The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 15, 2021, Page 14, Image 14

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    A14 The BulleTin • Tuesday, June 15, 2021
WORLD BRIEFING
Justice official resigning amid
uproar over Dems’ subpoena
The Justice Department’s top na-
tional security official is resigning
from his position after revelations
that the department under President
Donald Trump secretly seized re-
cords from Democrats and members
of the media.
John Demers, a Trump appoin-
tee, will leave by the end of next
week, a Justice Department official
told The Associated Press on Mon-
day. Demers, who was sworn in a
few weeks after the subpoena for the
Democrats’ records, is one of the few
Trump appointees who has remained
in the Biden administration. He had
planned for weeks to leave the de-
partment by the end of June, a second
person familiar with the matter said.
Demers’ resignation comes amid
questions about what he knew about
the Justice Department’s efforts to
secretly seize the phone data from
House Democrats and reporters as
part of the aggressive investigations
into leaks. Attorney General Merrick
Garland emphasized in a statement
Monday that “political or other im-
proper considerations must play no
role in any investigative or prosecuto-
rial decisions” and noted the depart-
ment’s inspector general has already
launched an investigation.
Reality Winner, NSA contractor
who pleaded guilty, out of prison
Reality Winner, a former National
Security Agency contractor who
pleaded guilty to mishandling govern-
ment secrets about Russian election
interference and who has long sought
a pardon, has been transferred from
federal prison to the custody of a half-
way house to serve the rest of her sen-
tence, her attorney said Monday.
Winner’s transfer came June 2 and
was not part of any commutation or
special treatment but a scheduled
shift due to good behavior, said her
attorney, Alison Grinter Allen.
While she finishes her sentence,
she is likely to have the option of
home confinement.
Her case marked the first crimi-
nal charges filed during the Trump
administration against someone sus-
pected of leaking government secrets
to a journalist, and her family and
open-government advocates have
long argued she deserves a pardon or
some other form of mercy.
The Air Force veteran was charged
after FBI agents questioned her at her
house not long after the story about
the intelligence document appeared.
Myanmar puts Suu Kyi on trial
on charges critics call bogus
Myanmar’s ousted leader Aung
San Suu Kyi went on trial Monday on
charges that many observers say are
an attempt by the junta that deposed
her to eliminate her as a political force,
erase the country’s democratic gains
and cement the military’s power.
Suu Kyi’s prosecution poses yet
another major setback for Myan-
mar, which had been making slow
progress toward democracy when a
February coup prevented elected law-
makers from her National League for
Democracy party from taking office
following last year’s landslide victory.
Human Rights Watch said that the
allegations being heard in a special
court in the capital, Naypyitaw, are
“bogus and politically motivated”
with the intention of nullifying the
victory and preventing Suu Kyi from
running for office again.
The army seized power on Feb. 1 be-
fore new lawmakers could be seated.
— Bulletin wire reports
Wasabi: Westminster winner
BY JENNIFER PELTZ
Associated Press
TARRYTOWN, N.Y. — The flavor
of the year at the Westminster Kennel
Club dog show: Wasabi.
A Pekingese named Wasabi won
best in show Sunday night, notching
a fifth-ever win for the unmistakable
toy breed. A whippet named Bour-
bon repeated as runner-up.
Waddling through a small-but-
mighty turn in the ring, Wasabi
nabbed U.S. dogdom’s most pres-
tigious prize after winning the big
American Kennel Club National
Championship in 2019. “He has show-
manship. He fits the breed standard.
He has that little extra something,
that sparkle, that sets a dog apart,”
said Wasabi’s handler, breeder and co-
owner, David Fitzpatrick. Show judge
Patricia Trotter said simply: “What’s
Wasabi, a Pekingese, rests on the win-
ner’s podium with his trophy and rib-
bons after winning Best in Show at the
Westminster Kennel Club dog show Sun-
day night in Tarrytown, New York.
Kathy Willens/AP
not to like about this dog? ... He stood
there as though he was a lion.”
