THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL & STATE Masks to be required at outdoor events  Gov. Kate Brown cites surge in COVID-19 cases By GARY WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Gov. Kate Brown has expanded a mandatory mask order to include large outdoor gatherings as well as indoor gatherings. The new rule will go into effect Friday, Aug. 27 and includes everyone aged 5 and over regardless of whether or not they are vaccinated. Masks will be required in out- door public situations. Brown also is recommending outdoor masks for private gatherings, though they are not manda- tory. “The delta variant is spreading fast and wide, throwing our state into a level of crisis we have not yet seen in the pandemic,” Brown said in a Tuesday afternoon announcement. “Cases and hospitalizations are at a record high.” The immediate impact will be on those going to outdoor sports events, fairs and large gatherings. The new rule will be in effect for the Oregon State Fair in Salem that begins Aug. 27 and for the Pendleton Round-Up Sept. 11. Masks will be required for any college football game as well. Oregon’s hospitals continue to head toward unknown medical territory as the num- ber of hospitalized COVID-19 patients hit 937 in a report Monday, 37 more than Sun- day. There are 253 COVID-19 patients in intensive care unit beds, up 22 from the day before. The Oregon Health Authority said Monday that 4,701 new cases were reported in the state between Friday and Sunday. The Oregon Health & Science University forecast last week that the highly contagious delta vari- ant would lead to skyrocketing case rates that won’t peak until early next month. Epidemiologists around the nation have noted an increase in infections that cannot be CHARGES Shirtcliff noted that while his ruling on Schaeffer’s dismissal motion is pending, Continued from Page A1 the fi rst-degree murder case Jail on several days, were ac- against Greenwood, 50, is cessed on Regan’s computer slated to go to trial in early September. at the Baker City Police Shirtcliff has scheduled Department, according to a a hearing for Aug. 30 at forensic investigation. Suppressing evidence col- 8:30 a.m. at the Courthouse lected after that date, Baxter to consider other motions not related to Schaeffer’s motion argued in court Tuesday, would be suffi cient “to secure to dismiss the charges or sup- (Greenwood’s) constitutional press evidence. rights.” “Dismissal is a last resort The phone calls type of remedy,” Baxter said. Although police can legally He also has argued, both access and listen to calls that jail inmates make to friends in court on Tuesday and in motions, that were the judge or family, conversations with to invalidate all evidence that attorneys are protected by attorney-client privilege. Regan had handled, from The fi ve calls that the beginning of the case, prompted Schaeffer’s mo- that would be tantamount tion to dismiss the charges to dismissing the charges since Regan was involved in against Greenwood were every aspect of the investiga- made to a cellphone number tion and Baxter could hardly that, according to Schaeffer’s expect to convict Greenwood motion, was not on the list without any of that evidence. of numbers that belonged to attorneys and thus were Baker City Police Chief privileged. Ty Duby said in an Aug. 19 A different cellphone for interview with the Baker Schaeffer, and his offi ce num- City Herald that he put Re- ber, were on that list, accord- gan on paid administrative leave after receiving a report ing to his motion. According to testimony from the forensic investiga- during Tuesday’s hearing tion conducted by Special and written motions fi led by Agent Mark Williamson of both Schaeffer and Baxter, the Oregon Department of the issue of police possibly Justice earlier in August. Williamson examined three listening to privileged phone police department computers, calls between Greenwood and Schaeffer arose in November including Regan’s, for evi- dence that they were used to 2020. That was about 10 months access and play the recorded after Greenwood was arrested phone calls. and accused of fatally shooting “We’re cooperating with the investigation,” Duby said. his former girlfriend, Angela Michelle Parrish, 30, of Vale, He declined to comment on Jan. 13, 2020. Police found further. Baxter said during Tues- Parrish’s body in a building just north of H Street in Baker day’s hearing that Regan City, on property that previ- is being investigated for ously was owned by the New possible criminal charges of Tribes Mission, south of the offi cial misconduct. Powder River Correctional The Herald left a mes- Facility. sage with Regan’s attorney, In an Aug. 17, 2021, mo- Dan Thenell of Portland, but had not received a response tion, Baxter wrote that Schaef- fer and his legal assistant by press time Wednesday contacted the Baker County afternoon. Jail staff in November 2020 At the end of Tuesday’s because Greenwood was con- hearing, Shirtcliff said he would take the matter “under cerned about police listening advisement” and issue a writ- to his privileged phone calls. Sheriff Travis Ash, the fi rst ten opinion “so my decision is of eight witnesses whom Bax- as clear as possible, as soon ter called during Tuesday’s as I can.” RESULTS Continued from Page A2 Teen Division Janie Bingham: 1 reserve champion, 2 blue, 1 red Avery Collier: 1 red Zoey Justus: 1 champion, 1 reserve champion, 4 blue, 1 red Paige Marlia: 2 blue Adult Division