A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Pressure on to decide on detective B aker City Police Chief Ty Duby told the Herald recently that the city can’t keep De- tective Shannon Regan on paid administra- tive leave “indefinitely.” Obviously. But city residents could hardly be blamed for wondering just how long this period, when the city is paying Regan $6,000 per month but not allowing her to work, will turn out to be. Duby placed Regan on leave in July 2021. He had little choice but to do so after La Grande defense attorney Jim A. Schaeffer alleged that Regan, the lead detective in the fatal shooting of Angela Par- rish in Baker City in January 2020, listened to five phone calls between Schaeffer and his client, sus- pect Shawn Quentin Greenwood, in 2020. Schaef- fer argued in court that Regan violated Green- wood’s rights, and the attorney sought to dismiss all charges against Greenwood. Judge Matt Shirtcliff declined to do so, but he did rule that Greg Baxter, Baker County district attor- ney, couldn’t use at trial any evidence that Regan collected after Sept. 14, 2020, the day her computer was used to access and listen to the phone calls, ac- cording to an investigation by the Oregon Depart- ment of Justice. Greenwood later pleaded no con- test to three lesser charges and was sentenced to 90 months in prison. Two issues have a direct bearing on Regan’s em- ployment situation. First, the Department of Justice is investigating whether Regan broke any laws (offi- cial misconduct is probably the most likely charge, if so). Duby said he hasn’t heard any results from the investigation. The second issue is whether the district attorney could use Regan as a trial witness in the future. If not, it’s difficult to imagine how the city could continue to employ her as a police offi- cer, as testifying is a vital part of the job, particu- larly for a detective. Duby and City Manager Jon Cannon need an- swers to both those questions. And then they need to make a prompt decision about Regan’s status. Prolonging this situation is a misuse of city dol- lars, and it deprives Regan of the ability to plan for the future. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor YOUR VIEWS Vote no on the Baker Rural Fire District tax levy state law and does not publish or post its budget for the taxpayers to read or com- ment on. I was a member of this Fire District for These factors along with other exam- several years until the board pulled sev- ples of bad management requires addi- eral stunts to the detriment of the depart- tional funds to keep to the same amateur- ment as a whole. ish path during these inflationary times. The present management and the ma- Please do not enable this department jority of the board have practiced bad to increase the amount of taxes it mis- management to the extent that the vast spends. It’s time to stop this local govern- majority of the firefighters have resigned. ment’s negligent behavior! This department has not been able to re- Addison Johnson spond to emergencies with qualified per- Baker City sonnel for the last several years. Extended administrative leave The board has mismanaged the bud- get by purchasing dilapidated equipment unfair to employee, citizens from acquaintance’s (tenders) and de- pleted the budget enough to now require I wanted to take a moment and com- these additional funds to operate. ment on the article titled, “Baker City The new station that was just pur- Police detective remains on paid leave.” chased is in a physical location that elim- I first want to clarify that I have neither inated several properties up Salmon heard nor seen any evidence, from either Creek to be covered by the insurance side of this situation, other than what the companies, the ISO (insurance services DA was quoted as saying during the early organization) requires a station within stages of the investigation. What I do five miles of the property. This station want to talk about is administrative leave does benefit the city fire department, for and what it is intended for. which he is the newest Chief and is also I too find it a travesty that the citizens the Chief Baker Rural Dept. and is paid of Baker City are paying for an employee by both departments, this arrangement to not do their job for this length of time. has obligated the Baker Rural depart- What I find is a bigger travesty is having ment to all of sudden be required to pay any employee, much less one with over 20 state PERS. He also uses a Baker Rural years of dedicated service to the citizens vehicle to commute daily to and from the of Baker City, sitting at home each day city department which costs the Rural for the past 7 months not knowing what more funds. decisions are going to be made about The department has failed to follow their future. I was taught that administrative leave was intended as a tool that could be em- ployed to protect the city and the em- ployee