East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, March 21, 2019, Page A5, Image 5

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    RECORDS
Thursday, March 21, 2019
East Oregonian
PUBLIC SAFETY
OBITUARIES
DEATH NOTICES
TUESDAY
Liana Delsie ‘Tiny’ Spino
Dale Floyd Bennett
Wapato, Wash.
July 10, 1981 — March 17, 2019
College Place, Wash.
March 13, 1938 — March 19, 2019
8:19 a.m. — The Pendleton parks supervisor asked police to
contact people burning pallets in the barbecue pits at Stillman
Park, 413 S.E. Byers Ave.
8:49 a.m. — Hermiston police received a report about graf-
fiti in the alley between East Main Street and Southeast Third
Street.
10:32 a.m. — An anonymous caller on Walla Walla Street,
Umatilla, complained about residents putting their weeds and
leaves in the road.
11:48 a.m. — The Umatilla County Sheriff’s office took a
report for animal neglect on Wildwood Lane, Umatilla.
12:19 p.m. — Callers reported one man was punching
another outside the Hermiston Dairy Queen on the Dogwood
Avenue side of the building.
1:28 p.m. — Three dogs — a Chihuahua, a Dachshund, and a
mix — chased a small child on North Hunt Street, Athena.
3:18 p.m. — Umatilla police responded to a 911 call for an
assault on Covina Court.
3:29 p.m. — A Hermiston caller on West Orchard Avenue
reported a 23-year-old woman was having an asthma attack
and a male was withholding her inhaler.
3:58 p.m. — A Umatilla resident on Tyler Avenue reported a
teenage boy at about 8:30 the previous night knocked on the
door and asked for a pair of pants because he ripped his while
playing. She said she found this suspicious, did not open the
door and told him the pants she had would not fit him.
8:29 p.m. — A caller reported juveniles were going in and
out of a burned-out structure on South Cherry Street, Ione, and
may have taken items.
11:49 p.m. — Emergency services responded to Trail Apart-
ments, 295 Boardman Ave. N.E., Boardman, on a 911 report of
60-year-old man who fell and may have broken his leg.
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
•Pendleton police arrested Thomas Eugene Satterwhite,
36, of Pendleton, for violating probation, resisting arrest, sec-
ond-degree escape and interfering with a peace officer.
•Umatilla Tribal Police arrested Joseph Troy Johnson, 33, of
Pendleton, for criminal trespass, criminal mischief, dangerous
drugs and criminal activity in drugs.
•Milton-Freewater police arrested Johnathan Gerald Rosen-
crans, 34, and Andrew Thorn Brandon Williams, 21, for first-de-
gree burglary and misdemeanor theft.
•Pendleton police arrested Bryce Devon Dickinson, 25, of
Pendleton, on numerous charges of theft and fraud.
Pendleton police Chief Stuart Roberts reported Dickinson is
the suspect in an early- to mid-February mail theft from the 900
block of Southwest 30th Street, which included a $300 gift card
and a credit card application.
“The gift card was used at various businesses throughout
town,” Roberts said, “while the credit card application was suc-
cessfully submitted/received. Approximately $9,000 worth of
fraudulent credit card transactions were completed in/around
Pendleton.”
Roberts also reported also Dickinson is the suspect in a
March 4 theft from Walmart for scanning items in self-check-
out and leaving without paying. Police booked Dickinson into
the Umatilla County Jail, Pendleton on the following: one count
of mail theft; one count of second-degree theft; one count of
third-degree theft; 13 counts of credit card fraud; 13 counts of
identity theft; and one count of aggravated identity theft. He
remains behind bars in lieu of $280,250 bail.
Liana Delsie “Tiny”
Spino, 37, of Wapato, Wash-
ington, died Sunday, March
17, 2019, at a Spokane
hospital.
She was born July 10,
1981, to Wesley Spino and
Rebecca Heath in Madras,
Oregon. She graduated Pace
High school in Wapato,
Washington.