Fitzpatrick, of East Berlin, Pennsyl-
vania, guided the Peke’s grandfather
Malachy to the Westminster title in
2012. Still, he said, “I just don’t al-
ways think lightning is going to strike
twice.”
How will Wasabi celebrate?
“He can have a filet mignon. And
I’ll have Champagne,” Fitzpatrick
said with a laugh.
The 3-year-old Pekingese, mean-
while, was “pretty nonchalant about
the whole thing,” his handler said. In-
deed, Wasabi laid down on the dais,
occasionally looking up as if to see
what the fuss was all about, as Fitz-
patrick spoke before a cluster of re-
porters and cameras.
It was a poignant win that came
after one of his co-owners, archae-
ologist Iris Love, died last year of
COVID-19. Besides Fitzpatrick, the
dog is also co-owned by Sandra Mid-
dlebrooks and Peggy Steinman.
Wasabi — the name derives from his
mother, Sushi — came out on top of a
finalist pack that also included Mathew
the French bulldog, Connor the old
English sheepdog, Jade the German
shorthaired pointer, Striker the Samo-
yed, and a West Highland white terrier
named Boy. Altogether, 2,500 cham-
pion dogs entered the show.
The Bulletin
LASSIFIEDS
General
Merchandise
200
204
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted $ Cash paid for
vintage, fake, & fine jew­
elry. Top $ paid for Gold
& Silver. I buy in bulk.
Honest Artist. Elizabeth
541-633-7006
CASH for Wood dress­
ers. Dead washers &
dryers. 541-420-2218
210
Pets & Supplies
Free kittens. 2 black and
white & 1 tiger. 4 weeks
old. Will be ready to go
June 13th. Happy &
healthy. Free play yard
for small dogs or cats.
541-241-7141
267
Trees, Plants & Flowers
6-inch perennial plants,
raspberries, phlox, day
lilies, & more! Enough
privet hedge starts for
at least 50-ft row. $3-4
ea. 1435 NW Galveston.
Fri & Sat, 9-4.
282
Community
YOU NEED STUFF
HAULED?I NEED
TO HAUL STUFF!
CALL THE WORKIN'
MAN. SPECIALIZ­
ING IN PROPERTY
CLEANUP AND
ITEM REMOVAL.
(541)610-2926
504
Employment Opportunities
Exciting outdoor job
fighting forest fires
includes adventure,
travel, new friend­
ships that will last
a lifetime, and don't
forget the $$$ OT
Apply www.patrick-
fire.net or in person
1199 NE Hemlock,
Redmond EOE
Employment Opportunities
Sales Professional
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every day, but if you
live in Central Oregon,
The Bulletin impacts
your life. Inserts for
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version for on the go. A
print copy for those who
love information and
want in-depth coverage
of big issues. Ads and
stories that keep you
informed about events,
sales and concerns in
the community.
Employment Opportunities
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Opportunity to work
part-time (20-25
hours per week) in
our packaging and
distributing depart­
ment at The Bulletin
in Bend, Ore. Hours
are typically evening
hours, with Sunday
and/or Thursday
off. Duties include
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place inserts into the
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newspapers and
moving the papers
from the press. Must
be able to regularly
lift 40# in a fast
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Mechanical aptitude
helpful and the abil­
ity to work well with
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Pre-employment
drug test required.
To apply, please go
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openings/eomedia-
group/jobs/1799776-
490973
Legal
Notices
10ÖO
1001
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
Legal Notice
Dominion Construc­
tion, LLC has filed
suit against Moisan,
LLC, for breach of
contract, negligence,
and unjust enrich­
ment, as a result of
Our employees see the
Moisan's negligent
big picture ... a com­
work performed on a
munity without a strong
construction project
newspaper is missing
known as High Des­
something important.
ert Industrial Park,
Our people are here to
located at 2561 NE
make sure The Bulletin
4th Street, Bend, Or­
remains a vibrant part
egon.
