FOOTBALL: Hermiston opens Mid-Columbia Conference season at Pasco | E O AST 143rd year, No. 230 SPORTS, A8 REGONIAN THURSDAy, SEPTEMBER 5, 2019 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2019 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD HERMISTON Change of plea in murder case Vincent Shermantine takes deal; David Sommerville faces murder charges By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian HERMISTON — Vincent Wesley David Shermantine no longer faces a murder charge for the 2018 killing of Eric Navarrete of Hermiston. Sher ma nt i ne, 30, of Herm- iston, pleaded guilty Tues- Shermantine day to first-de- gree robbery and unlawful use of a weapon, accord- ing to state court records. The Umatilla County District Attorney’s office Sommerville in April charged Shermantine with those two crimes plus murder and felon in possession of a weapon. Cir- cuit Judge Dan Hill accepted the change of plea at his courtroom in Hermiston and remanded Shermantine to the custody of the sheriff’s office pending his sentencing. The court also sealed the plea petition, and District Attorney Dan Primus said he did not want to talk about the plea while the case continues against Sherman- tine’s co-defendant, David Edgar Sommerville. The state accused Sherman- tine and Sommerville of robbing Navarrete at gunpoint on June 4, 2018, and then Sommerville in the course of the crime shot and killed Navarrete. Sommerville, 20, of Board- man, has pleaded not guilty to two counts of unlawful use of a weapon, murder and aggravated murder, the only crime that car- ries the threat of the death pen- alty in Oregon. Oregon has 29 men and one woman on death row, accord- ing to the Oregon Department of Corrections. The state’s last execution was May 16, 1997, with the lethal injection of Harry Charles Moore. The governor’s office in 2011 placed a mora- What’s in store for WINTER? By ALEX CASTLE East Oregonian P ENDLETON — It might be time to check that those winter jackets and boots are still in the back of your closet where you left them in the spring. Or so says the Old Farmer’s Alma- nac, at least. According to the reference book’s 2020 edition released last week, Eastern Oregon should expect colder tempera- tures with above average precipitation and snowfall this winter. The almanac positions Eastern Ore- gon in the Intermountain region, which stretches as far south as Flagstaff, Ari- zona, and as far north as the U.S.-Can- ada border. In total, the region encom- passes nine different states between the Cascade and Rocky Mountains. For the 2019-20 winter, the Inter- mountain region will reportedly be char- acterized by “low temps, deep powder.” Across the country, the almanac is pre- dicting “frequent snow events — from flurries to no fewer than seven big snow- storms from coast to coast.” In February, Pendleton recorded all- time highs in snowfall after being cov- ered in 32.5 inches during the shortest month of the year. That’s nearly double the previous record of 16.8 inches and, according to the National Weather Ser- vice, nearly 10 times the average snow- fall of 3.4 inches for the month. While the area saw some more snow- fall in March this year, the Old Farm- See Winter, Page A7 HERE’S A PREDICTION Old Farmer’s Almanac says colder temperatures, above average precipitation and snowfall this winter in region Staff photos by E.J. Harris, File TOP: Travis Hamman uses a bobcat to move snow while working with NW Installations snow removal service in Pendleton in February 2019. ABOVE: Pedestrians and vehicles nav- igate snow-covered roads on Dec. 28, 2017, in downtown Pendleton. According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac’s 2020 edition released last week, Eastern Oregon should expect colder temperatures with above average precipitation and snowfall this winter. See Plea, Page A7 Washington murder suspect no longer fighting extradition By CHRIS COLLINS EO Media Group BAKER CITy — Washington murder suspect Colby James Hed- man ended his fight to stay in the Baker County Jail. Hedman, 23, a former Heppner res- ident, waived extra- dition Wednesday in Baker County Circuit Court before Judge Greg Baxter. Hedman That action means he soon will leave for Washing- ton where he will face charges of first-degree murder and theft of a motor vehicle. Baker City attorney Damien yer- vasi represented Hedman, while assistant district attorney Michael Spaulding represented the state. Baxter told Hedman while Wash- ington authorities have 21 days to retrieve him from the Baker County Jail, he expects them to act sooner because of the first-degree murder charge. “I’m pretty sure Washington will come down and get you within the week,” Baxter told Hedman, who appeared via video from the Baker County Jail. Upon his return to Washington to face the more serious charges, the state will dismiss the Baker County charges. Spaulding told the judge that Bob and Robbie Borders, who live on Taggert Lane north of Baker City where Hedman is accused of stealing two of their vehicles, sup- ported the state’s action. Hedman has been in the Baker County Jail since his arrest July 9 on two counts of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle and one count of attempting to flee or elude police, both Class C felonies; two counts of second-degree criminal mis- chief, Class C misdemeanors; and one count each of reckless driving, second-degree criminal trespass and failure to perform the duties of a driver involved in an accident, all Class A misdemeanors. A grand jury indicted Hedman on the charges on July 11. Baxter set bail at $100,000, requiring the full amount to be paid before Hedman could be released, rather than 10 per- cent as is allowed in some cases. The Washington fugitive warrant charges him with first-degree mur- der in the death of Kyle J. Martz, 35, of Walla Walla, and theft of Martz’s Toyota pickup truck from Martz’s home at Walla Walla on July 8. Hedman has been held in lieu of $1 million fixed bail on those charges. The Baker County incident began about 10:30 p.m. the night of July 8 when county, city and state police responded to a call from Bob Bor- ders reporting the theft of his 1988 Ford F350 pickup from his property. While attempting to elude police during the incident, police said Hed- man returned to the Borders’ home and took a second vehicle, a 2000 Jeep Wrangler. Before they were called to the sto- len vehicle report, police had been notified Hedman was a suspect in the Walla Walla murder and was driving a Toyota pickup, which they later found abandoned on the shoul- der of the eastbound freeway lanes where he had run out of gas. According to police, Hedman admitted he struck Martz with an ax multiple times the night of July 8 before stealing the victim’s vehicle and fleeing to Oregon, where he was arrested after trying to elude police.