Liana worked at the Wild-
horse Hotel, Miners Burg-
ers and then at Yakamart
as a supervisor cashier and
received Employee of the
Month; she was known
for her excellent customer
service.
Some of her hobbies
included beadwork, pool
shark, jingle dress dancer,
traveling, dance trip genera-
tion, basketball, and most of
all spending time with her
family and friends.
Liana is survived by
her companion Larry Bill
Jr.; mother Rebecca Heath
(Kirby Heath Sr.) of Warm
Springs, Oregon; her brother
and sisters Jerrod Heath,
Keena Heath and Jerome
Spino of Warms Springs,
Oregon, and Gladys Heath
(Thomas Sam Jr.), Kirby
Heath Jr. and Kevin Heath
of
Wapato,
Washing-
ton; six grandchildren and
grand-special Jade Men-
doza; and numerous aunts,
uncles, nieces and nephews.
Liana is preceded in
death by her father Wesley
Spino, grandparents Marvin
Felix Patrick Sr. “Wish” and
Suevina Albert Patrick, and
uncle Zachary Patrick.
Dressing service was
Wednesday March 20, 2019,
at 2:00 p.m. at Burns Mor-
tuary, with Washat service
at 7:00 p.m. at the Agency
Longhouse. Final Seven is
Thursday, March 21, 2019,
at 6:00 a.m. at the Agency
Longhouse, followed by
burial at the Tutuilla Ceme-
tery, Mission, Oregon.
Burns Mortuary of Pend-
leton is in charge of arrange-
ments. Sign the online
guestbook at www.burns-
mortuary.com.
UPCOMING SERVICES
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
CASTILLO CHAVEZ, ROGELIO — Recitation of
the rosary at 5 p.m. in the chapel at Burns Mortuary, 685 W.
Hermiston Ave., Hermiston.
SPINO, LIANA — Final Seven Songs at 6 a.m. at
Agency Longhouse, Mission, followed by burial at Tutuilla
Cemetery, Mission.
FRIDAY, MARCH 22
CASTILLO CHAVEZ, ROGELIO — Funeral mass
at 10 a.m. at Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church, 565 W.
Hermiston Ave., Hermiston. Burial will follow at the Herm-
iston Cemetery.
CROWELL, JUNE — Viewing from 4-6 p.m. at Swee-
ney Mortuary, 320 E. Matlock St., Heppner, with recitation
of the rosary following at 7 p.m. at St. William’s Catholic
Church, 110 Main St., Ione.
GATES, KENNY — Memorial service at 11 a.m. at
Lexington Bible Church, 150 A St.
Poll: Americans OK with immigration rate
By AMY TAXIN
Associated Press
SANTA ANA, Calif.
— A growing number of
Americans say immigra-
tion levels should remain the
same or increase, accord-
ing to a major U.S. sur-
vey, a shift that comes as
the Trump administration
has ramped up immigration
enforcement.
At the same time, the lat-
est data from the General
Social Survey — a widely
respected poll that has mea-
sured trends on American
attitudes since the 1970s —
shows a growing partisan
divide on the topic over the
past decade.
The 2018 survey released
this week shows 34 percent
of Americans want immi-
gration levels to be reduced,
down from 41 percent in
2016, according to an analy-
sis by The AP-NORC Center
for Public Affairs Research
and GSS staff.
That’s compared with 23
percent of Americans who
want more immigration,
up from 17 percent in 2016,
and 41 percent who say they
want immigration levels to
stay the same.
It’s the first time since
the survey question was
first asked in 2004 that more
Americans want immigra-
tion to remain the same than
to be reduced.
The survey is conducted
every two years, and the
question was last asked
before President Donald
Trump took office and made
it harder for people to immi-
grate to the United States.
