and broken wheelchair By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN East Oregonian Though she can’t walk or hear, Lelia Workman does most things for herself. Deaf and para- plegic, she lives in Heppner with her service dog Sam. She counts hunting, sewing and gardening among her hobbies. Most recently, she began teaching free American Sign Language classes downtown. But recently, Workman has run into some diffi cult times. And community members are hoping to help her fi nd a solution. “She can live by herself, she doesn’t need to go to a nursing home,” said Jodi Segraves, Workman’s friend and caregiver. “She just needs a good provider.” Workman spent much of Wednesday morning in the hospital with what she worried was a broken rib, a continuation of the unlucky streak she’s been riding. On Thanksgiving, Workman’s power wheelchair broke, seriously limiting her mobility. The use of the manual wheelchair has put extra stress on her arms and causes strain to her upper body. A string of roadblocks Workman was not born deaf or paraplegic, as she is now. She was beaten by her parents, and lost her hearing at the age Pendleton council takes pledge, passes on prayer By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Pendleton city councilor Dale Primmer, second from right, ex- presses his views on whether or not the council should start their meeting with an invocation during a work session Tuesday. The Pendleton City Council has come to the consensus that prayers are private but pledges can be public. At a workshop Tuesday, the council discussed adding an opening invoca- tion and the pledge of allegiance to its regular meeting agenda. The issue was brought up at the behest of councilor Paul Chalmers, who said prayers were already a part of the council rule book. He added that he had seen other governing bodies open their meetings with prayers. For him, invocations were about recognizing personal weaknesses and asking a higher power for wisdom. “I understand the concept of invo- cation because I believe as human beings we need divine intervention “If we are able to stand together and say the pledge, then we know, at least for that one mo- ment, we’re all together.” — Becky Marks, Pendleton city councilor more times than we would like to admit,” said Chalmers, a member of the Pendleton First Assembly of God Church. The rules of public prayer Nancy Kerns, Pendleton’s city attorney, said the council had discon- tinued invocations in the early to mid-1980s over worries that it violated See COUNCIL/8A