Moisan was
of your community.
the general contrac­
tor hired to perform
Recent findings by
excavation and un­
Pulse Research say
derground work on
98,6% of Bend resi­
the project, but after
dents use The Bulletin
conducting
negligent
or BendBulletin.com
work,
failing to com­
for their local news,
plete its work, failing
plus more people
to pay its workers,
The Mitchell School
refer to The Bulletin
and causing de­
District has the follow­
and BendBulletin.com
lays, Moisan aban­
before making a buying ing openings for the
doned the project
decision than any other 2021-2022 school year
and Dominion was
beginning in August:
local media.
• Middle School Teacher forced to file suit to
recover the costs
•
Social
Studies/PE/
Would you like to join
associated
with
Health Teacher
us?
Moisan’s contractual
• Head Cook
breach and negli­
The Bulletin and White • CDL Certified Bus
gence.
Dominion
Board Media (our digital Drivers
estimates damag­
• Substitutes for teach­
agency) are seeking
es owed by Moisan
an outside salesperson ers and other staff
total approximately
who is passionate about Contact 541-462-3311
$1,918,000.00.
for
more
information
or
helping local business­
The motion or answer
es be successful. Must go to our employment
or reply must be
demonstrate excellence page at
given to the court
http://www.mitchell.k12.
in person-to-person
clerk or administra­
or. us/employment
sales and customer
tor within 30 days
service, work well with
of the date of first
a support team and be
publication specified
Autos &
proficient with technolo­
herein along with the
gy while managing time
Transportation
required filing fee.
and required paperwork
Date of First Publica­
efficiently. Skills in work­
tion: June 8th, 2021
ing with digital adver­
tising, real estate and/
or automotive clients
Legal Notice
would be a bonus.
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF THE
This is a full-time posi­
STATE OF ORE­
901
tion, working Monday
GON FOR THE
Automobiles-Trucks,
through Friday with
COUNTY OF DE­
Auto, RV,Vans
evenings and weekends
SCHUTES Probate
off, plus paid holidays!
Department
Guaranteed wage
1941 Chevy convertible. In the Matter of the
plus commission and
All original car, orig. mo­
Estate of DONALD
mileage reimbursement tor runs. Needs resto.
GENE LOWE, De-
make this a great op­
$32,500. 503-728-3562.
portunity for an aggres­
Case No. 21PB03964
sive sales professional.
NOTICE TO INTER­
To apply go to: https://
People Look for Information ESTED PERSONS
www.eomediagroup.
About Products and NOTICE IS HEREBY
com/careers/
GIVEN that Betty L.
Services Every Day in Rushing has been
The Bulletin Classifieds
appointed Personal
Representative
of
Subscribe to The Bulletin
the above estate.
call 541-385-5800
1946 Ford 5-passenger
All persons having
coupe, on S-10 frame.
claims against the
350 V8, 350 trans, runs.
estate are required
$15,500. 503-728-3562
Cabinet Builder
to present the same
-Experienced or
within four months
2017
Harley
Sportster
Entry Level. Full or
from this date to
883N
iron.
Only
153
part time. Flexible
the undersigned at
miles.
$7000
541-548-
schedule. 401K, paid
the law offices of
7171
CRR
will
text
pics.
vacation, signing
DOLE COALWELL,
bonus after 90 days.
1941 Chevy Convertible. 810 S.E. Douglas
Call me
Avenue, P.O. Box
Needs restoration, runs.
541-480-4824.
1205, Roseburg,
$25,500. 503-728-3562.
900
Legal Notices &
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com
Legal Notices &
1001
Legal Notices &
Legal Notices &
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
Public Notices
Public Notices
Public Notices
Public Notices
Oregon 97470, or
said claims may be
barred. All persons
whose rights may be
affected by the es­
tate proceeding may
obtain additional in­
formation from the
records of the above
entitled court, the
Personal Represen­
tative or the Person­
al Representative's
attorneys.
