REGION Tuesday, November 30, 2021 East Oregonian A3 Pendleton Round-Up announces 2022 president, new directors East Oregonian PENDLETON — The Pendleton Round-Up Asso- ciation at its annual stock- holders meeting Tuesday, Nov. 23, elected Karl Farber as president to lead the iconic Oregon event into its 112th year. Farber has been on the Round-Up Board of Direc- tors seven years and has ser ved as concessions (three years) and as secu- rity direc- tor (the past four years), according Farber to the press release from the Round-Up Association. Competitive Events Director Nick Siro- vatka was elected vice pres- ident, Sponsors Director Tiah DeGrofft was voted in as secretary and Offi ce/ Ticketing Director Kevin Jordan will serve as the association’s treasurer. Two new directors, Stuart Roberts, of Pendleton, and Nick Michael, of Pilot Rock, were elected to four-year terms on the Round-Up Board of Directors. Roberts served as chief of the Pend- leton Police Depart- ment for 18 years, retir- ing from the position in De ce mbe r Roberts 2020. He is a graduate of Pendleton High School, served on numer- ous boards and committees, including gover nor-ap- pointed positions, and served as president of the Oregon Association Chiefs of Police and as vice-chair of the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training Police Policy Committee. Roberts works as a law enforcement risk manage- ment consultant for City County Insurance Services of Oregon where he supports 130 police departments and sheriff ’s offi ces statewide. He and his wife, Lisa, an elementary school child development specialist, will have been married 30 years in August. They have two children, Lauren and Cooper. Lauren is a first grade teacher at Washington Elementary School in Pend- leton, and Cooper attends Eastern Oregon University, La Grande, where he pitches for the baseball team. Michael was born and raised in Pilot Rock. He joined the Oregon Army National Guard in 1998 and served there until he retired in 2020. He had 22-1/2 years of service and spent 30 months deployed in support of operation Enduring Free- dom and other campaigns. He met his wife, Allie Wilgus, in 2007 and they married in 2 014. He has worked i n d if fe r- Michael e n t r ol e s in the high voltage electrical industry since 2000. He works for the Bonneville Power Admin- istration in the substation operations group. He and his wife also raise and sell performance horses. Michael has been an active Round-Up volunteer with the hay and barns crew for 21 years. The other Round-Up Board of Directors are: Publicity Director Pat Reay, Indians Director Dr. Harper Jones, Let ’er Buck Room Director Tim Smith, Live- stock Director Justin Terry, Arena Director Berk Davis, Queen and Court Direc- tor Jason Hill, Grounds and the quality of livestock provided. The Round-Up also was nominated for the Women’s Professional Rodeo Associ- ation Large Outdoor Rodeo of the Year. Further, the association was informed regarding their selection as a fi nalist for the 2021 Massey Ferguson “Sowing Good Deeds” Award. The winning rodeo committee will receive a new Massey Ferguson trac- tor and will be announced Dec. 1 at the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Associa- tion Annual Convention in Las Vegas. In addition, there are several other cont ract personnel that contrib- ute to the success of the Round-Up. The PRCA announced several contract personnel who are nomi- nated for awards in bull- f ighting, pick up men, secret a r y, t i mers a nd photographer’s categories. Director Casey Currin, Concessions Director Jason Graybeal, Programs and Ushers Director Rob Burn- side, Room 17 and Medical Director Dr. Brad Adams and Parades Director Tim O’Hanlon. According to the press release, the Round-Up A s s o ciat ion r ev iewe d multiple successes during t he 2021 f isca l ye a r ending Oct. 31. In addi- tion to the recap of 2021, ref lection on the success of the Let’er Buck Cares Fund that provided nearly $1 million in com mu- nity, essential partner and local business assistance during the pandemic. The 2021 Round-Up also had an increased media pres- ence with the Rural Media Group showing the events on the Cowboy Chan- nel. The media agreement allowed for continued growth in contestant payout Sex abuse case comes back to Umatlla County on appeal Higher court found trial was a ‘credibility contest’ involving no physical evidence By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Bryce Dole/East Oregonian Shoppers and employees of Scentsy, a fragrance company, talk about holiday products Saturday, Nov. 27, 2021, at the Hermiston Christmas Bazaar. Racquel Rodriguez, a Hermis- ton-based consultant for Scentsy, said the bazaar is one of the biggest events of the year for sales. She said the event is essential for local