LOCAL & STATE TUESDAY, MAY 26, 2020 BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A Grant County district attorney has suspects in 2018 murder of couple By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Closure may be coming almost two years after a couple vanished after their cabin became engulfed in fl ames in the Laycock Creek Road area. Grant County District Attorney Jim Carpenter said May 20 he planned to prosecute suspects in the murder of Terry and Sharon Smith. “There are suspects in the case,” Car- penter told the Eagle, “and a substantial amount of evidence that points to the suspects such that I will be taking it to the grand jury.” Carpenter said, as soon as grand juries can meet without social distanc- ing restrictions, he plans to take the case to a grand jury, and he anticipates an indictment. The couple and their pickup were not found after their home on Nan’s Rock Road between John Day and Mt. Vernon burned in the early morning hours of July 18, 2018. The case evolved into a homicide after investigators confi rmed DNA samples from remains found in the residence be- longed to Terry and Sharon Smith. The pickup was later located in Boise. Carpenter said the Oregon Depart- ment of Justice was brought in as a special prosecutor for Grant County, and the DOJ had been directing the inves- tigation and working toward prosecution. Submitted photo Terry and Sharon Smith He said, several months ago, Grant County Sheriff Glenn Palmer requested the case back from the DOJ to have it prosecuted in Grant County. Carpenter said, because of limited resources, he attempted to bring in a spe- cial prosecutor, a local attorney whom he declined to name, who initially agreed to take the case but then backed out after receiving the materials from the DOJ. “It was initially assigned to the Department of Justice because I simply didn’t have the resources to take care of it,” Carpenter said. “I still don’t, but there are no other options. The Department of Justice isn’t going to take it back.” The case is being investigated by the Oregon State Police and Grant County Sheriff’s Offi ce with the assistance of the FBI Bend offi ce. “I’ve discussed the case recently with the FBI, and they are assisting the sher- iff’s offi ce with a few fi nal steps in the investigation,” Carpenter said. Grant County Sheriff Glenn Palmer declined to comment in an email on May 14, stating it was “an ongoing criminal investigation.” Family and friends told the Eagle about the social nature of Terry and Sha- ron Smith and how unusual it would be for them to disappear for any length of time without communicating with their friends and family. “The Smiths’ friends and acquain- tances all would like to know if there has been any progress in solving this heinous murder,” Lisa Roach, a friend of the Smiths, said in an email. “Any news would be greatly appreciated.” Timothy Williams, a pastor, who grew close to the Smiths after purchasing a property from them roughly a year before their murder, said he was their “hanai son” — a term used in Hawai- ian culture to refer to a family member, though not blood-related. He said Terry and Sharon saw some- thing good in him and treated him like family. He said they were not just people he bought a house from in an agreement of sale. “I loved these people,” Williams said. “There’s no reason that you can tell me, or anybody can tell me, they deserved to die like they did.” Oregon State Penitentiary has largest outbreak of coronavirus The man had been trans- ferred Monday to Salem The number of coronavirus Hospital and was tested that cases continues to rise at the day. On Tuesday, the results Oregon State Penitentiary, confi rmed he had the virus. He which last week became the died the next day. source of the single largest Like the vast majority of known outbreak of the virus in people who have died from the state. the illness in Oregon, the man On Friday, the Oregon had an underlying health Department of Corrections condition, prison offi cials said. said a total of 141 people at Citing the confi dentiality of the prison — 115 inmates and medical information, the state 26 employees — have tested declined to identify the man, positive. A Southeast Portland saying only that he was be- nursing home is the source tween 50 and 60 years old, and of the state’s second largest wouldn’t disclose his underly- outbreak. ing condition. Four inmates at the Dr. Christopher DiGiulio, maximum-security prison in the chief of medicine for the Salem have been treated for Corrections Department, said the disease at local hospitals, inmates’ movements within including one man who died the prison are restricted to con- Wednesday. It was the fi rst tain the spread of the illness. inmate death from coronavirus Built in 1866, the state peni- in Oregon. tentiary, a hulking complex of imposing cellblocks, was not designed with a pandemic