The BulleTin • Tuesday, april 6, 2021 A3 TODAY LOCAL, STATE & NATION A woman holds a picture of George Floyd while seated on a concrete barrier Monday outside the building where the second week of testimony in the trial of former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin continues. LOCAL BRIEFING Virtual open house for Wickiup Junction proposal The public can now provide feedback on a draft plan to im- prove safety at Wickiup Junc- tion in La Pine. Last year, the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation heard many ideas for improvements. The feedback that was pro- vided and a technical highway analysis helped the department create a draft plan to make this area safer and easier to navigate, according to ODOT. This plan, referred to as the re- finement plan, is available to view at a virtual open house at www. wickiuprefinementplan.com. Residents can use an inter- active map to see proposed im- provements and leave comments. The La Pine City Council is anticipated to vote on the plan later this spring. The online open house runs through April 16. The original solution for Wickiup Junction, an overpass, would have allowed U.S. High- way 97 traffic to travel over the BNSF tracks but was scrapped in 2017. Officials discovered the overpass was being built on set- tling soil at the site. The soil was weakened by ancient micro- scopic creatures called diatoms. The department started dis- mantling the overpass in 2018. 4 nonprofits get nearly $2.8M in federal funds Four local nonprofits — Bethlehem Inn homeless shelter, J Bar J Youth Services, Neigh- borImpact and Thrive Central Oregon — have received a com- bined $2.77 million in federal funds to address COVID-19. Specifically, the funds are geared to help people and fam- ilies who are either experienc- ing homelessness, or are at risk of experiencing homelessness, according to a press release Monday from the Oregon Housing and Community Ser- vices department. Thirty-six nonprofits from around Oregon received a total of $42 million in federal relief funds, the release stated. The money comes from the federal coronavirus relief act. “This funding is historic be- cause it will help rebuild lives, and because we are partnering with an array of diverse service providers that have trusted re- lationships with Oregon’s com- munities of color, so we can reach people hardest hit by the crisis,” Margaret Salazar, exec- utive director of Oregon Hous- ing and Community Services, said in the press release. Deschutes sergeant resigns while under investigation Richard “Deke” DeMars, a Deschutes County Sheriff’s Of- fice sergeant who was under investigation in an alleged sex- ual assault, resigned Thursday from his position, according to the sheriff’s department. DeMars had been on paid leave since February 2020. The Redmond Police Department began a criminal investigation into DeMars more than a year ago, after a woman alleged he sexually abused her. Police rec- ommended charging DeMars with a sex crime. In early 2020, a woman in a romantic relationship with DeMars told Redmond Po- lice his behavior was becom- ing increasingly frightening to her. She described various controlling behaviors and be- ing awoken to rough sex in the middle of the night. DeMars earned more than $131,000 since being placed on leave. He remains the subject of an internal conduct investi- gation, in addition to the crim- inal investigation. — Bulletin staff reports Jim Mone/AP Floyd’s death leads states to require police to intervene Oregon works to strengthen its law BY ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press SALEM — When a police officer knelt on the neck of George Floyd in Minneapolis, other officers at the scene didn’t intervene, even while Floyd said he couldn’t breathe and stopped moving. That lack of action is leading a growing number of states to compel police to stop misconduct by a fellow officer. Since Floyd’s death, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Nevada and New Jersey have passed laws requiring police to intervene when they see a fellow officer engaged in misconduct, said Katie Ryan of Campaign Zero, a group that encourages reforms to reduce police violence. Previously, many laws were aimed at com- pelling police to only report misconduct. But activists say Floyd’s death makes clear that alone is not enough. Oregon’s Legislature also passed a bill in a spe- cial session last year requiring intervention by an officer witnessing police misconduct. It also re- quires officers to report abuses to “a supervisor.” This year, lawmakers are tweaking the new law to strengthen how the complaints are han- dled. It is sponsored by Rep. Janelle Bynum, a Democrat who chairs the House subcommit- tee on equitable policing. “For me, the original trigger was the George Floyd case,” said Bynum, who is Black and from a Portland suburb. Portland was an epicenter of Black Lives Mat- ter protests that erupted nationwide after Floyd’s Minneapolis police chief: Kneeling on Floyd’s neck violated policy Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo testified Monday that now-fired officer Derek Chauvin violated departmental policy in pin- ning his knee on George Floyd’s neck and keep- ing him down after Floyd had stopped resisting and was in distress. Also Monday, Dr. Bradford Langenfeld, who tried to resuscitate Floyd at the hospital he was taken to, took the stand to say it was “more likely than the other possibilities” that Floyd’s cardiac arrest — the stopping of his heart — was caused by asphyxia, or insufficient oxygen. — Associated Press death. On the night of Sept. 5, a Black resident came to police officers to inform them their tear gas was seeping into his house, affecting his son and dog. One officer hit the man on the head with his baton, causing a concussion. Other officers told their colleague the man was an area homeowner, not a protester. Police said back then that the incident was being investigated, but a half-year later they re- main mum on the outcome or status. Bynum’s new bill aims to address such cases. It requires complaints to be filed with a direct supervisor of the reporting officer, their chain of command or with the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training, which licenses law enforcement officers across the state. The bill sets a three-month deadline for investigations to be completed. Today is Tuesday, April 6, the 96th day of 2021. There are 269 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On April 6, 1909, American explorers Robert E. Peary and Matthew A. Henson and four Inuits became the first men to reach the North Pole. In 1886, the Canadian city of Vancouver, British Columbia, was incorporated. In 1896, the first modern Olym- pics formally opened in Greece. In 1917, the United States en- tered World War I. In 1954, Sen. Joseph R. McCar- thy, R-Wis., responding to CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow’s broadside against him on “See It Now,” said in remarks filmed for the program that Murrow had, in the past, “engaged in propa- ganda for Communist causes.” In 1974, Swedish pop group ABBA won the Eurovision Song Contest held in Brighton, En- gland, with a performance of the song “Waterloo.” In 2017, Don Rickles, the grand- master of insult comedy, died at his Beverly Hills home at age 90. Ten years ago: Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi appealed to President Barack Obama in a letter to end what Gadhafi called “an unjust war. Portugal became the third debt-stressed Europe- an country to need a bailout. Five years ago: A federal judge in Charleston, West Virginia, sentenced former coal executive Don Blankenship to a year in prison for his role in the 2010 Up- per Big Branch Mine explosion that killed 29 men in America’s deadliest mining disaster in four decades. Country giant Merle Haggard died in Palo Cedro, Cali- fornia, on his 79th birthday. One year ago: Israeli Prime Min- ister Benjamin Netanyahu an- nounced a complete lockdown over the upcoming Passover holiday to control the country’s coronavirus outbreak. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Billy Dee Williams is 84. Actor Roy Thinnes is 83. Actor John Rat- zenberger is 74. Actor Patrika Darbo is 73. Former Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., is 65. Rock singer-musician Black Francis is 56. Actor Paul Rudd is 52. Actor Zach Braff is 46. Actor Candace Cameron Bure is 45. — Associated Press