Polk County itemizer observer. (Dallas, Or) 1992-current, June 10, 2015, Image 5

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    Polk County Itemizer-Observer • June 10, 2015 5A
Polk County News
POLICE
REPORT
Information for the police re-
port comes from law enforce-
ment agencies. Not all calls for
service are included. The status
of incidents repor ted may
change after further investiga-
tion. Individuals arrested or sus-
pected of crimes are considered
innocent until proven guilty.
—
DALLAS
Arrests/Citations
• Dakota N. McKinley, 20, of
Dallas in the 500 block of
Southwest Washington Street
on June 1 on two counts of
first-degree sex abuse.
• Jeremiah H. Lometo, 28, of
Dallas in the 600 block of West
Ellendale Avenue on June 2 on
a charge of physical harass-
ment.
• Tina L. Stuck, 41, of Dallas in
the 100 block of Northeast Fern
Court on Thursday on a charge
of misdemeanor fourth-degree
assault.
• Jeffery D. Allen, 39, of Dallas
in the 200 block of East Ellen-
dale Avenue on Saturday on a
charge of second-degree disor-
derly conduct.
• Richard E. Buckley, 28, of
Dallas in the 100 block of
Southwest Court Street on Sat-
urday on a charge of second-
degree criminal trespassing.
INDEPENDENCE
Arrests/Citations
• Joshua Kane Shelton, 29, of
Independence in the 100 block
of Polk Street on Friday on a
warrant for probation viola-
tion.
• Corey Allen Jenkins, 27, of
Salem in the 1600 block of
Monmouth Street on Sunday
for second-degree burglary,
first-degree theft and second-
degree criminal mischief.
MONMOUTH
Arrests/Citations
• Carmen G. Ochoa Pinto, 31,
of Independence in the 900
block of Church Street East on
May 29 for hit-and-run.
• Aron Plancarte Solorio, 20,
of Monmouth in the 500 block
of Jackson Street North on May
30 for misdemeanor driving
under the influence of intoxi-
cants, reckless endangering and
possession of less than an
ounce of marijuana.
• Adam Andrew Johnson, 21,
of Monmouth in the 200 block
of Catron Street North on May
31 for unnecessary noise.
• Daniel Gene Lee, 23, of
Monmouth at the corner of
Knox Street North and Jackson
Street East on May 31 for mis-
demeanor driving under the in-
fluence of intoxicants.
• Nicholas Robert Nestell, 19,
of Monmouth at the corner of
Church Street West and Stadi-
um Drive North on May 31 for
possession of less than an
ounce of marijuana.
• Ian Matthew Search, 19, of
Monmouth at the corner of
Broad Street South and Clay
Street East on May 31 for minor
in possession of alcohol.
• Mario Molina Cruz, 29, of In-
dependence at the corner of
Pacific Highway North and Pow-
ell Street East on June 2 for pro-
bation violation.
• Katie L. Owens, 34, of Mon-
mouth in the 400 block of Mon-
mouth Avenue South on June 3
for first-degree burglary.
Flight: Veteran whisked
around memorials in D.C.
Continued from A1
“They gave up their lives
to go fight for our coun-
try — some of them truly
gave up their lives — but
they gave up their plans to
go fight,” Dixon added.
Lonigan, 93, who was the
navigator on a B-24 bomber
crew in 1944 and 1945, still
insists he is not a hero.
“No way, the guys down
on the ground (were),” he
said.
Honor Flight of Oregon
sees all the World War II vets
it takes to the memorial in a
different light, organizing
dinners, airport welcomes,
and police escorts while in
Washington, D.C., to give
them the credit they earned
so many decades ago.
“It was just so fun to have
them get that kind of treat-
ment, from the police es-
cort to the response of the
people, overwhelming,”
Dixon said of the trip span-
ning May 28-31.
Once in D.C., the group
of 26 vets and their
guardians were taken to the
memorials for World War II,
Vietnam War, Korean War,
Kutzer
Mirelez
Lincoln, U.S. Navy, Iwo
Jima, and U.S. Air Force.
They also made stops at Ar-
lington National Cemetery
to see the changing of the
guard at the Tomb of the
Un k n ow n So l d i e r a n d
Smithsonian’s National Air
and Space Museum.
All of those visits were
crammed into two days, but
Honor Flight made sure
they were whisked from one
location to another as
quickly as possible.