in mind, DiGiulio said. “That is one of the most dif- fi cult aspects and the biggest challenge managing this,” he said. “The building is over 100 years old. It was not designed for social distancing. It was probably designed before germ theory was established. So the idea of social distancing inside of OSP is diffi cult.” He said hundreds of men live “in very close quarters on multiple tiers.” Corrections offi cials had been moving almost all infected inmates to Coffee Creek Correctional Institution in Wilsonville, where the infi r- mary is equipped with rooms that limit air circulation. But the rising number of cases has prompted the agency to shift away from that practice, DiGiulio said. The infi rmary continues to take people who are consid- ered medically vulnerable and have a serious case of the vi- rus, but people with symptoms who are in better shape are treated in a converted housing unit at Coffee Creek, the state women’s prison. DiGiulio said people who test positive but don’t have any symptoms and are other- wise healthy have remained in quarantine at the state penitentiary. Inmates are routinely screened for symptoms, he said, but testing remains a hard sell among the men who fear they will test positive and end up moved away from their cells and placed in an even more restrictive setting. LAWSUIT briefs on Friday arguing why they believe Shirtcliff was correct in issuing the pre- liminary injunction and why the Supreme Court should reinstate that injunction. That would prohibit the state from continuing to enforce Brown’s executive orders. In all but one of Oregon’s 36 counties — Multnomah, which includes Portland — the state has begun to ease some of the restrictions in those orders. Baker County is among the counties that started phase one of the state’s reopening plan on May 15. The county could potentially move into phase two, which further eases restrictions (details have yet to be announced), on June 5. Mannix said the 57-page brief he fi led includes ad- ditional legal support for the plaintiffs’ position — a position with which Shirtcliff concurred in his order grant- ing a preliminary injunction. That position is that be- cause Gov. Brown has invoked the state’s public health emer- gency law — Oregon Revised Statute (ORS) 433.441 — in several of the executive orders she has issued since mid March, she was bound by the 28-day limit for public health emergencies as stated in that law. Attorneys for the governor have argued that the 28-day limit in ORS 433 doesn’t apply to the executive orders because Brown’s initial decla- ration of a state of emergency due the pandemic was made under a different state law — ORS 401.165 — which does not have a time limit. In his brief to the Supreme Court, Mannix argues that the two laws overlap, and that when there is a confl ict between laws — in this case one law that has a time limit and another law which does not — the more specifi c law “should take precedence.” By Noelle Crombie The Oregonian/OregonLive Continued from Page 1A If Shirtcliff declines to either vacate his order or submit a written opinion, then the Supreme Court would set a deadline of Thursday for the governor’s attorneys to fi le a brief related to the prelimi- nary injunction. The plaintiffs’ attorneys would then have until June 2 to fi le briefs in response to the governor’s brief. Kevin Mannix, a Salem attorney who is representing a group of intervenors — includ- ing Bill Harvey, chairman of the Baker County Board of Commissioners, acting as an individual and busi- ness owner, not in his elected capacity — who have joined the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against the governor, said Saturday that he hopes Shirt- cliff will either send a written response to the Supreme Court further explaining his decision to issue a preliminary injunction, or do nothing. Mannix said he’s encour- aged by the Supreme Court’s decision to set deadlines for lawyers to submit briefs in the event Shirtcliff chooses either of those two options. “This means that the Or- egon Supreme Court has kept this case on a very short time frame,” Mannix said. He said he was pleased that the Supreme Court didn’t issue a peremptory writ of mandamus, which would have ordered Shirtcliff to vacate his order granting a preliminary injunction rather than give him the option of defending his earlier decision. The legal issue at play now is not the lawsuit itself, but rather Shirtcliff’s order grant- ing the preliminary injunction. Even if that order is vacated — either by Shirtcliff himself or by a later decision of the Supreme Court — the lawsuit would continue, potentially leading to a trial in Baker County Circuit Court. The governor’s attorneys from the state Department of Justice fi led a motion seeking to dismiss the lawsuit, argu- ing it has no legal merit, but Shirtcliff denied that motion. Mannix said that both he and Ray Hacke, the Salem at- torney from the Pacifi c Justice Institute who is representing the plaintiffs and fi led the lawsuit on May 6, submitted See Prison/Page 6A Now save $ 30/mo. for a whole year on a bundle with DIRECTV and AT&T Internet. w/24-mo. TV & 12-mo. Internet agmts & combined bill. 