A6 NEWS Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, June 26, 2019 Stonebrink sentenced to 10 years for child pornography, attempting to lure a minor Steve Tool Wallowa County Chieftain NASA Curiosity Rover recently detected a cyclical fl uctuation of methane emission on Mars. Curiosity detects cyclical methane emissions on Mars By Paul Voosen Science AAAS Last week, NASA’s Curiosity rover caught its strongest whiff yet of martian methane. While exploring a clay- rich region of the Red Planet, the rover detected the highest levels of the gas it has ever observed, some 21 parts per billion. That’s three times the level it sniffed out for several months in 2013. The fi nding, if it holds up, will only deepen the mystery of methane on Mars. Methane can be a byproduct of microbial life, but it can also be pro- duced through geologi- cal reactions or created in the atmosphere from car- bon in solar system dust. Until now, the large spike seen by Curiosity in 2013 has never been repeated; instead, the rover has doc- umented minute levels of methane that shifted with the seasons. Adding to that mystery, last year the European Space Agency’s Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), which started scanning Mars’s atmosphere for methane in 2016, did not detect any of the gas, despite carrying instru- ments far more sensitive than Curiosity’s. Curiosity’s scientists say it might be possible for thousands of small seeps in Mars’s surface—none of which would be detect- able from orbit—to release the gas. Follow up work with the TGO and Mars Express, another orbiter, will reveal whether their instruments picked up this latest martian burp. If they did, they might give sci- entists some sense of the plume’s origin and how long methane lasts in the planet’s atmosphere. A sordid chapter in the annals of Wallowa County justice has come to an end as John W. Stonebrink, 50, Wallowa received a 123- month sentence to the Ore- gon Department of Correc- tions at Wallowa County Circuit Court on May 31 regarding multiple charges of possession of child pornogra- phy and attempting to lure a minor. Wallowa County District Attorney Rebecca Frolander said the case hit hard. “Obviously, the subject matter is very challenging, and the descriptions of the images is something that is really hard to get out of your head,” she said. As Oregon Department of Justice investigated the case, Frolander wasn’t required to view the fi lms involved although she had to write out brief descriptions of what the fi lms contained. The DOJ started investi- gating the case after receiving a tip from the National Cen- ter for Missing and Exploited Children. The initial informa- tion came as a cyber tip from the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. Frolander explained that the DOJ reviewed all the rel- evant material to the case because although there is an exception for law enforce- ment purposes, the act of copying and disseminating sexually explicit images of children is a crime, so the DOJ tries not to duplicate them. The investigator gave Fro- T HE B OOKLOFT lander descriptions of the images and had she needed any for trial, the department would have traveled here to show her the images. “Until I’m headed in for trial, for my own health and welfare, I try not to look at all the images if I don’t have to.” Frolander said she had one other similar case she’s prosecuted from the DA’s offi ce. In that case, a Union man had possession of sex- ually explicit photos of a minor he was communicat- ing with online, although he wasn’t trading them online, as Stonebrink had. together into one case. Fro- lander said that the fi rst tip about the fi rst Wallowa County case came from Face- book to the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force Program, a national net- work of 61 coordinated task forces that represents 4,500 federal, state, and local law enforcement and prosecuto- rial agencies. The agency was investigating the tip when Stonebrink was arrested on the Luring a Minor charge in Wallowa County on the Jack- son County case. Stonebrink’s phone made the trip to Jackson County ‘STATISTICALLY, WE KNOW THAT PEOPLE WHO EXAMINE, POSSESS OR TRADE PORNOGRAPHIC IMAGES OF CHILDREN TEND TO BE OFFENDERS OF REAL CHILDREN … IF ANYONE COMES FORWARD, WE WILL INVESTIGATE IT AND PURSUE IT IN ANY MANNER THAT WE CAN.’ Wallowa County District Attorney Rebecca Frolander Stonebrink kept his illegal material in several places: On his cell phone, through Face- book exchanges, his email and Dropbox. “There were multiple plat- forms these items were stored in, transmitted through, shared with other people,” Frolander said. A number of law enforce- ment people worked collab- oratively on the case. DOJ employee Marl Posler did much of the work. Frolander said that the recently retired Posler told her it was one of the most egregious cases he’d seen in the last 30 years. Stonebrink’s two Wallowa County cases and the Jackson County case were melded as part of his personal prop- erty, but the tip to ICAC pro- vided enough information to allow a warrant to seize the phone and examine the con- tents. The phone revealed contents pertinent to the Jackson County case as well as the fi rst Wallowa County case. With Stonebrink in jail in Jackson County, his defense attorney asked for permission to represent her client in the Wallowa County case and an ensuing dialogue started between Frolander and Stonebrink’s attorney on the best way to resolve the separate cases with the least impact on the victim and also avoid multiple trips between Wallowa and Jack- AND Skylight Gallery Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com Church Directory Church of Christ Grace Lutheran Church 502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa 541-398-2509 409 West Main -Enterprise SUNDAY