BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2022 A5 STATE & NATION Trump ‘detached from reality’ over election, Jan. 6 witness says BY LISA MASCARO AND MARY CLARE JALONICK Associated Press WASHINGTON — Don- ald Trump’s closest campaign advisers, top government offi- cials and even his family were dismantling his false claims of 2020 voting fraud on elec- tion night, but the defeated president was becoming “de- tached from reality,” clinging to outlandish theories to stay in power, several said. Trump’s former campaign manager Bill Stepien testified Monday, June 13 before the House Jan. 6 committee that Trump was “growing increas- ingly unhappy” at the election results as the night wore on. Son-in-law Jared Kushner tried to steer Trump away from attorney Rudy Giuliani and his far-flung theories of voter fraud that advisers be- lieved were not true. Former Justice Department official Richard Donoghue recalls breaking down one claim after another — from a truckload of ballots in Penn- sylvania to a missing suitcase of ballots in Georgia —- and telling Trump “much of the info you’re getting is false.” “He was becoming de- tached from reality,” said for- mer Attorney General Wil- liam Barr, who resigned. “I didn’t want to be a part of it.” The witnesses appeared before the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capi- tol attack as the panel focused on the “big lie,” Trump’s false claims of voter fraud that fu- eled the defeated Republican president’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election and pro- voked a mob of his supporters to lay siege to the U.S. Capitol. Most of those appearing did so in previously recorded tes- timony from closed door in- terviews over the course of the panel’s yearlong investigation. The committee has interviewed some 1,000 witnesses and com- piled 140,000 documents, and some members say they have uncovered enough evidence for the Justice Department to con- sider an unprecedented crimi- nal indictment against the for- mer president. Chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., opened Monday’s hearing saying Trump “betrayed the trust of the American people” and “tried to remain in office when people had voted him out.” Stepien was to be a key wit- NORTHWEST Mass arrest outside Idaho pride event 31 Patriot Front members planned to riot, police say BY MARTHA BELLISLE Associated Press Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times-TNS Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) during a House Select Committee to Inves- tigate the January 6th hearing in the Cannon House Office Building on Thursday, June 9, 2022, in Washington, D.C. ness Monday, but abruptly backed out of appearing live because his wife went into la- bor. The ex-campaign man- ager is still close to Trump, and had been subpoenaed for to appear. But the panel marched ahead after a morning scram- ble, showing previously re- corded testimony from the ex-campaign manager and others close to the president as Trump latched on to re- peated false claims about the election although those clos- est told him the theories of stolen ballots or rigged voting machines were not true. Stepien described how the festive mood at the White House on election night turned as Fox News an- nounced Trump had lost the state of Arizona to Joe Biden, and aides worked to counsel Trump on what to do next. But he turned a deaf ear to them, choosing to listen in- stead to Giuliani, who was de- scribed as inebriated by several witnesses. Giuliani issued a general denial on Monday, re- jecting “all falsehoods” he said were being said about him. “My belief, my recommen- dation was to say that votes were still being counted, it’s too early to tell, too early to call the race,” Stepien said in the recorded testimony. But Trump “thought I was wrong. He told me so.” Kushner testified that he told Trump the approach Gi- uliani was taking was not one he would take. But the presi- dent pushed back and said he had confidence in the attorney. And Barr, who had previ- ously testified in last week’s blockbuster hearing that he told Trump the allegations being raised were bull——, revealed in gripping detail how was “as mad as I’d ever seen him” when the attorney general explained that the Jus- tice Department would not take sides in the election. Monday’s hearing also fea- tured other live witnesses, including Chris Stirewalt, a former Fox News Channel political editor who declared on Election Night that Ari- zona was being won by Biden. Thompson, D-Miss., and vice chair Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., were leading the hearing after last week’s blockbuster session drew nearly 20 million Americans to