while a prompt, thorough inves- tigation was completed to determine if policy and/or criminal violation(s) were committed by an employee. What it was not intended for is a means of placing an employee on leave for an indefinite amount of time while a bureaucracy tries to figure out how to settle a matter. That isn’t fair to the city, the department, the citizens or the employee. What you are seeing is the result of a lack of leadership. There is absolutely no rational reason for this investigation to have lasted for 7 months and counting. During my career I placed numerous em- ployees on administrative leave. Although I don’t remember the exact timeframes, you’d be hard pressed to find an em- ployee who was on leave for more than 1 or 2 weeks at the most, whether it was an in-house investigation or outsourced to another agency. I will bet that you could contact Ontario, La Grande and Pendle- ton Police departments and find similar timeframes for personnel investigations. It’s past time for Chief Duby and City Manager Cannon to start rattling cages, whether it be at the Department of Jus- tice or the District Attorney’s Office and get this matter settled. You owe it to the citizens of Baker City and especially to your employee. Wyn Lohner Retired Baker City Police chief CONTACT YOUR PUBLIC OFFICIALS President Joe Biden: The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D.C. 20500; 202-456- 1111; to send comments, go to www.whitehouse.gov. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley: D.C. office: 313 Hart Senate Office Building, U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C., 20510; 202-224-3753; fax 202-228-3997. Portland office: One World Trade Center, 121 S.W. Salmon St. Suite 1250, Portland, OR 97204; 503-326-3386; fax 503-326-2900. Baker City office, 1705 Main St., Suite 504, 541-278- 1129; merkley.senate.gov. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden: D.C. office: 221 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20510; 202-224- 5244; fax 202-228-2717. La Grande office: 105 Fir St., No. 210, La Grande, OR 97850; 541-962-7691; fax, 541- 963-0885; wyden.senate.gov. U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz (2nd District): D.C. office: 1239 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20515, 202-225-6730; fax 202-225-5774. Medford office: 14 N. Central Avenue Suite 112, Medford, OR 97850; Phone: 541-776-4646; fax: 541-779-0204; Ontario office: 2430 S.W. Fourth Ave., No. 2, Ontario, OR 97914; Phone: 541-709-2040. bentz.house.gov. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown: 254 State Capitol, Salem, OR 97310; 503-378-3111; www.governor.oregon.gov. Oregon State Treasurer Tobias Read: oregon. treasurer@ost.state.or.us; 350 Winter St. NE, Suite 100, Salem OR 97301-3896; 503-378-4000. Oregon Attorney General Ellen F. Rosenblum: Justice Building, Salem, OR 97301-4096; 503-378- 4400. COLUMN A sordid but little-known piece of Oregon history T hat someone went to an Or- egon state park on a summer night and attacked two young women with an ax, inflicting nearly fatal wounds on one and leaving the other permanently scarred, is terrible. But this story is even worse than that single sentence, horrific as it surely is, suggests. The ax-wielder, who preceded the flurry of bloody blows by driving his pickup truck over the tent where the women were sleeping, leav- ing tire marks on one of them, was never arrested. Yet even if this man presented him- self today at the headquarters of the Oregon State Police and admitted that he had done the deed, he could then walk back out the door and the cops would have no legal authority to im- pede, much less to arrest, him. That’s the basic outline of a story that seems to me ought to be better known than it is. I have what I think is a fairly thor- ough knowledge, for a layperson with neither law enforcement nor legal experience, of Oregon’s sordid criminal history. I’ve read all of the late Ann Rule’s books about killers who prowled the state in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s. I also read widely about more re- cent, heavily publicized cases. In researching a series of stories for the Baker City Herald in 2004, I listened to the audio recording of a man who confessed to killing his pregnant wife and their three chil- dren the year before. (I see no need in naming any of these cretins; it’s unfortunate that kill- ers’ names are more prominent than those of their victims.) But the story of the women who were run over and hacked with an implement normally used to chop kindling is not widely known, so far as I can tell, except perhaps in Cen- tral Oregon. That’s where it happened. It happened a long time ago, to be sure, in 1977. I suspect the duration partially explains this episode’s rela- tively modest legacy. (Although D.B. Cooper’s 1971 ca- per, to cite only one even older crime, seems to have lost little of its ability