“They gave us a police es-
cort, so we just went from
place to place with no trou-
ble,” Dixon said. “The sirens
would go off and we went
through red lights. … It was
pretty exciting.”
For the patriotic Lonigan,
the trip was the fulfillment
of a long-held wish.
“It was something I had
looked forward to, but
didn’t know whether I
would ever make it,” he
said.
He said among the high-
lights of the trip was see-
ing the World War II and
Korean War memorials,
and the changing of the
Arroyo
guard at Arlington.
“There’s no words to de-
scribe that,” he said.
Dixon said she’s heard
her father’s stories about
the war many times — par-
ticularly the time he and his
crew had to bail out of their
plane, the Lucky Penny,
while on a bombing mis-
sion. They all survived the
dramatic incident, except
for the B-24, which crashed
and exploded on impact.
She said going on the trip
with her father allowed her
to connect in a small way
with his experience.
“To go and see him hon-
ored like this was a special
thing to do together,” she
said.
Upon its return to Port-
land, the group was given
one last hero’s welcome at
Portland International Air-
port. Even National
Women’s Soccer League
team Portland Thorns took
part, posing for photos with
the guys after a return trip
from a game.
“It was exhausting,”
Dixon said of the whirlwind
trip, “but it was incredible.”
Wooldridge
Kyle Parkin indicted in
death of infant daughter
Itemizer-Observer staff report
INDEPENDENCE — Kyle Parkin, 36, of Independence
was arrested on June 3 in connection to the death of his 2-
month-old daughter.
Parkin was indicted by a grand jury on May 27 for sec-
ond-degree manslaughter and second-degree criminally
negligent homicide.
On Feb. 6, Independence Police and medics from Polk
County Fire District No. 1 responded to a call of an infant
not breathing. Parkin allegedly put a pacifier in her
mouth because she was fussy, and laid her on her stom-
ach next to him and went back to sleep, according to po-
lice reports.
When he woke up, his daughter would not wake up.
Medics could not revive her using CPR.
Colley
Corrections posts ‘most wanted’
POLK COUNTY — Polk
County Community Correc-
tions lists these individuals
as “most wanted” for June.
Citizens with information
on the whereabouts of any
of these individuals should
call Community Corrections
at 503-623-5226.
• Shaina Renee Kutzer,
born June 19, 1986, 5-5,
130 pounds, blond hair, blue
eyes. Charges: Possession
of methamphetamine.
• Antonio Monroe
Mirelez, born Feb. 21,
1990, 5-7, 150 pounds,
black hair, brown eyes.
Charges: Second-degree
kidnapping.
• Raquel Arroyo, born
Jan. 4, 1994, 5-2, 145
pounds, black hair, brown
eyes. Charges: Third-degree
assault.
• Michelle Renee
Wooldridge, born April 1,
1984, 5-0, 140 pounds,
blond hair, blue eyes.
C h a rg e s : D e l i v e r y o f
methamphetamine, posses-
sion of methamphetamine,
unlawful use of a vehicle
and failure to appear.
• James Nicholas Colley,
born Jan. 24, 1995, 5-9, 140
pounds, brown hair, hazel
eyes. Charges: Fourth-de-
gree assault.
SHAMANIC HEALING
The teaching spirits are fully realized, transcen-
dent, compassionate beings who are available to
us for healing and wisdom. They give us per-
spectives we don’t see for personal empower-
ment, healing, knowledge and transformational
growth.
Marian Simon, MA
SHAMANIC
PRACTITIONER
& COUNSELOR
Specializing in Spiritual
Healing & Development
503-831-0158
• Soul Retrieval - lost soul parts due to trauma
• Extraction - clearing localized illness
• Divination or message from the spirits
• Power animal retrieval - given a spirit animal for
guidance and protection
• Healing with spiritual light
• Soul remembering - a symbol to remind you of
your true self
• Unravel curses from the past
• Remove spirit intrusion or possession
• Cutting emotional ties that bind
• Psychopomp - guiding souls of the dead to cross over
• Clearing of home, property or business
• Healing ancestral lines
simonart@teleport.com • http://mariansimon.com
!
!
!
S
G
N
I
BIG SAV
4th of July Celebrations
Publishes July 1st
Summerfest
Publishes July 22nd
Polk County Fair
Publishes August 5th
Hop & Heritage
Publishes Sept. 16th
Contact Heidi, Rachel or Karen by June 11th
to be a part of this special!
503-623-2373
Itemizer-Observer
147 SE Court St, Dallas