businesses to connect with clientele. Bazaar sees big turnout Organizers had to turn away at least 40 vendors as the event overfl owed By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian HERMISTON — It’s Christmastime in Hermis- ton. For some, that means it’s time to shop. More than 1,000 people fl ocked to the Her miston Community Center and The Arc Umatilla County on Saturday, Nov. 27, for the annual Christmas Bazaar. The event featured more than 60 vendors, and some “overflow” vendors were moved to The Arc Umatilla County nearby, according to Diana Picard, the city’s recreation coordinator and the manager of the commu- nity center. Picard said this year’s bazaar was the biggest yet — so big that organizers had to turn away at least 40 vendors. Picard said she was unsure why this year saw so many more vendors, but she assumed that many people had taken up creative hobbies during the pandemic and were ready to put their products on display. Vendors remarked on the bazaar’s bustling atmo- sphere. Crowds of people meandered through the center browsing or na- ments, woodwork, paint- ings, jewelry, crochet hats, bath bombs and other types of goods. The air was fi lled with the smell of holiday fragrances and baked goods. Shoppers said they were excited to be out support- ing local businesses after months where the pandemic shuttered them and brought both supply chain and hiring woes. Many purchased holi- day gifts for loved ones, noting the special feeling of shopping local rather than buying online through Amazon and other shopping websites. “This is a way to connect with each other,” Picard said. “It’s a place to see the people you haven’t in a while.” And shoppers were eager to buy. Stephanie Walchli saw that firsthand. Next to her crochet table, she watched as her parents’ wood tables were completely sold out before 11 a.m., hours before the event was sched- uled to end. By noon, the tables were clear and her family had left. Walchli’s day was busy, too. She said she typi- cally makes around $200 at a bazaar, which she had successfully made halfway through her day on Nov. 27. A substitute teacher, Walchli taught herself to crochet. She enjoyed seeing other creative artisans reap the benefi ts of their hobbies at the bazaar. “You see the results of months of work,” she said. Some vendors said the bazaar is one of their biggest sales days. And this year was even more important after the stresses the pandemic placed on small businesses. That was the case for Racquel Rod r ig uez, a Hermiston consultant for the fragrance company Scentsy. During pandemic shutdow ns, Rod r ig uez said she was unable to hold “home parties” to showcase products in a home. That slowed business, and made Rodriguez all the more grateful for the community support on a busy Nov. 27. “It has not stopped,” she said as a half-dozen custom- ers approached. Among the bazaar shop- pers was April Huckstep, from the Tri-Cities. A weekly bazaar shopper, she had checked out food, salsa, handcrafts and other home- made gifts at the event. To her, shopping locally is a more personable experi- ence. It makes holiday gifts meaningful. On Nov. 27, she purchased for her daughter a wooden Mickey Mouse ornament to remind her of a recent trip to Disneyland. A few feet from Huckstep stood dozens of stacks of paintings. They were Donna Anderson’s, who was show- ing her work for the first time at the bazaar. After surgery last year left Ander- son immobilized, painting became her “saving grace,” she said. “It gives me peace,” she said. Now, Anderson’s house is filled with countless paintings, so her family convinced her to start sell- ing. That’s why she came to the bazaar, where she said she sold a few paintings. She said she enjoyed the friendly atmosphere, chatting with locals about what they’re buying and with vendors about their passions. Mary A. Johnson, Ph.D., wife of the late Jim Hanks and former Pendleton resident, announces the publication of her second book, LOVE AND ASPERGER'S: Jim and Mary's Excellent Adventure, a Memoir, set mostly in the Pendleton area. Available on Amazon.com PENDLETON — A former Pilot Rock man is getting another shot at defending himself against sexual abuse charges after the Oregon Court of Appeal overturned verdicts against him. Hussein Ibrahin Hassan, 68, is out of state prison and again in the Umatilla County Jail, Pendleton, awaiting a new trial. A jury in 2019 convicted Hassan on two counts of first-degree sexual abuse of a 13-year-old girl. He appealed, and the higher court heard the arguments in the case on Jan. 26, and issued its ruling Oct. 27. The appeals court found two reasons to remand the case back to Umatilla County. The jury voted 10-2 to convict on one count. That meant the case was coming back to the county