see its prime-time findings. For the past year, the com- mittee has been investigating the most violent attack on the Capitol since the War of 1812 to ensure such an as- sault never happens again. Lawmakers hope to show that Trump’s effort to overturn Joe Biden’s election victory posed a grave threat to democracy. A second group of wit- nesses testifying Monday was to be made up of election officials, investigators and experts who were likely to discuss Trump’s responses to the election, including doz- ens of failed court challenges, and how his actions diverged from U.S. norms. Among them those wit- nesses is the former U.S. attor- ney in Atlanta, BJay Pak, who abruptly resigned after Trump pressured Georgia state offi- cials to overturn his presiden- tial defeat. Trump wanted to fire Pak as disloyal, but Pak stepped down after Trump’s call urging Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” enough votes to over- turn Biden’s win in the state became public. Authorities arrested 31 members of the white su- premacist group Patriot Front near an Idaho pride event Sat- urday, June 10 after they were found packed into the back of a U-Haul truck with riot gear. The men were standing in- side the truck wearing khakis, navy blue shirts and beige hats with white balaclavas cover- ing their faces when Coeur d’Alene police stopped the U-Haul and began arresting them on the side of the road. “They came to riot down- town,” Coeur d’Alene Police Chief Lee White said at a news conference. All 31 were charged with conspiracy to riot, a misde- meanor, White said. The men were going through the book- ing process Saturday after- noon and are scheduled to be arraigned on Monday, he said. Based on evidence collected and documents, authorities found that the group was planning to riot in several ar- eas of downtown, not just the park, White said. Arkansas, White said. Only Police found riot gear, one one was from Idaho, he said. smoke grenade, shin guards The truck was stopped and shields inside the van, near where the North Idaho White said. They wore arm Pride Alliance was holding patches and logos on their hats the Coeur d’Alene Pride in the Park event. Police had stepped that identified them as mem- up their presence in the area bers of Patriot Front, he said. during the event. Police learned about the “It appears these people U-Haul from a tipster, who did not come here to engage reported that “it looked like in peaceful events,” Kootenai a little army was loading up County Sheriff Bob into the vehicle” in “It appears Norris told a Coeur the parking lot of a Alene Press re- hotel, White said. these people d’ porter. Officials spotted Patriot Front is de- the truck soon after did not come scribed by the South- and pulled it over, here to engage ern Poverty Law he said. as “a white na- Videos of the ar- in peaceful Center tionalist hate group” rest posted on so- events.” that formed after the cial media show the deadly “Unite the men kneeling on — Kootenai Right” rally in Char- the grass with their County Sheriff lottesville, Virginia in hands zip-tied be- Bob Norris 2017. hind their backs. “Patriot Front fo- “Reclaim Amer- cuses on theatrical rhetoric ica” was written on the back of and activism that can be easily one shirt. distributed as propaganda for Police led the men, one by one, to the front of patrol cars, its chapters across the coun- took off their masks and then try,” the Southern Poverty brought them to a police van. Law Center said of the group. The group’s manifesto calls Those arrested came from at least 11 states, including Wash- for the formation of a white ethnostate in the United ington, Oregon, Texas, Utah, States, the Southern Poverty Colorado, South Dakota, Illi- Law Center said. nois, Wyoming, Virginia, and OREGON Probe underway into fire at anti-abortion center GRESHAM (AP) — Fed- eral law enforcement is inves- tigating a fire that broke out on Friday morning, June 10 at an anti-abortion center in a suburb east of Portland. The Bureau of Alcohol, To- bacco, Firearms and Explo- sives said on Twitter that they considered the fire at a First Image Pregnancy Resource Center in Gresham to be “sus- picious in nature.” KOIN-TV reported that the fire began at around 3 a.m. on Friday morning and that the investi- gation would involve multiple agencies. “Gresham Police, Gresham Fire, ATF, and the FBI are all involved in the investigation at this time,” Gresham Fire Bat- talion Chief Jason McGowan told the station. “Because it’s suspicious, in each structure fire we collect evidence, that evidence is then sent off to be processed, and once that pro- cess is over, we should have more information.” Pregnancy resource centers like