WORSHIP at 9am Worship at 11 a.m. Mid-week Bible Study 7 p.m. St. Katherine’s Catholic Church Fr. Thomas Puduppulliparamban 301 E. Garfield Enterprise Mass Schedule Sundays: St. Pius X, Wallowa - 8:00 am St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 10:30am Saturdays: St Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 5:30am Weekday: St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise – 8:00am (Monday – Thursday and First Friday) Mission Project: “Bag It for School” School clothes for Foster Children phone (message): 541-426-4633 web: gracelutheranenterprise.com son counties. During the fi rst Wal- lowa County investigation law enforcement received a tip from Dropbox, an online cloud storage platform, that a Stonebrink account possibly contained unlawful images of children. Another investi- gation with search warrants ensued for Dropbox, Google and other entities. Authorities found more images, includ- ing some duplicates of the images from the fi rst case. All were linked back to his home, phone, email, etc. “There were a lot of ways we were able to prove it was the same person,” Fro- lander said. “They had differ- ent dates they were uploaded than the fi rst case, so it was a separate incident. Everything kind of happened at the same time as far as one thing would lead to the next.” Stonebrink’s network of crime and pornography extended to Europe. Fro- lander added that child por- nography is produced every- where, and that the Center for Missing and Exploited Children keeps a database of images regularly shared and traded online. Although Stonebrink is spending the next 10 years with no ability to exploit chil- dren, it doesn’t necessarily mean that all the loose ends are tied up. “Statistically, we know that people who examine, possess or trade pornographic images of children tend to be offenders of real children, so I don’t know whether there are any victims of him or anyone else that will come forward,” she said. “If anyone comes forward, we will investigate it and pursue it in any manner that we can.” She also urged that victims of sex crimes who do not want to step for- ward should seek medical care and pursue counseling or other supportive services because the impact will even- tually affect them physically or emotionally for the rest of their lives. Rock the Rodeo & Festival Season! Boots Blazers Dresses Bags Graphic T-Shirt’s St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church 100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise NE 3rd & Main St 541-426-3439 Worship Service Sunday 9:30am All are welcome CLUES ACROSS 1. Invade 5. Fruit coolers 9. Small drink 12. Car’s wheel shaft 13. Flimsy 14. Tic-tac-____ 15. Shriek 16. Remedy 18. Sins 20. October gemstone 21. Glued 24. Birthday number 26. Fully develop 27. Reflecting surfaces 31. Notable timespan 32. Perfume 34. Sticky glop 35. Giza structure 37. Shoo! 39. Grovel 40. Globe 41. Waitperson’s handout 44. Workbench clamp 45. Mimic 48. Resounding sound 52. Cashew or pecan 53. Refer to 54. ____ cream 55. Dangerous curve 56. ____ off (furious) 57. Ogler CLUES DOWN 1. Manta ____ 2. Logger’s tool 3. Feeling awful 4. Erase 5. Prize 6. Bears’ lairs 7. Dine 8. Winter transport 9. Desist 10. Pinch 11. Strip 17. Effective one 19. Change the title of 21. Kind of school, for short 22. Drafty 23. Mast or boom 24. Objective 25. Understands 27. Trendy 28. Fairy-tale baddie 29. Thunder 30. Not all 33. Tractor-trailer 36. Border on 38. Swiss or cheddar 40. Fathered 41. Look for ore 42. Down-under birds 43. Louse eggs 44. Cast a ballot 46. Opera division 47. No-win contest 49. Artfully shy 50. 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Hockey great Bobby ____ Joseph United Methodist Church Summit Church 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Cherie Dearth Phone: 541-432-3102 Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am Gospel Centered Community Service time: 10:30 am Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise 541-426-2150 Interim Pastor: Rich Hagenbaugh JosephUMC.org www.summitchurchoregon.org Enterprise Christian Church Christ Covenant Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 Pastor Terry Tollefson Worship at 9 a.m. Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. Evening Worship at 6 p.m. (nursery at A.M. services) Family Prayer: 9:30 AM Sunday School: 10 AM Worship Service: 11 AM “Loving God & One Another” David Bruce, Sr. - Minister 723 College Street Lostine Lostine Presbyterian Church Enterprise Community Congregational Church Discussion Group 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 AM The Big Brown Church Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com 541.398.0597 Hwy 82, Lostine Stephen Kliewer, Minister Wallowa Assembly of God 702 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:am Worship Service • 10:am Pastor Tim Barton Visit Us on with an open door Pastor Archie Hook Sunday Worship 11am Bible Study 9:30am Ark Angels Children’s Program Ages 4-6th grade, 11am Nursery for children 3 & under 301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044 Seventh-Day Adventist Church & School 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-3751 Church 541-426-8339 School Worship Services Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon Pastor Jonathan DeWeber Closed Monday & Tuesday TRY OUR GLUTEN FREE CRUST! THE TROLLEY A unique experience in travel & taste. Cheese topped by asparagus spears, artichoke hearts and spinach. THE BEACH The taste of a BBQ on the beach (sand not included) with onions, green peppers & marinated BBQ chicken with our special sauce. THE RIO GRANDE The taste of the southwest featuring whole green chilies and spicy chicken in a chili verde sauce topped with Open Memorial fresh tomatoes & served w/a Day to Day side of Labor sour cream. 7 Days A Week