DATED and first pub­
lished on June 15,
District-owned Main
Canal to improve
water conservation
in District owned
infrastructure, im­
prove water supply
management
and
delivery reliability for
District patrons, and
improve public safe­
ty. The Deschutes
Basin Board of Con­
trol is the project
sponsor and Arnold
Irrigation District is
the project co-spon-
sor. Farmers Con­
servation
Alliance
is assisting NRCS
in this planning pro­
cess. The proposed
improvements may
be partially funded
by NRCS through
the Watershed Pro­
tection and Flood
Prevention Act of
1954 (PL 83-566).
The proposed proj­
ect is located in
Deschutes County,
Oregon, The Na­
tional Environmental
Policy Act and the
Council on Environ­
mental Quality’s reg­
ulations at 40 CFR
Parts
1500-1508
require evaluations
of the potential ef­
fects of federally
funded projects on
human and natural
resources.
These
evaluations include
input from the public.
NRCS has reviewed
the potential impacts
of the project and re­
leased a Draft Plan-
EA for public and
agency review.
You are invited to
attend
a
virtual
public meeting to
provide input on
this project. At the
virtual
meeting,
project partners will
present the range
of resource issues
associated with the
project and alterna­
tives to addressing
system
improve­
ments in Arnold Ir­
rigation District. The
presentation will be
followed by a ques­
tion and answer ses­
sion.
Date: June 23, 2021
Time: 6 PM to 7 PM
Register at: oregon-
watershedplans.org
Due to COVID-19 pub­
lic event restrictions,
the meeting will be
held virtually using
Zoom. A recording of
the meeting will be
available afterward
at the same web­
site. Media inquiries
should be sent to
Marla Keethler at
maria,
keethler®
fcasolutions.org.
Comments on the
Draft Plan-EA may
be submitted during
a public comment
period
starting
June 8, 2021 and
ending on July 8,
2021. You can view
the complete Draft
Plan-EA and other
project information
online at oregonwa-
tershedplans.org.
A printed copy of
the Draft Plan-EA is
also available at the
Deschutes
Public
Library (601 N.W.
Wall St, Bend, OR
97703).
Comments may be
emailed to arnold.
id.comments®
gmail.com, submit­
ted online at oregon-
watershedplans.org,
submitted via phone
to (541) 716-6085,
or mailed to: Farm­
ers
Conservation
Alliance, 102 State
Street, Hood River,
OR 97031.
Additional information
is available online
at
oregonwater-
shedplans.org
or
the NRCS Oregon
public notices web­
page at nncs.usda.
gov/wps/portal/nrcs/
main/or/newsroom/
pnotice/.
On May 14, 2021,
Elekta notified St.
Charles that certain
of Elekta's network
systems
experi­
enced a data securi­
ty incident from April
2, 2021 to April 6.
2021, and from April
19, 2021 to April
20, 2021. This event
did not occur at St.
Charles, nor did it
impact the security
of St. Charles' com­
puter network and
systems. Immediate­
ly upon detecting the
incident, Elekta en­
gaged expert foren­
sic investigators to
launch an investiga­
tion to determine the
nature and scope of
the incident. Elekta
also contacted law
enforcement
and
has been cooperat­
ing with them since.
When Elekta's in­
vestigation revealed
that the incident may
have impacted per­
sonal information of
St. Charles patients,
Elekta contacted St.
Charles and provid­
ed it with informa­
tion regarding the
nature and scope of
the incident, Elek­
ta's forensic inves­
tigation. and the
potentially impacted
patient personal in­
formation. Elekta's
investigation to date
has revealed no ev­
idence the person­
al information has
been disclosed pub­
licly or used for any
fraudulent purpose.
What
information
was involved?
From Elekta's investi­
gation, the following
types of personal
information of cer­
tain of St. Charles'
Oregon patients may
have been impacted
by the incident: full
name. Social Securi­
ty number, address,
date of birth, height,
weight, medical di­
agnosis,
medical
treatment
details,
and
appointment
confirmations.
No
financial
account,
credit card, or deb­
it card information
was involved in this
incident. And, from
Elekta's forensic in­
vestigation to date,
there is no evidence
to suggest that per­
sonal
information
has been disclosed
publicly or used for
any fraudulent pur­
pose.
