SUNDAY • March 28, 2021 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 OREGON, USC TO FACE OFF MEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT • SPORTS, B1 WARM SPRINGS Community tries to preserve language as elders slip away RANDALL KILBY | ACCUSED OF MURDER IN BEND Neighbors were afraid of suspect for years BY GARRETT ANDREWS The Bulletin Dean Guernsey/Bulletin photos Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs elders from front to back, Viola Govenor, 82, Marcia Minthorn, 78, Willard Tewee, 72, and Lonnie James, 63, in a classroom where native language is taught on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. More than 20 people at Warm Springs have died from COVID-19, taking their knowledge of language and tradition with them BY MICHAEL KOHN • The Bulletin instructors, 84-year-old Viola Govenor closed her eyes and broke into song in Sahaptin, her native language. The melody rose and fell as the others listened intently to her impromptu song. There may not be many more times to hear it. Govenor is one of the last speak- ers of her language, and there are fewer now in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which claimed the lives of more than 20 Warm Springs community mem- bers, some of them fluent speakers of their indigenous language. The pandemic, which has cut short millions of lives, is now threatening the traditions and lan- guages of indigenous people in Or- egon. Those who know the tradi- tions the best, the elder population, have seen their numbers dwindle to the point where the stream of knowledge is being undercut. Govenor, who was hospital- ized herself with COVID-19, lost friends to the disease and spent months in isolation. She missed the powwows and meetings. She missed out on funerals for loved ones. Mostly, she missed the op- portunity to pass along knowledge of her fragile culture. “We don’t get together too of- ten anymore to share it with the younger generation,” said Gove- nor, wisps of gray and black hair framing a face burnished during a youth spent riding horses in the sunshine near her home on Mutton Mountain, close to the village of Simnasho. “I thank the lord that I was able to leave the hospital and I am still here doing the work that I really enjoy. Our language has to go on,” she said. “We have a certain way that we put our dead away ; it used to be two to three days. We haven’t been able to have our washat, our drumming, when we sing over the body. We haven’t been able to dance around the deceased ; it’s hurtful and very depressing.” An offer of help Kilby had a friend in Jeffrey Taylor, though. The two met when they worked for an in- dependent contractor that cleaned commer- cial kitchen stove hoods. Taylor let Kilby park a trailer outside his Granite Drive home when Kilby got out of prison. Jeffrey Taylor once ran a catering business in Bend but lately had been on disability. With the neighborhood mailboxes located outside his house, he was known to say hello to everyone picking up mail. For years, neighbors told Jeffrey Taylor that Kilby was “no good,” but he insisted his friend just needed help. “He was very laid-back. Very nice guy,” said neighbor Jerry Stanyer, Susan’s hus- band. “He maybe trusted people too much is what he did.” Neighbors grew to recognize the signs Randall was around: loud arguments that spilled into the street, strangers working on cars at odd hours. Kilby had grown up in Bend, his parents operating the 7-Eleven franchise on East Third Avenue. He has a criminal record throughout his adult life — burglary, vehicle theft, resisting arrest — but nothing as severe as the mur- der charges he’s facing. Kilby’s attorney, TJ Spear, declined to comment for this article, citing the conduct code of the Oregon State Bar. — Marcia Minthorn, a 78-year-old Warm Springs community member See Language / A4 TODAY’S WEATHER Some sun High 61, Low 28 Page B6 See Kilby / A5 INDEX Business/Life Classifieds Dear Abby C1-8 B5 C3 Editorial Horoscope Local/State A6 C3 A2-3 Lottery Market Recap Mon. Comics B2 B4 C5-6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A9-11 C4 B1-4 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 75, 30 pages, 4 sections SUN/THU I n a brightly lit classroom on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, sitting among other senior-aged language Arriving home from work, Susan Stanyer’s heart would fall whenever she saw Randall Kilby’s car parked outside her neighbor’s home at 60971 Granite Drive. Neighbors like Stanyer, who lives across the street, say their corner of the Romaine Village subdivision in Bend is quiet and crime-free. But when Kilby showed up five years ago, after a stint in prison, he brought an air of menace. He lived in a trailer on the Granite Drive property, often yell- ing at people there. “We just felt different when Randall was living here,” Stanyer said. “We’ve been uncomfortable with Randall Kilby, him for five years.” shown in There was reason to feel March, had a that way about Kilby. He string of police had a string of police ar- arrests and rests and criminal convic- criminal con- tions dating back to victions dating November 2001 that in- back to No- cluded burglary, theft and vember 2001 assault. But none of that that included prepared neighbors for burglary, theft what they discovered last and assault. Sunday. Kilby, 35, now stands ac- cused of killing three people in the Granite Drive house: A March 20 hatchet attack on brothers-in-law Jeffrey Allen Taylor, 66, and Benjamin “Benny” Harlin Taylor, 69, and an alleged Christmas Day beating of 43-year- old Daphne Banks, who was in a coma for weeks and died in January after being taken off life support. Kilby is due to be arraigned Monday in Deschutes County Circuit Court. The killings left many in the community asking questions, notably, why Kilby wasn’t in jail earlier. These people include neigh- bors, relatives and alleged victims who say they were shocked by killings, but not sur- prised Kilby is the suspect. “Quite a few people around here didn’t care that much for Randall,” said neighbor Dorothy Evans. “A lot of people said that he was bad news.” U|xaIICGHy02330rzu