to obsess self-appointed sleuths.) But I think too that the case failed to lodge itself into the state’s collective memory in part because the story isn’t as awful as it easily could have been. Both women survived. Such is the perverse nature of pub- licity. Just as murderers’ infamy surpasses the public’s knowledge of their vic- tims, crimes that involve the infliction of horrible, but not quite fatal, injuries tend not to inspire books and docu- mentaries and movies. Still and all, it strikes me as passing strange that this episode, which hap- pened on the night of June 22, 1977, at Cline Falls State Park, along the De- schutes River a few miles west of Red- mond, is not especially notorious. It’s unsolved, for one thing, and those mysteries which lack resolu- tion tend to captivate us with a par- ticular power. Moreover, though it’s not implausi- nial route designated the year before, America’s 200th birthday. They were a week into their ride, which started in Astoria, when they camped at Cline Falls. They never ble that the attacker might some day pedaled another mile together. be identified, the unfortunate history Weiss, who was struck in the head of Oregon’s statute of limitations for with an ax (or possibly hatchet; the attempted murder ensures that the details of the weapon, which was man will never stand before a judge or never found, aren’t absolute), nearly jury to answer for the crimes. died. She has no memory of the at- I knew nothing of the Cline Falls at- tack. Her eyesight was diminished for- tack until several years ago — I don’t re- ever, although she became a doctor. call the precise period — when I came Jentz, however, vividly recalled the across a book in the true crime section incident. at the Baker County Public Library. Her injuries were less life-threat- The book, “Strange Piece of Para- ening but still appalling. The ax blade dise,” was published in 2006. The au- sliced through the skin of her fore- thor, Terri Jentz, is one of the women arm and into the bone. A pickup tire who were attacked. cracked her collarbone and some ribs. I recently re-read the book — the She had a distinct recollection of same copy from the same library — her attacker. Though she didn’t see after listening to a podcast that fea- his face, she had a good look at his tured the story. legs, clad in clean blue jeans, and a Jentz is an immensely talented shirt tucked neatly into the pants. writer. Her prose, and in particular Jentz frequently describes the attack- her ability to evoke the essence of the er’s attire as “meticulous.” Central Oregon landscape, with its ar- Jentz didn’t return to Oregon un- omatic sage and juniper and its dusty til 1992. expanses of high desert and its vistas That year she embarked on what of volcano and glacier, elevates what would become an investigation ex- would be a compelling narrative even tending over nearly a decade during in the hands of a lesser writer. which she learned that a Redmond The story started in mid June of man was widely suspected among lo- 1997. Just a couple weeks earlier, the cal residents, though never formally Portland Trail Blazers won their first, charged, of being the attacker. and only, NBA championship. Jentz uses the pseudonym “Dirk Jentz and her roommate at Yale, Duran” for the suspect, who she Shayna Weiss (a pseudonym), in- comes to believe was indeed guilty. tended to ride their bicycles 4,200 The man has a long list of criminal miles across the U.S., from the Pacific charges in Deschutes County, span- to the Atlantic, on the BikeCenten- ning more than 30 years. He was con- Jayson Jacoby victed of coercion and unlawful use of a firearm in a 1997 trial — which Jentz attended — and sentenced to five years in prison. His most recent conviction, for an October 2016 incident, was for ha- rassment. Prior to that, however, Jentz learned, to her disgust, that the stat- ute of limitations for attempted mur- der in Oregon was just three years. Which means that by June 22, 1980 — a dozen years before she returned to Oregon to revisit the place where her life had been irrevocably changed — Jentz’s attacker was free from the fear of being prosecuted, and for the perverse reason that none of his blows was quite fatal. Jentz testified in 1997 before the Oregon Legislature in support of a bill that eliminated the statute of limita- tions for attempted murder. The bill became law, but because it wasn’t ret- roactive it had no effect on the Cline Falls attacker. Which, in one sense, is the end of the story. An unsatisfying ending, to be sure. Yet the absence of a neat conclu- sion is also part of what makes Jentz’s book, and this episode, so fascinating, and frightening. I can think of no better adjective than the second one, anyway, for the reality that a man got away with driv- ing over a tent in which two people slept, and then attacking both with an ax. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.