Trump has repeatedly
called for a wall on the
U.S.-Mexico border, and
his push for wall funding
last year drove the federal
In this Sept. 20,
2017, file photo,
family members
welcome their
relatives as new
U.S. citizens
after taking
the citizenship
oath during
naturalization
ceremonies in
Los Angeles.
AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File
government to a monthlong
shutdown that furloughed
hundreds of thousands of
government workers.
The
administration
enacted a travel ban for cit-
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izens of mostly Muslim
countries, including Iran and
Yemen, that has torn families
apart. And officials last year
separated immigrant parents
from their children to pros-
ecute illegal border crossers,
a move that sparked an inter-
national outcry.
“People are more toler-
ant of immigration than the
president and the far right
would have us believe,” said
Louis DeSipio, a political
science professor at the Uni-
versity of California, Irvine.
According to the sur-
vey, nearly three times as
many Democrats as Repub-
licans want more immi-
grants allowed into the
country, while Republicans
are more than twice as likely
as Democrats to favor less
immigration.
But fewer Republicans
want a reduction in immi-
gration than did in 2016. In
2018, 52 percent of Repub-
licans said they wanted less
immigration, down from 62
percent two years earlier.
And 44 percent of Dem-
ocrats say they want immi-
gration levels to remain the
same, while 34 percent want
an increase in immigration.
The survey — which does
not distinguish between ille-
gal and legal immigration —
also looked at Americans’
views on the issue by race.
About 41 percent of
whites want a decrease in
immigration, while 24 per-
cent of blacks and 22 per-
cent of Hispanics say the
same.
Trump has made immi-
gration an intensely politi-
cal issue, and also an issue
of race, said Manuel Pastor,
director of the University of
Southern California’s Cen-
ter for the Study of Immi-
grant Integration.
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A5
Dale Floyd Bennett, 81, of College Place, Wash., died
Tuesday, March 19, 2019, in Walla Walla. He was born
March 13, 1938. Arrangements by Herring Groseclose
Funeral Home in Walla Walla.
MEETINGS
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
WEST EXTENSION IRRIGATION DISTRICT, 9 a.m., Irri-
gon Fire Department, 705 N.E. Main St., Irrigon. (Lisa Baum
541-922-3814)
ECHO CITY COUNCIL, 4 p.m., Old VFW Hall, 210 W. Bridge St.,
Echo. (541-376-8411)
HERMISTON IRRIGATION DISTRICT, 4 p.m., Hermiston Irri-
gation District office conference room, 366 E. Hurlburt Ave.,
Hermiston. (541-567-3024)
UMATILLA COUNTY SPECIAL LIBRARY DISTRICT, 5:15 p.m.,
Pendleton Center for the Arts boardroom, 214 N. Main St.,
Pendleton. (Erin McCusker 541-276-6449)
FRIDAY, MARCH 22
No meetings scheduled
MONDAY, MARCH 25
CASON’S PLACE CHILDREN AND FAMILY GRIEF RECOVERY
CENTER BOARD, 6 p.m., Cason’s Place, 1416 S.E. Court Ave.,
Pendleton. All those interested in volunteering are encour-
aged to attend. (Matt Terjeson 503-720-1620)
UMATILLA BASIN WATERSHED COUNCIL, 6 p.m., Pendleton
City Hall community room, 501 S.W. Emigrant Ave., Pendleton.
(Michael T. Ward 541-276-2190)
MILTON-FREEWATER CITY COUNCIL, 7 p.m., Milton-Freewa-
ter Public Library Albee Room, 8 S.W. EIghth Ave., Milton-Free-
water. (541-938-5531)
IRRIGON COMMUNITY PARKS & RECREATION DIS-
TRICT, 7 p.m., Irrigon Fire Station, 705 N. Main St., Irrigon.
(541-922-3047)
HERMISTON CITY COUNCIL, 7 p.m., Hermiston City
Hall council chambers, 180 N.E. Second St., Hermiston.