Caleb Colton: 1 best of show, 1 overall champion, 1 champion, 4 blue Sarah Owen: 1 reserve champion, 2 blue Emery Owen: 1 cham- pion, 3 blue, 1 red Jacquelyn Sanders: 1 overall champion, 1 reserve champion, 3 blue, 1 red Heather Goshorn: 1 red Jill Myatt: 1 reserve champion, 4 blue, 5 red Nick Myatt: 1 reserve champion, 2 blue, 1 red Jessica Wilson: 1 reserve the spike, when daily cases rates could top 5,000 under some scenarios. Deaths have also been rising, with 159 so far this month, putting it on pace to be the fourth or fi fth worst level of fatalities since the pandemic hit Oregon in February 2020. Because early vaccination efforts centered on older and medically fragile people, OHA has said the state will not see the 603 deaths reported in Decem- ber. But the spread of the delta variant is increasing the overall population of those infected, which will lead to an Dave Killen/The Oregonian, File upturn in deaths. Monday’s totals brought Oregon Gov. Kate Brown in September 2020. the state to 257,644 cases. The increased infection and hospi- death total stands at 3,036. traced to an indoor spread. The extension of the rules talization rates. Unvaccinated “We are starting to see to outdoors mirrors many of Oregonians have become instances where cases are the exceptions of the existing clustering around events, like sicker longer when infected. indoor mandate. The Oregon Health outdoor music festivals, that People do not need to Authority reported just 7% of happen outdoors,” said Dr. Dean Sidelinger, the state epi- adult staffed hospital beds and wear masks while drinking, eating or sleeping. Masks are demiologist in the statement. 8% of adult staffed Intensive not required for those sing- A sharp spike in COVID-19 Care Unit beds in the state ing, speaking or otherwise infections driven by the highly were available on Monday. performing in a public setting, OHA has forecast it will be contagious delta variant has swept Oregon since July, with 500 beds short at the peak of during sports games or train- ing. It also has an exception for the homeless. The order comes as the state is hammered by the highly contagious delta vari- ant that has driven infection levels above those of last winter. Hospitalizations have overwhelmed medical centers across the state and forecast are for at least 10 more days before the infection wave peaks. Because of the speed of the spread of the delta variant, health offi cials say it is too late for the two-shot Moderna or Pfi zer vaccinations to have full effect before the current spike spreads throughout communities. The only way to partially blunt the expected peak of in- fections and hospitalizations is by expanded masking at least until the spike levels out and drops dramatically. “Masks are a quick and simple tool we can imme- diately deploy to protect ourselves and our families, and quickly help stop fur- ther spread of COVID-19,” Brown said. hearing, testifi ed that after he learned about the allegation, he had Cpl. Dennis Lefever of the Sheriff’s Offi ce make two copies of the fi ve phone calls in question. Ash said he gave one com- puter disc with the recorded calls to Schaeffer’s investiga- tor, and that he intended to give the second disc to Baxter. Ash said he never did give the second disc to Baxter, and that the disc was on his desk in the Sheriff’s Offi ce for the next several months, until after Schaeffer fi led his motion to dismiss charges on June 25 of this year. In response to Baxter’s questions, Ash said he has never listened to the phone calls, nor has he ever talked with Regan about the content of the calls. In cross-examination, Schaeffer asked Ash if his of- fi ce is always locked when he’s not there. Ash answered that it’s not always locked. He said he has no reason to believe that the disc containing recordings of the fi ve phone calls between Greenwood and Schaeffer was ever moved from his desk, but that he couldn’t say for certain that it had not. Following Ash’s testimony, Baxter called as witnesses Dennis Lefever and two other Sheriff’s Offi ce offi cials, Cpl. Maya Lefever and Lt. Ben Wray. All three told Baxter that they had neither listened to the phone calls, nor spoken with Regan about them. In his argument, Baxter conceded, as he did in his Aug. 17 motion, that the evidence shows not only that Regan alone listened to the phone calls, but that based on the length of time her computer played the calls compared with the actual du- ration of those calls, that she acted intentionally rather than inadvertently. But Baxter argued that there is no evidence that anyone besides Regan listened to the calls or knows their content. He cited the testimony from the county and city offi cers, all of whom said that Regan never mentioned the phone calls to them. In his Aug. 17 motion, Baxter addressed the same issue, writing: “This is impor- tant, because it shows that Detective Regan, perhaps fearful of what consequences she could face, never dis- cussed anything related to the fi ve phone calls with any other member of the prosecu- tion team.” “There is not a conspiracy going on,” Baxter wrote in the motion. “The information obtained out of those phone calls has not been conveyed to anyone else on the pros- ecution team.” Once the allegations arose that Regan had illegally listened to the privileged con- versations, Baxter said “we put up a wall between Shan- non Regan and everybody else involved in this case.” Baxter wrote in the mo- tion that he would not