Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 Tuesday • March 30, 2021 2nd-half rally wasn’t enough for Beavers MEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT • SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 Bentz visits veterans in first trip home as a congressman Dozens attend local event By BReNNa VIsseR The Bulletin In his first trip back to Oregon since being sworn in early this year, U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, came to speak at the Central Oregon Veterans Ranch north of Bend in honor of Vietnam War Veterans Day. Dozens of veterans, their friends and families gathered Monday at the ranch, which supports veter- u.s. Rep. Cliff Bentz, center, talks with veterans during a Vietnam War Veterans day event at Central Oregon Veterans Ranch on Monday. ans by offering peer support and agriculture- related therapy. “We’re here to honor you for your sacrifice and your suffering,” Alison Perry, Founder of Central Oregon Veterans Ranch, said at the event. Dean Guernsey/ The Bulletin See Bentz / A4 BEND HOMICIDE CASE BLOCKBUSTER SOARS Kilby arraigned: 1st-degree murder Business was already booming at Bend Blockbuster; Netflix doc boosted it higher By GaRReTT aNdReWs The Bulletin Bend man Randall Richard Kilby was ar- raigned Monday on charges of first-degree murder after a grand jury returned an enhanced in- dictment related to a dou- ble homicide in Bend. Kilby, 35, is suspected of killing Jeffrey Allen Taylor and Benjamin Harlin Taylor on March 20, and Daphne Dawn Banks, who died Jan. 10. The three deaths are covered in two indict- ments. One concerns the deaths of Jeffery Taylor and Benny Taylor, who were brothers-in-law and roommates. Kilby is ac- cused of two counts of first-degree murder and two counts of second-de- gree murder. In the other indictment, Kilby is ac- cused of one count of second-degree murder in the death of Banks. In Oregon, a con- viction for first-degree murder carries a possible “true” life prison sen- tence, while second-de- gree murder does not. To earn a conviction for first-degree murder in this case, prosecutors will have to prove Kilby killed Jeffery Taylor and Benny Taylor as part of the same “criminal episode.” Kilby was arrested March 21 while walking in Romaine Village in southwest Bend. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Milt McConnell, of Bend, takes a picture of Mark style, of Philadelphia, and Ilene style, of Bend, in front of the Bend Blockbuster on Monday. By KyLe sPuRR • The Bulletin T he Blockbuster video rental store in Bend was already popular when it became the last location on Earth. It drew visitors from across the United States and as far as Taiwan and London. But in the past two weeks, the store off NE Third Street has been flooded with even more visitors and online orders after Netflix boosted its visibility. It was featured in “The Last Block- buster,” a documentary about the store that started trending in the top 10 most watched movies on Netflix. “It’s a little bit crazy, but it’s a very good thing. We’ll take a little crazy if it means keeping the store open.” — sandi Harding, Bend Blockbuster manager People have sent flowers and called the store just to say thank you for staying open. Those visiting the store wear masks and keep their distance due to the COVID-19 pan- demic, but are not deterred from finding a movie to rent. In the backroom, staff members have been busy packaging thousands of online orders for Blockbuster T-shirts, hats and face masks, which are all made by Bend businesses. “It’s a little bit crazy, but it’s a very good thing,” said Bend Blockbuster Manager Sandi Harding. “We’ll take a little crazy if it means keeping the store open.” Harding is the star of the movie, which peaked as high as the No. 4 movie in the United States since it appeared on Netflix March 15. See Blockbuster / A14 See Kilby / A14 4 file for last vacant school board seat 211 acres were burned; homes briefly evacuated By GaRReTT aNdReWs The Bulletin By JaCKsON HOGaN The Bulletin A vacant seat on the Redmond School Board, initially to be filled by appointment, is now one of the most hotly contested races in the May 18 election in Central Oregon. Four candidates have filed to fill the seat of board Chair Tim Carpenter, who abruptly resigned from his seat on March 17. It’s the second Redmond School Board seat to have four candidates, and no other Central Ore- gon school board race has more than three this year. See Board / A14 TODAY’S WEATHER High winds fuel early fires near Bend Sunny High 58, Low 29 Page a13 INDEX Strong, dry winds rolling off the Cascade Mountains from the west and northwest fueled several small fires outside Bend on Sunday, forcing the evacua- tion of hundreds of people from their homes. The Bull Spring Fire burned 211 acres of private, state and county land outside Tumalo. A smaller, unnamed fire in Business Classifieds Comics A11,13 A14 A9-10 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A7 A8 A7 Department of Forestry and U.S. Forest Service, according to Lt. Trish Connolly of Bend Fire & Rescue. “This is a pretty early fire for us,” Connolly said. “What exac- erbated things for us was high winds that really pushed that fire front.” Though it’s early in fire sea- son, now is when many residents burn brush on their property. Connolly urged property owners to call the fire department’s burn hotline at 541-693-6911 with questions about burning. Deschutes River Woods, south- Road from Bull Springs Road to west of Bend, affected 1 acre and Kuhlman Road. threatened four homes. The Level 3 alert was sent to No injuries were reported, 148 people in Deschutes River nor homes lost. Woods and 198 in Two outbuild- the Tumalo area. ings burned in By Monday Deschutes River The strongest gust morning, evacua- recorded in the Bend area. Woods. tion levels in all ar- Speeds reached 70 mph The fires were eas had been low- in the Gorge and 74 in reported within ered to Level 1. Pendleton. five minutes of The exact cause each other around of the fires remains 3:45 p.m. The Deschutes County under investigation. Sheriff’s Office issued Level 3, Every fire authority in the re- gion was involved in the effort or “go now,” evacuation orders Sunday, along with the Oregon to all addresses west of Johnson 47 mph Kid Scoop Local/State Lottery A12 A2-3 A6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A10 A5-7 See Wind / A4 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 76, 14 pages, 1 section DAILY REDMOND U|xaIICGHy02329lz[