A8 The BulleTin • Friday, March 19, 2021 Former federal worker who sold knockoff bags with Oregon accomplice gets prison DEAR ABBY Write to Dear Abby online at dearabby.com or by mail at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 Dear Abby: For more than four decades, my step- mother, “Vera,” and I never got along. We tolerated each other for the sake of my fa- ther, who has now passed away. I’m a 60-year-old male reader and unsure how to re- spond to some recent state- ments she has been making. For the record, I and many others always found Vera to be extremely self-absorbed and lacking in empathy. She often treated my father un- kindly, bordering on abusive before and during his slow decline with dementia, even though she never had to pro- vide any hands-on care. Yes, I know it’s hard to always be patient in these cases, but Dad was never “difficult” or violent — just forgetful. I call and visit Vera (who is now 87) occasionally, out of a sense of duty. A few times she has mentioned the un- kind things she said or did to my father, not expressing remorse but possibly feeling some guilt. Thus far, I have ignored these remarks, though I want to let her know I felt sad and angry about how she acted and could never live with myself if I’d treated my se- riously ill spouse that way. Should I keep letting it go or express how I really feel? — Grieving Son in the West Dear Son: The next time Vera mentions the unkind things she said or did to your dad, feel free to speak up and let her know that not only did you notice but also how you feel about it. Frankly, it is admirable that you check in on the woman at all con- sidering how you felt about each other all those years. I don’t think most people would do as much as you have done under similar cir- cumstances. Dear Abby: I have two wonderful grandparents I love very much. They are the most important people in my life, and I always think about them when planning anything in my life because I want to make them happy. The problem is I want to go to college out of state and pursue a career that isn’t pos- sible in the city or state they live in. They want me to live with them in a city I can’t be happy in because of this. How do I tell them I can’t see myself staying there for the rest of my life? I know they won’t be happy hearing it, but I don’t want to disap- point them or make them think I don’t love them any- more by leaving. Please help. I don’t know what to do or what path in life to take. — At a Crossroads in Texas Dear At a Crossroads: You ARE at a crossroads. You’re standing in the inter- section of adolescence and adulthood. You deserve the chance to fulfill your dreams, so it’s time for an adult con- versation with your grand- parents. Explain that you love them and don’t want to disappoint them, and outline what your plans are regard- ing your education and your career. While they may be disappointed, if they love you as much as you love them, they won’t stand in your way. YOUR HOROSCOPE POSITIVE | AVERAGE | SO-SO | A former U.S. Department of State employee who used his embassy computer in Seoul, Korea, to sell over 5,000 coun- terfeit Vera Bradley designer bags and other products to customers across the United States was sentenced Thursday to a year and a half in prison. Gene Leroy Thompson Jr., 55, and his wife, Guo- jiao “Becky” Zhang, 40, both pleaded guilty to conspiracy to traffic in counterfeit goods. The two worked with an unidentified accomplice who stored and shipped the goods from a home in Nyssa, located along the Snake River on the HAPPY BIRTHDAY FOR FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 2021: Charming, kind and introspective, plan several trips that are both educational and enjoyable. This year, expressing yourself artistically is high on your priority list, even if you step back from other activities. Give back by mentoring or vol- unteering for a group that shares your ideals. If single, you want to love and be loved, so it can happen. If attached, take your partner on an adventure. CANCER understands you deeply. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Make sibling rivalry a thing of the past. Bite the bullet and contact them with a friendly message. Get your errands done early. Brush up on your time management skills, and everything will get done. Tonight: Try on a new outfit. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Something you ordered may be delayed or out of stock. Do your re- search and find alternative products. It is never too early to explore vacation destinations. “Save more and spend less” should be your mantra. Tonight: Rearrange furniture to increase comfort. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Today might bring messages from friends who you love hearing from. Observe the effect you have on others. People want to be around you but may drain your energy. You might need to define your boundaries. To- night: Home sweet home. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Volunteer for a cause you believe in, but do not feel pressured. What- ever you can do will be most appreciated. Time alone may be time well spent. Take a walk outside and enjoy your playlist. Tonight: Catch up on email. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) 11 Try out a new exercise, dance or yoga class, either in person or online. Invite friends along to sample the wares. Exchange ideas with people you admire. Get past your insecurity even if you get overruled. Tonight: Reading in bed. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A speech or presentation may get you noticed by your peers. Sigh a breath of relief that you achieved your goal with flying colors. Celebrate your victory. Go to your favorite restaurant with someone you love. Tonight: Attend a weekly meeting. