Spilyay Tymoo February 9, 2022 Page 7 Standoff closed hwy. for 6 hours Highway 26 between War m Springs and Madras was cloesd to traffic for six hours last Wednes- day afternoon, February 2. The incident began about 8:30 a.m., when Warm Springs Police at- tempted to make a vehicle stop based on an outstanding warrant. Rather than pull over, the driver continued south on the highway, before turning off on Pelton Dam Road, where the driver then stopped. The driver, a 41-year old female from Warm Springs, was taken into custody without incident. The male passenger, Janson Harrington, 34, refused to exit the vehicle. He brandished a firearm, barricading himself inside the ve- hicle, according to police. This Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office Scene of the stand-off on Pelton Dam Road. prompted the six-hour closure of the highway. After extensive negotiation, a tactical team used a flash-bang de- vice to get Mr. Harrington from the vehicle, authorities said. Harrinton was wanted for crimes on the reservation, and on a felony probation violation out of Jefferson County. At the scene of six-hour standoff were War m Springs and Madras police, sher- iffs deputies and other members of the Central Oregon Emergency Response Team. Also on the scene were two Bearcat armored vehicles, a K-9 team, and a drone helping keep watch on the vehicle. Most fortunatley, the incident ended without injury. Portland Area IHS reports lower covid cases New leader for NAGPRA The Portland Area of the In- dian Health Service reported the tied-for-lowest Covid-19 seven-day incidence rate among the 12 IHS areas. The most recent data is through early February. The Portland Area and Califor- nia Area each reported a recent seven-day incidence rate of 20.4 percent, followed narrowly by the Alaska Area at 20.6 percent inci- dence rate. For comparison, the seven-day incidence rate for the Tucson Area was 46.4 percent. This number reflects the seven-day incidence rate among those tested during the time frame. The Billings Area was at 46.4 percent; and Al- buquerque at 40.1 percent. In other early February IHS covid data from around Indian Country: The IHS has conducted more than 4 million covid tests for its ser- vice membership across Indian Country. Of the total, 426,146 have returned positive since the pandemic began. The data shows an increase in cases from late January to early Driver killed in Jan. wreck In late January an SUV driver traveling at a high rate of speed, and passing other vehicles on Highway 26 on the reservation, collided head-on with a pickup truck, killing the driver and leav- ing two other people with minor injuries. The incident happened Friday, January 28. Warm Springs Police and medics responded to the two-ve- hicle crash about 6 p.m. near milepost 74. Based on the investigation, the driver of a 2007 Lincoln SUV was heading west at a high rate of speed and attempting to pass other vehicles when he struck an eastbound 2014 Ford February. Warm Springs has cases falling in recent weeks, from the large spike that happened in the weeks following the December holi- days. Two of the IHS regions with the highest overall incidence are in Ari- zona: The Navajo Area and the Phoenix Area. The Oklahoma City Area has also been among the high- est, with Albuquerque. In fact, the Oklahoma City Area is now ap- proaching the top hot-spot long held by the Navajo Area. Young Life Youth Club meeting in Warm Springs pickup truck towing a small utility trailer. The driver died at the scene. Oregon State Police re- sponded to assist with the in- vestigation and crash recon- struction. Speed is considered a primary factor in the crash. The crash and investiga- tion shut down a 25-mile stretch of the highway for several hours. The highway was closed be- tween mileposts 71 and 96, with drivers urged to use al- ternate routes, such as high- ways 35 and 216. The highway didn’t reopen until early Sat- urday. The Young Life Youth Club meets on Thursdays in War m Springs from 4:15 to 5:15 p.m. The club meets at the modulars by the former elementary school, where Bridges used to be located. There are food and games and more. Feel free to stop by! For more information contact Shontae Thomas at 541-771 9724. The Warm Springs Community Action Team is offering Tax Aide again this year. You can schedule an appointment for Febru- ary by calling 541-553- 3148. Courtesy WSPD Tribal police photo at the scene. CODE makes inter-state drugs, weapons arrests The Central Oregon Drug En- forcement Team last week con- cluded a lengthy surveillance op- eration with the arrest of a Ma- dras couple on inter-state drug and weapons charges. Officers with the Drug En- forcement Team received a war- rant for the arrest of David Toedtemeier, 31, and his wife Kylee, 38. The officers stopped the couple’s vehicle in late January on Highway 97 near LaPine. At the stop, the Warm Springs Police Department narcotics K9 alerted the officers to the presence of the drugs in the vehicle. Officers then found a large amounts of fentanyl, metham- phetamine and heroin, disguised as Oxycodone pills. They also recov- ered a loaded pistol. Mr. Toedtemeier would then face a Pills and other drugs seized during arrests. CODE felon-in-possession charge. The couple also had their infant child in the vehicle, bringing a charge of en- dangering the welfare of a child. After the arrests, officers searched the Toedtemeier residence, recovering more drugs and weap- ons. An allegation is that weapons were being exchanged in California for drugs. Federal officials announced the hiring of the first full-time Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act investigator at the Department of the Interior. The new employee will help en- sure that museums and other insti- tutions are complying with the fed- eral law, which requires the return of ancestral remains and cultural property to their rightful American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian caretakers and owners. “Repatriation is a sacred respon- sibility for many Native Ameri- cans,” said Chuck Sams, a citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation who serves as director of the National Park Service. “We hope our efforts to stream- line the requirements of NAGPRA and invest in additional staff will lead to more instances of proper repatriation and reburial of Indig- enous ancestors and cultural items,” said Sams, who is the first Native person to lead the National Parks.