use Regan as a witness should Greenwood go to trial. Shirtcliff asked Baxter during Tuesday’s hearing how he would be able to introduce evidence at trial if Regan wasn’t a witness. Baxter said that during the fi rst few months of the investigation, in the winter and spring of 2020, Sells gathered evidence, including listening to non-privileged phone conversations between Greenwood and others. Baxter said Sells, not Regan, testifi ed about those conversations in court, and that he should be allowed to testify as well in trial. Regan — he didn’t remem- ber when it happened — in which she mentioned hearing part of a phone call involving an attorney, and that when she realized an attorney was involved she went on to a dif- ferent call. Sells testifi ed that he didn’t remember whether Regan had mentioned the attorney’s name, or the suspect or the case. “I assumed it was acciden- tal,” Sells said. Sells, in response to Schaef- fer’s questions, said he has listened to phone conversa- tions that Greenwood had from jail with people other than Schaeffer. Sells, who said he worked closely with Regan in investi- gating Parrish’s murder, told Schaeffer that “I believe Detec- tive Regan made a mistake, and I don’t think she would jeopardize the evidence in this case.” Attorneys’ arguments Following testimony from witnesses, Shirtcliff asked fi rst Schaeffer, as the hearing was prompted by his motion, and then Baxter to make arguments. Schaeffer contended that because Regan was the lead investigator, and thus involved with all aspects of assembling the case against Greenwood, it’s not possible to separate her alleged mis- conduct from the case itself. “This is purposeful mis- conduct by the lead detec- tive,” Schaeffer said. “She’s a member of the prosecution team.” He conceded that dismiss- ing criminal charges is a “last resort remedy,” and that the legal standard for justify- ing a dismissal is, and should be, a high one. But Schaeffer argued that based on Regan’s “outra- geous conduct,” and her inte- gral role in the prosecution, that standard has been met. Schaeffer contends that Baxter’s statement that he has neither listened to the phone calls nor is aware of their content, and the testimony from the county and city offi cers that they too haven’t listened to the calls, doesn’t override the sig- nifi cance of Regan’s involve- ment. Schaeffer also argued that Baxter can’t prove conclu- sively that no one besides Regan listened to the calls or knows what Greenwood and Schaeffer talked about. Schaeffer contends that the prosecution can’t prove that nobody took the disc with the recorded calls from Ash’s desk over the several months the sheriff said it was there. “The appropriate remedy — how can it not be dismiss- al of charges, your honor,” Schaeffer said to Shirtcliff. However, should the judge decide not to dismiss charges, Schaeffer argued that Shirt- cliff should instead suppress all evidence that Regan was involved in collecting, both before and after Sept. 14, 2020, the day the phone calls were accessed from and played on her computer. Baker City Police offi cers testify Baxter then called as wit- nesses three current or former offi cials from the Baker City Police Department — Duby, former Chief Ray Duman, who retired June 30, 2021, and Detective Chris Sells, who worked with Regan to investi- gate Parrish’s murder. All three told Baxter that they had not listened to the phone calls between Green- wood and Schaeffer. They also said they had not talked with Regan about those calls. Sells did tell Baxter that he recalled a conversation with Forensic investigation in Baker City Police computers Baxter’s eighth and fi nal witness was Williamson, the forensic examiner from the Oregon Department of Justice. Duman, the retired Baker City Police chief, testifi ed ear- lier that after learning about the allegations that a city offi cer had listened to Green- wood’s privileged phone calls, he had copies made of the hard drives from the computers of the three offi cers who had ac- cess to phone calls from the jail — Regan, Sells and Duby. Williamson told Baxter that he examined the three hard drives and that only the one that Regan used contained digital “artifacts” showing that her computer was used to access and to play the fi ve recorded phone calls. Williamson testifi ed that he found evidence that in one case Regan’s computer “auto- fi lled” the cellphone number for Schaeffer that Greenwood used for each of the fi ve calls. Williamson said that means someone had previous- ly typed in the full cellphone number on that computer, and that the auto-fi ll function oper- ated in a subsequent search for that number. champion, 5 blue, 2 red Kristy Herman: 2 blue, 1 red Blake Herman: 2 blue Elizabeth Ellis: 1 cham- pion, 11 blue, 1 red Sierra Koehler: 1 blue Blake Marlia: 1 reserve best of show, 1 overall champion, 1 champion, 1 blue Bibiana Gifft: 1 blue Lindsey Huyett: 1 overall champion, 1 blue Crystal Brockman: 1 red Heidi Justus: 1 cham- Senior Division Professional Division pion, 1 reserve champion, David Colton: 1 blue Gina Perkins: 1 blue 2 blue Gary Tritt: 1 blue, 1 red Debbie King: 1 blue Jarri McClarin: 1 overall Jay & Kristin Wilson, Owners champion, 2 reserve cham- 2036 Main Street, Baker City 541-523-6284 • ccb#219615 pion, 6 blue, 2 red Cindy Birko: 1 blue, 1 red Shirley Owen: 1 reserve champion, 1 blue, 2 red Alana Clark: 1 blue Brenda Goshorn: 1 cham- pion, 1 reserve champion, 3 blue, 2 red Deanna Davis: 3 blue, 2 red