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Mentor someone who wants to learn skills you have mastered. You might be surprised that others want to absorb your knowledge. This is not the time for modesty. Be proud of what you know and can share. Tonight: Chat with friends. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, however, dis- agrees and considers the sub- stance dangerous. In 2018, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in a statement, “There is no evidence to indi- cate that kratom is safe or ef- fective for any medical use.” House Bill 2646 would di- rect the Oregon Department of Agriculture to adopt rules to carry out the regulations and allow civil penalty for some vi- olations of those rules. The bill would make it a crime to sell kratom to anyone under 21. HB 2646 is the second at- tempt by Oregon Rep. Bill Post, R-Keizer, to get Oregon lawmakers to agree to a legal framework for the substance. He started his effort when some in Oregon’s kratom in- “In our view, these strong equity gains are a clear positive for homeowner balance sheets, as well as for overall additional consumer spending, should homeowners be desirous of tapping a portion of their eq- uity gains,” Jonathan Woloshin, a real estate and lodging ana- lyst at UBS, wrote in a research note last week. Rising home values and low mortgage rates spurred many U.S. homeowners to refinance Castparts Continued from A7 Precision Castparts makes heavy metal components for jet aircraft and other industrial products. It was among Ore- gon’s biggest companies when it sold to Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett’s investment firm, for $37 billion in 2016. Its Redmond plant was one of the region’s largest employers, with about 450 employees in 2019, according to Economic Devel- opment for Central Oregon. Precision Castparts strug- gled last year amid the down- turn in global aviation, and be- cause of Boeing’s setbacks with its 737 MAX plane. The com- pany laid off 40% of its global workforce. Michael Joseph Pankratz of Redmond, OR AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) December 16, 1944 - March 12, 2021 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Redmond is honored to serve the family. 541-504-9485 Memories and condolences may be expressed to the family on our website at www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A family service was held. Children and grandchildren have words of wisdom. Just listen. No need to respond. Creative urges are put to the test since you need your own space. Involve those closest to you and your problem is solved. Tonight: Work up a sweat. John “Chuck” Charles Webb of La Pine, OR SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today brings people you love closer together. You might need to mediate and straighten out a misunderstanding between two colleagues. Remind someone special how much they mean to you. Plan a surprise they will never forget. Tonight: Get a massage. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Exchange different points of view with a new team. Compromise is the keyword. Share social time after hours with co-workers. Aim to unwind and feel fit. Blow off steam at the gym or take a power walk. Tonight: A healthy dinner. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Connect with a relative you miss seeing. Be supportive, not argu- mentative, when you hear the latest news. Vehicles may cause problems, so be on the lookout. Shop for colorful home furnishings, but keep to your budget. Tonight: Turn on dance music. Looking for local events or want to add your own? Go to bendbulletin.com/events Questions? Call 541-383-0304 or email go@bendbulletin.com. September 23, 1952 - March 15, 2021 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the Webb family. Please visit our website, www.bairdfh.com, to share condolences and sign the online guestbook. “In my mind, the misuse of government facilities to facil- itate this crime makes it more onerous,” the judge said. The couple also must forfeit $229,000, a substantial amount of their life savings that rep- resents the gross amount of their counterfeit sales but more than they gained from their enterprise, and pay $740.17 to Vera Bradley. “There is a need for deter- rence in these kinds of crimes,” McShane said. “Privileged peo- ple don’t get to engage in it and walk away, while we are send- ing underprivileged margin- alized young men and women every day to prison in this country.” dustry came to him, looking for ways to make the product safer for consumers and themselves. Kratom as it’s sold now is not labeled in any way, mean- ing it can be adulterated with many substances. “There are no safeguards for consumers whatsoever,” said Jenn Lauder, the director of marketing and advocacy at PDX Aromatics, a Port- land-based company that im- ports kratom from Indonesia and makes it into capsules and extracts. Lauder is one of the backers of HB 2646. The narrative around kra- tom can be bad, she said. Deaths have been attributed to the substance, though sup- porters of kratom attribute that to adulteration. And the prod- uct has been recalled for sal- monella. PDX Aromatics itself has had salmonella issues. “We’ve been working really hard to counter the narrative,” Lauder said. According to Post, it is kra- tom producers that are push- ing for rules. “The industry wants to pay the state to say, ‘Your kratom is pure,’” he said. Post himself is a kratom be- liever. Lauder gave him some capsules to try while she was educating him about the sub- stance, he said. It helped his back pain, Post said, and “I’ve been using it ever since.” and cash in some of the equity in their home last year. Home- owners pulled out $152.7 billion in equity, an increase of 41.7% from 2019 and the highest refi- nancing cash-out dollar amount since 2007, according to mort- gage buyer Freddie Mac. Homeowners also tapped into the equity in their home via a home equity line of credit. The volume of such lines of cred more than doubled in 2020 from a year earlier to $74.9 billion. Low mortgage rates, strong demand and a record low in- ventory of homes for sale na- tionwide have fueled home sales and pushed home prices higher since last summer. Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes climbed 5.6% in 2020 from a year earlier to 5.64 million, the highest level since 2006 at the height of the hous- ing boom, according to the Na- tional Association of Realtors. The national median home sales price jumped 12.9% to $309,800. In Bend and Red- mond, the median sales price for a single-family home in February was $575,000 and $373,000, respectively, accord- ing to the Beacon Appraisal Group of Redmond. The strong demand for homes continued in January, with sales ticking up 0.6% from December and almost 24% from a year earlier. By the end of January, however, the supply of homes on the market nationally was down to a record-low 1.04 million units. That amounts to a 1.9 months’ supply. A balanced housing market tends to have a 6-month supply. The Realtors group issues its February home sales data next week. Mary Esch/AP file A bill in the Oregon Legislature would regulate Kratom. Its revenue had been stag- nant for several years, though, and earlier this month Buffett admitted that he’d overpaid by $10 billion for the Portland company. Precision Castparts didn’t im- mediately respond to a message Thursday seeking comment on this week’s court ruling, so it’s not clear whether the company will seek to appeal to the Su- preme Court. Anderson said the union is hopeful it will not, and that negotiations can now begin. “We typically haven’t had this kind of relationship with them, especially with Warren Buffett promoting himself as pro labor,” he said. “The ball’s in their court. It’s my hope they wouldn’t do something like that.” SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Review savings or investment accounts. Carve space in your sched- ule to organize tax documents. There may be a problem you need to solve. A friend may arouse your interest in spy or mystery novels. Tonight: Update your wardrobe with accessories. with customers and procured merchandise, and conveyed transaction information and a prepaid shipping label to an unidentified co-conspirator in Oregon, who stored and shipped the knock-off goods to customers across the United States. The goods bore coun- terfeit versions of the Vera Bradley trademark, according to the government. The criminal scheme lasted from September 2017 through December 2019. U.S. District Judge Michael J. McShane sentenced Zhang to eight months of home deten- tion with GPS monitoring and ordered that she have limited ability to leave her home. Continued from A7 Continued from A7 DIFFICULT Idaho border. Prosecutors say Thompson, as an information program of- ficer for the U.S. Embassy in Seoul who held an “exception- ally trusted role” with the high- est level of security clearance within the U.S. government, abused his position to facilitate the crime. While responsible for en- suring the cybersecurity of the embassy, Thompson used his State Department computer to create online accounts for sale of the counterfeit bags on eBay, Poshmark and Mercari, and then provided the login cre- dentials for those accounts to his wife, prosecutors said. Zhang communicated Kratom Equity By Madalyn Aslan Stars show the kind of day you’ll have DYNAMIC | BY MAXINE BERNSTEIN The Oregonian Shirley Jean Dexter of Terrebonne, OR Feb 23, 1933 - March 15, 2021 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Red- mond is honored to serve the family. 541-504-9485 Memories and condolenc- es may be expressed to the family on our website at www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A graveside service will be held at the Terrebonne Pio- neer Cemetery on Monday March 22, 2021 at 1:00 PM Contributions may be made to: St. Charles Hospice, 2275 NE Doctor’s Drive Suite 3 Bend, OR 97701 OBITUARY DEADLINE Call to ask about our deadlines 541-385-5809 Monday-Friday 10am-3pm Email: obits@bendbulletin.com OBITUARY Jane Selisch March 21, 1936 - March 6, 2021 Jane Selisch left us on March 6, 2021. She was born in McMinnville Oregon March 21, 1936 to John and Ellen Harrington. Aft er graduati ng from McMinnville High in 1955 she was introduced to Walt Selisch and they were married shortly aft er. They had two boys, Max and Kurt. Jane was a 4th generati on Oregonian; her maternal great-great grandparents traveled the Oregon Trail in a covered wagon and sett led in Oregon City spring of 1853. Walt and Jane moved from McMinnville to Bend in 1969, owned Bob’s Sporti ng Goods for a number of years then started Selisch Insurance Agency which they operated unti l their reti rement in the mid 1980’s. Jane enjoyed hiking, skiing, playing cards, wildfl owers, bird watching, trail rides on her horse Buddy, and her many friends. Walt and Jane traveled extensively in their motorhome aft er reti rement. Arizona in the winter, and Campbell River, BC in spring for salmon fi shing. They also traveled to Maui on numerous occasions and the beauty of the island was another of Mom’s favorite places. Unfortunately, in her later years she suff ered from dementi a but always had a smile on her face, could recognize family and friends, and conti nued to be the loving person she always had been. A memorial service will be held at a later date. She leaves behind her husband Walt, sons Max and Kurt, and grandchildren Sam, Reid, and Avery. She is preceded in death by her granddaughter Brooke. In lieu of fl owers, please donate to the Alzheimer’s Assoc: www.act.alz.org/donate.