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The Addams Family: ©2019 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. and BRON Creative MG1, LLC. All Rights Reserved. ©2020 AT&T Intellectual Property. All Rights Reserved. AT&T, Globe logo, DIRECTV, and all other DIRECTV marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. our lives,” she said. “But in the bottom of our Continued from Page 1A hearts we knew our job Curry referred to is to protect the people at “the people behind us” home. We’re not going to — the orderly rows of let anyone take away our white headstones in the freedoms.” veterans section of the Jimm Mooney of cemetery. Veterans Hope Ministries And then she ad- introduced Curry, and dressed the veterans also followed her address who stood before her on with concluding remarks. a slope of well-tended Mooney said he was grass, the snowy Elkhorn thrilled with the turnout Mountains providing a for the ceremony, which stirring backdrop. he started planning little Both groups, Curry more than a week earlier said — those in front and after learning that the those behind — helped annual event would be to make possible events another casualty of the such as Monday’s Memo- coronavirus pandemic. rial Day ceremony. “My heart is so big and Curry is herself a mem- so grateful for all of you ber of the former group. to be here today,” Mooney She served in the U.S. said. “Today is the day Army in both Afghani- to honor and remember stan and Iraq. those who paid the ulti- “When we signed on mate sacrifi ce so we could the dotted line we knew be free in this country we might have to give today.” COUNCIL vandalism to the Powder River Pavilion in Geiser- Pollman Park. In a letter to councilors, Shollen- berger posed questions to councilors, including whether the city can take additional steps to enforce ordinances prohibiting vandalism. Continued from Page 1A In other business this evening, councilors will hear from Marilyn Haynes Shollenberger, president of Baker City Events, about her concerns about recurring L OCAL B RIEFING AmeriTitle’s Baker City employees donate $300 to local Backpack program Employees from AmeriTitle’s Baker City branch have donated $300 to the Baker City Backpack Pro- gram, which provides meals during weekends to local children. Community Connection has money available for food and shelter programs Baker County will receive $6,792 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and $9,683 from the CARES Act’s emergency food and shelter program. Organizations that provide those services to Baker County residents can apply for some of the money through Community Connection of Baker County. To request an application, call Joe Hayes at 541-523- 6591, extension 11, or email to joe@ccno.org. Applica- tion deadline is June 12 at 4 p.m. Pine Fest Music Festival in Halfway canceled due to coronavirus pandemic HALFWAY — The organizers of the annual Pine Fest Musical Festival scheduled for Sept. 11-12 in Halfway announced that the event has been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. People who have bought tickets or camping reserva- tions can keep their receipts, which will be honored at the 2021 event. For refunds, or other questions, email steve@pinetel.com, specifying “Pine Fest 2020” in the subject line. Mannix contends ORS 433 is more specifi c, not only be- cause it prescribes a time limit but also because it grants the governor particular authori- ties, including the ability to restrict residents’ movements, that are not included in the more general emergency law, ORS 401. Indeed, Shirtcliff, in his or- der granting the preliminary injunction, wrote that Brown had to invoke ORS 433 in some of her executive orders because of the specifi c powers it conveys to the governor. Oregon’s Solicitor General, Benjamin Gutman, disagreed, writing in a memo asking the state Supreme Court to vacate the preliminary injunction that Shirtcliff “committed fundamental legal error” in granting the injunction. “The trial court erred in fi nding that the Governor’s emergency powers under ORS chapter 401 are time-limited by the provisions of ORS chap- ter 433,” Gutman wrote. “The provisions for public-health emergencies in chapter 433 supplement rather than sup- plant the Governor’s powers under chapter 401.” Once Upon Three Rivers Rhine, Moselle & Main YOUR PERFECT BUNDLE BUNDLE NOW. SAVE ALL YEAR. TRIBUTE MO. 190 CHANNELS Including Local Channels! CALL TODAY - For $100 Gift Card Promo Code: DISH100 for 12 Mos. 1-866-373-9175 Offer ends 7/15/20. 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