in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Cou r t r uling against nonunanimous verdicts. The jury on the second count was unanimous. But the appeal court found Circuit Judge Jon Lieuallen erred during the trial when he did not allow the defense to posit a theory that would have cast doubt on the actu- ations. According to the 12-page ruling, Hassan and the 13-year-old girl lived in diff erent halves of a duplex in Pilot Rock, and the duplex shared a backyard, accord- ing to the ruling. The girl accused Hassan of kissing her and touching her right breast while they were alone in a yard. During the trial, the girl testifi ed to Hassan kissing her and touching her right breast. She also told the jury this prompted her to move from Pilot Rock back to Pendleton where she had lived for “pretty much (her) whole life,” because “we didn’t feel safe at home anymore.” The forensic evaluator who conducted the abuse assessment of the girl also testifi ed. During cross-ex- amination, the defense asked the evaluator about why the girl was not living with her mother. The pros- ecutor objected on the basis of relevance, and the defense responded, “Goes to bias.” Lieuallen allowed the defense to pursue the line of questioning outside the pres- ence of the jury to determine whether to sustain the objec- tion. The defense asked the evaluator if it was correct the child said she was not living in Pendleton due to allega- tions of theft. The evaluator confi rmed that. The defense explained its theory of relevance: That after getting into trouble for stealing a phone, then moving to a diff erent town, the girl made up the sexual abuse claim to get out of trouble with her parents. The prosecutor contin- ued to object on the ground that the two matters were not related. After further testimony, including from the mother and the girl, the judge sustained the prose- cution’s objection. Lieual- len explained, “I don’t think there’s suffi cient relevance, relevance to that. She’s not under any further restric- tions, punishment at the time of the incident. While it may be 30 days, it’d come and gone. … There may have been lots of choppy stuff earlier some but (it had) all been worked out and smoothed out. .. I guess it doesn’t appear (to) me there was anything to avoid at that time, and therefore no reason to make up, fabricate a story, anything of that nature, so.” The jury ultimately convicted Hassan on the two counts of fi rst-degree sexual abuse. But the appeals court found the judge should have allowed the defense to explain its theory of why the girl may have fabricated the account, even if the theft of the cellphone had little eff ect on the girl by the time she made the accusations. The general rule, the appeals court explained, is all relevant evidence is admissible, and rele- vant evidence is “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” To meet the test of relevance, the ruling stated, “bias or interest evidence ‘need only have a mere tendency to show the bias or interest of the witness.’” The court’s error in not allowing the defense theory also was not harmless. “This case involved a credibility contest in which there was no physi- cal evidence of abuse and no eyewitnesses who testi- fied other than (the girl). The evidence regarding the phone incident and subse- quent move would have been defendant’s only evidence of (her) motive to fabricate the allegations, and he was denied the opportunity to advance that theory and to meet the prosecutor’s closing argument that (the girl) had no bias, motive or interest in falsely accusing defendant of abuse.” Hassan has a pretrial conference Tuesday morn- ing, Nov. 30, at the Umatilla County Courthouse, Pend- leton. Lieuallen is presiding. GOLD SPONSORS Community Bank SILVER SPONSORS Alive and Well PPP CHI St. Anthony Hospital Corteva Agriscience Desire For Healing Inc Hill Meat Company Northeast Oregon Water Association OSU Extension Service- Umatilla County RE/MAX Cornerstone Rick’s Car Wash Tum-A-Lum Lumber Western Radiator BRONZE SPONSORS A & G Property Management & Maintenance Blue Mountain Community College Coldwell Banker Whitney & Associates, Inc, Davita Blue Mountain Kidney Center DuPont Pioneer HiBred Research Center Jeremy J Larson DMD LLC Kelly Lumber Supply Inc Kiks Golf Center Kirby Nagelhout Construction Co. Kopacz Nursery & Florist Landmark Tax Services McEntire Dental Mid Columbia Bus Co NW Metal Fabricators Inc Rob Merriman Plumbing & Heating Inc The RBH Group LLC The Saddle Restaurant and Lounge Willowbrook Terrace OTHER SPONSORS Barhyte Specialty Foods Umatilla Electric Cooperative CMG Financial Duchek Construction Episcopal Church of the Redeemer Hermiston Public Library Hodgen Distributing Pendleton KOA Starvation Ridge Farming, LLC Sun Terrace Hermiston Want to see you name here? Call 541-276-2211