OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian A8 Hamley: Owners reach agreement on sale of businesses Continued from Page A1 hearing the afternoon of Aug. 7 at the bankruptcy court in Portland. That’s a hearing for Woodfi eld and other parties to explain to the judge why the court should approve their plan. Neither Woodfi eld nor Pearce returned calls seek- ing comment. After the sale closes, Woodfi eld and Pearce have to work with the Hamley bookkeeper to calculate and pay all company debts, and bankruptcy Judge Peter McKittrick or a third-party arbitrator gets to settle any disputes that arise during that process. Until then, according to the deal, the management of the Hamley companies remains status quo, with Woodfi eld overseeing the steak house and Pearce in charge of the western store. The two former business partners also consented to the winning bidder appoint- ing new managers of the Hamley businesses. And Woodfi eld agreed Pearce “may remain involved in some capacity” in Hamley operations after the sale. Wealthy fi nancier charged with molesting dozens of girls fl ee if released. His lawyers argued that the sex-crime allegations had been settled in 2008 NEW YORK — In a with a plea agreement in startling reversal of for- Florida that was overseen by tune, billionaire fi nancier Alexander Acosta, who was Jeffrey Epstein was charged the U.S. attorney in Miami Monday with sexu- at the time and is ally abusing dozens now Trump’s labor of underage girls in secretary. a case brought more “This is ancient than a decade after stuff,” Epstein attor- he secretly cut a deal ney Reid Weingar- with federal pros- ten said in court, ecutors to dispose calling the case Epstein of nearly identical essentially a “redo” allegations. by the government. The 66-year-old hedge But U.S. Attorney Geof- fund manager who once frey Berman of New York socialized with some of the said that the non-prosecu- world’s most powerful peo- tion agreement that spared ple was charged in a newly Epstein from a heavy prison unsealed federal indictment sentence a decade ago is with sex traffi cking and binding only on federal conspiracy during the early prosecutors in Florida, not 2000s. He could get up to 45 on authorities in New York. years in prison if convicted. The alleged victims The case sets the stage “deserve their day in court,” for another #MeToo-era Berman said. “We are proud trial fraught with questions to be standing up for them by of wealth and infl uence. bringing this indictment.” Epstein’s powerful friends Epstein was accused in over the years have included the indictment of paying President Donald Trump, underage girls hundreds former President Bill Clin- of dollars in cash for mas- ton and Britain’s Prince sages and then molesting Andrew. them at his homes in Palm Prosecutors said the Beach, Florida, and New evidence against Epstein York from 2002 through included a “vast trove” of 2005. hundreds or even thousands He “intentionally sought of lewd photographs of out minors and knew that young women or girls, dis- many of his victims were covered in a weekend search in fact under the age of 18,” of his New York City man- prosecutors said. He also sion. Authorities also found paid some of his victims papers and phone records to recruit additional girls, corroborating the alleged creating “a vast network of crimes, and a massage room underage victims for him still set up the way accusers to sexually exploit,” prose- said it appeared, prosecutors cutors said. said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Epstein, who was Alex Rossmiller said that arrested Saturday as he while there is some overlap arrived in the U.S. from between the Florida and Paris aboard his private New York cases, one of the jet, was brought into court counts is based entirely on Monday in a blue jail uni- New York victims. form, his hair disheveled, Federal authorities said and pleaded not guilty. He new accusers have come was jailed for a bail hearing forward since Epstein’s next Monday, when prose- arrest, and they urged other cutors plan to argue that the possible victims to contact rich world traveler might the FBI. By MICHAEL R. SISAK AND JIM MUSTIAN Associated Press Tuesday, July 9, 2019 Townhall: Merkley fi elds questions in Boardman Continued from Page A1 while they waited for their hearing. The program had a near 100% success rate in getting families to show up to court, but was can- celed by the Trump admin- istration for reasons Merk- ley said he hasn’t been able to determine. He said the federal gov- ernment needed to provide the resources to get people of all ages seeking asylum through the hearing process much more quickly. The vast majority of people who seek asylum are turned away, he said — only about 20,000 people were granted asylum last year. “Regardless of whether they win or lose we should still treat them with dignity in between,” he said. He also said the country needed to stop turning away unaccompanied minors at the border, leaving them at the mercy of sex traffi ckers and other bad actors. Others at Saturday’s town hall were concerned about children who are strug- gling in America’s education system. Maureen McGrath, direc- tor of Umatilla Morrow Head Start, asked about fed- eral initiatives on the horizon for early childhood educa- tion. Rick and Susan Scheib- ner, who both work for Hermiston School District, described children coming to school with more mental health problems and more trauma than a decade ago. Susan said she saw econom- ically stressed parents mak- ing tough choices, and the effect on their children. Merkley said the fed- eral government needed to Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Senator Jeff Merkley speaks during a town hall at the SAGE Center in Boardman. Merkley used the time to address community concerns regarding Social Security, refugees and ed- ucation. directly invest in education but also help families by cut- ting wasteful spending and focusing on basics such as health care and housing. He said when he was growing up his family pur- chased a home worth the equivalent of two years of his father’s salary as a mechanic. Today the same type of home in the same town costs fi ve to six times a mechanic’s annual salary, he said. “It isn’t that the families in my neighborhood changed, it’s that the economics have changed,” he said. Merkley also said he was a proponent of a combined effort of state and federal spending to serve more chil- dren with early childhood education programs like Head Start. He said research showed that investments in a child’s formative years paid off many times over when they became a more productive member of soci- ety and avoided trouble like incarceration. Attendees at Saturday’s town hall also asked about keeping Social Security sol- vent, taking away subsi- dies for fossil fuels, prevent- ing foreign interference in elections, slowing climate change and holding power- ful tech companies like Face- book accountable. Merkley said if the gov- ernment removed the cap on the level of wages subject to the Social Security tax or placed a Social Security tax on capital gains the program would be solvent for many decades into the future with money for increased benefi ts. He expressed sup- port for incentivizing clean energy and energy-effi - ciency upgrades to homes and agreed with the citizen who advocated removing the subsidies for oil and gas companies. Merkley said he sup- ports passage of the bipar- tisan DETER Act, which lays out stiff sanctions for any foreign country found meddling in the United States’ elections. Beyond foreign interference, he feels Congress has a duty to tackle problems he believes are eroding the country’s democracy. “We’re seeing a lot of ger- rymandering, a lot of voter suppression and intimida- tion and a lot of dark money in campaigns,” he said. “It’s got to be a real priority to take those on.” Big earthquakes raise interest in West Coast warning system By JOHN ANTCZAK AND CHRISTOPHER WEBER Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The powerful Mojave Desert earthquakes that rocked Cal- ifornia ended a years-long lull in major seismic activ- ity and raised new interest in an early warning system being developed for the West Coast. The ShakeAlert system is substantially built in Cal- ifornia and overall is about 55% complete, with much of the remaining installation of seismic sensor stations to be done in the Pacifi c North- west, said Robert de Groot of the U.S. Geological Survey. Areas that have the appropriate number of sen- sors include Southern Cal- ifornia, San Francisco Bay Area and the Seattle-Tacoma region, de Groot said. The system does not pre- dict earthquakes. Rather, it detects that an earthquake is occurring, rapidly calcu- lates expected intensity lev- els and sends out alerts that may give warnings ranging from several seconds to per- haps a minute before poten- tially damaging shaking hits locations away from the epicenter. Depending on the dis- tance, that could be enough time to automatically slow trains, stop industrial machines, start generators, pull a surgical knife away from a patient or tell students to put the “drop, cover and hold” drill into action. For alerts to be useful, delivery has to be timely, and that’s a problem with current cellphone technol- ogy. For cellphone delivery, the USGS ultimately intends to use the same system that delivers Amber Alerts, send- ing signals to everyone in reach of cellphone towers in defi ned areas where damag- ing shaking is expected. Pilot programs involv- ing select users have been underway for several years. In October, the USGS announced the system was ready to be used broadly by businesses, utilities, schools and other entities following a software update that reduced problems such as false alerts AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez Members of the National Guard load water onto an SUV in the aftermath of an earthquake on Sunday outside Trona High School in Trona, Calif. typically caused by a big quake somewhere in the world being misidentifi ed as a local quake. Currently, the only mass public notifi cation is pos- sible through a mobile app developed for the city of Los Angeles and functional only within Los Angeles County. The ShakeAlertLA app did not send alerts for last week’s two big quakes, but offi cials said it functioned as designed because the expected level of shaking in the LA area — more than 100 miles from the epicen- ters— was below a trigger threshold. Thresholds for alerting are important because Cali- fornia has daily earthquakes. “Imagine getting 10 ShakeAlerts on your phone for really small earthquakes that may not affect you,” de Groot said. “If people get saturated with these mes- sages it’s going to make peo- ple not care as much.” In the Mojave Desert on Monday, rattled resi- dents cleaned up and offi - cials assessed damage in the aftermath of Thurs- day’s magnitude 6.4 earth- quake and Friday’s magni- tude 7.1 quake centered near Ridgecrest. President Donald Trump on Monday declared an emergency exists in Califor- nia because of the quakes, paving the way for federal aid. The declaration autho- rized the Federal Emer- gency Management Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts. 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