the one in Gresham are clinics that typically provide free services and counsel cli- ents against having abortions. Many are religiously affiliated and most are not licensed medical facilities. The fire comes amid in- creasing tension and nation- wide polarization over abor- tion that has arisen since a U.S. Supreme Court draft decision that could overturn Roe v. Wade leaked in May. Fire broke out at another an- ti-abortion center in upstate New York earlier this week and police are investigating a May arson fire at a wom- en’s health clinic that plans to open and provide abortions in Casper, Wyoming. Last week, the Department of Homeland Security pub- lished a memo warning of in- creasing threats of civil unrest and violence surrounding the looming Supreme Court de- cision. Morrow County declares emergency over water contamination BOARDMAN (AP) — Of- ficials in Oregon’s Morrow County along the Columbia River have declared a local state of emergency after private well testing showed high levels of nitrate contamination. During a Thursday, June 9 special meeting, Morrow County commissioners voted 3-0 in favor of the measure, which will allow the county to take immediate action to pro- tect drinking water, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported. It’s believed to be the first time an Oregon county has declared a state of emergency over water quality issues. The county is distributing bottled water and setting up water distribution trailers in the small city of Boardman. Groundwater is the primary drinking source for residents in the county but it’s been plagued by high levels of nitrates. The state designated Morrow and adjacent Umatilla counties as groundwater management ar- eas more than 30 years ago. Kathy Aney/East Oregonian, File Morrow County Commissioner Jim Doherty collects a water sample from the faucet of Boardman homeowner Tiffany Baldock on May 9, 2022, so a lab can determine if nitrates have contaminated the water. A committee was formed to address the issue and identify activities that contribute to the contamination. But state data shows the ni- trate problem has only gotten worse. “It’s been an ongoing issue,” Morrow County Commis- sioner Chair Jim Doherty said. “It’s not something that just hit us in the last week, and we’ve been approaching it from lots of different angles.” Drinking high levels of ni- trate can lead to respiratory infections, thyroid dysfunction and stomach or bladder can- cer. It can also cause “blue baby syndrome,” which decreases the blood’s capacity to carry oxygen. Earlier this year, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality fined the Port of Mor- row $1.3 million for overapply- ing 165 tons of nitrogen-rich wastewater onto agricultural fields over a four-year period and failing to monitor the ni- trate contamination. The Port of Morrow re- leased a statement this week saying it’s considering millions of dollars in upgrades to re- duce pollution and is eager to play a role in finding workable solutions. Doherty said he hopes the declaration will help them ob- tain money for more home testing. Doherty has been go- ing door-to-door with the lo- cal health department to test tap water for residents outside Boardman’s city limits. So far, he said they’ve tested about 70 wells that were “high enough to cause some pretty severe health issues.” A team from the nonprofit organization Oregon Rural Ac- tion is assisting the county and has tested tap water in about 60 homes in Boardman and Ir- rigon. The team found almost all were above the federal safe drinking water limit and doz- ens were five times that limit, according to Kristin Anderson Ostrom, the group’s executive director. Zaira Sanchez, ORA’s direc- tor of organizing, said it was hard to deliver test results. “The common response from the community was im- mediate shock and concern,” she said. Sanchez said some families boil their water, but that could worsen the problem. She added some families are already spending up to $100 a month purchasing bottled water. ORA board member and former DEQ administrator Mitch Wolgamott, who has been working with Ander- son Ostrom and Sanchez, said this is the first-time elected officials have stepped up and highlighted this issue. But he said the response doesn’t go far enough. “That’s addressing the symp- toms, that doesn’t really ad- dress the cause of the problem,” he said. “We’re going to have to figure out how to either be putting less nitrogen on the ground or we’re spreading it out a lot more.” The Oregon Office of Emer- gency Management is coordi- nating with Morrow County to meet emergency needs of res- idents. 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