(541-567-5521)
MORROW COUNTY HEALTH DISTRICT, 7 p.m., Pioneer
Memorial Clinic conference room, 130 Thompson St., Hep-
pner. 6 p.m. provider dinner, 6:30 p.m. board meeting. (Tonia
Adams 541-676-2942)
TUESDAY, MARCH 26
UMATILLA-MORROW COUNTY HEAD START, 11:30 a.m.,
Head Start boardroom, 110 N.E. Fourth St., Hermiston. (Mon-
ina Ward 541-564-6878)
BLUE MOUNTAIN ALLIANCE, 6 p.m., Athena Public Library,
418 E. Main St., Athena. Annual meeting (February meet-
ing canceled due to weather). Includes election of offi-
cers, approval of bylaw revisions, a financial report and
review of last year’s activities. Everyone welcome. (Ann Jolly
541-938-9553)
UMATILLA PLANNING COMMISSION, 6:30 p.m., Umatilla
City Hall, 700 Sixth St., Umatilla. (Brandon Seitz 541-922-3226
ext. 103)
MORROW COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION, 7 p.m., Bar-
tholomew Government Building upper conference room, 110
N. Court St., Heppner. (541-922-4624)
COMING EVENTS
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
BOARDMAN SENIOR MEAL SERVICE, 12 p.m.,
Boardman Senior Center, 100 Tatone St., Boardman.
(541-481-3257)
PENDLETON SENIOR MEAL SERVICE, 12-1 p.m., Pend-
leton Senior Center, 510 S.W. 10th St., Pendleton. (Tori Bow-
man 541-276-5073)
HERMISTON SENIOR MEAL SERVICE, 12 p.m., Harken-
rider Center, 255 N.E. Second St., Hermiston. (541-567-3582)
SENSORY STORY TIME, 12:30 p.m., Boardman Public
Library, 200 S. Main St., Boardman. For children from birth
to age 4. (541-481-2665)
BOOK SIGNING: CAROL CLUPNY, 4:30-6 p.m., Prodigal
Son Brewery & Pub, 230 S.E. Court Ave., Pendleton. Meet
Carol and hear about her memoir, “The Ribbon of Road
Ahead: One Woman’s Remarkable Journey with Parkinson’s
Disease.” Books will be available for purchase and signing.
(Carol Clupny 541-720-4256)
YARN CLUB, 5:30 p.m., Hermiston Public Library, 235 E.
Gladys Ave., Hermiston. (541-567-2882)
THE ARC UMATILLA COUNTY BINGO, 6-10 p.m., The
Arc Building, 215 W. Orchard Ave., Hermiston. Doors open
at 6 p.m., games begin at 7 p.m. 541-567-7615)
UMATILLA DISTINGUISHED CITIZEN AWARD BAN-
QUET, 6-8 p.m., El Rodeo, 705 Willamette Street, Umatilla.
Annual citizens’ awards banquet features dinner and des-
sert. Tickets $25, available at the Umatilla Chamber of Com-
merce. (Kacie Evans 541-922-4825)
PENDLETON AIR MUSEUM MEET-AND-GREET, 6 p.m.,
Oregon Grain Growers Brand Distillery, 511 S.E. Court Ave.,
Pendleton. A short meeting will be followed by a presen-
tation of a National History Project on the Doolittle Raid-
ers. Military displays and a no-host dinner will be available.
Everyone welcome. (Becky Dunlap 541-278-0141)
FIDDLER’S NIGHT, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Avamere Assisted
Living, 980 W. Highland Ave., Hermiston. Enjoy light refresh-
ments, listen to some favorite oldies or join in the jam ses-
sion. All ages welcome. (Lori 541-567-3141)
FIRST DRAFT WRITERS’ SERIES, 7-9 p.m., Pendleton
Center for the Arts, 214 N. Main St., Pendleton. Peter Walker
will read from his work. Open mic slots of 3-5 minutes avail-
able following main presentation. Free. (Roberta Lavadour
541-278-9201)
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