What Elekta and St.
Charles are doing
Upon learning of this
incident, Elekta im­
mediately launched
an investigation and
engaged the assis­
tance of third-party
forensic
experts.
Elekta also took
steps to prevent
further access to
information from its
systems, including
resetting passwords
and implementing
multi-factor authen­
tication. When St.
Charles was notified
by Elekta of this in­
cident, the health
system commenced
an investigation of
its own to determine
what St. Charles
data may have been
at risk, to under­
stand the nature,
scope, and cause of
the incident at Elek­
ta, and to evaluate
Elekta's remedia­
tion measures. On
June 14, 2021, St.
Charles mailed writ­
ten notification to all
impacted
patients
informing them of
the Elekta securi­
ty incident. As an
added precaution,
Elekta is also offer­
ing free access to
identity monitoring,
fraud consultation,
and identity theft
restoration services
to any impacted St.
Charles patients.
What impacted pa­
tients can do now
Although St. Charles
has no evidence
that any person­
al information has
been misused, the
health system urges
impacted patients to
take advantage of
the free credit mon­
itoring and identity
theft protection ser­
vices being offered
by Experian in the
notification
letters
sent by U.S. mail
on June 14, 2021,
and encourages in­
dividuals to remain
vigilant by reviewing
account statements
and credit reports
closely. The notifica­
tion letters contain
additional informa­
tion at the end re­
garding steps that
impacted
patients
can take to further
protect their person­
al information, in-
cluding(1)?reporting
suspicious activity
or suspected identity
theft, (2) credit re­
ports, and (3)?credit/
security freezes.
For more information
St. Charles takes the
privacy and security
of its patients’ infor­
mation very serious­
ly, and apologizes for
any inconvenience
Elekta's
incident
may cause. If im­
pacted patients have
additional questions
about this incident or
this letter, please call
St. Charles' dedicat­
ed assistance line at
+1 855-693-5358.
2021 .
Jeffrey A. Mornarich,
OSB #935291
DOLE COALWELL
Of Attorneys for Per­
sonal Representa­
tive
Legal Notice
The undersigned has
been appointed per­
sonal representa­
tive of the Estate of
JANE ANNE GOR­
MAN.
Deceased,
by the Deschutes
County Circuit Court
of the State of Ore­
gon, probate num­
ber
21PB04478.
All persons having
claims against the
estate are required
to present the same
with proper vouch­
ers within four (4)
months after the
date of first publi­
cation to the under­
signed or they may
be barred. Addition­
al information may
be obtained from the
court records, the
undersigned or the
attorney.
Date first published:
June 8, 2021
/s/ Thomas R. Gorman
THOMAS R. GOR­
MAN, Personal
Representative c/o
Edward P. Fitch
Attorney at Law
Fitch & Neary, PC
210 SW 5th Street,
Suite 2 Redmond
OR 97756
Legal Notice
Notice of Availability
of Draft Watershed
Plan-Environmen­
tal
Assessment and Vir­
tual Public Meeting
June 23, 2021 for
Arnold
Irrigation District
Infrastructure Mod­
ernization Project
The United States
Department of Ag­
riculture
Natural
Resources
Con­
servation
Service
(NRCS) announces
the availability of
a Draft Watershed
Plan-Environmental
Assessment (Draft
Plan-EA) for the Ar­
nold Irrigation Dis­
trict
Infrastructure
Modernization Proj­
ect. Arnold Irrigation
District proposes to
install 13.2 miles of
buried pipe in the
Legal Notice
St. Charles Health
System, Inc. ("St.
Charles”) is provid­
ing this notice pur­
suant to the Health
Insurance Portability
and Accountability
Act of 1996 ("Hl-
PAA') to inform St.
Charles patients that
one of the health
system’s data stor­
age vendors, Elek-
ta, Inc. (“Elekta”),
recently notified St.
Charles of a securi­
ty incident that may
have involved the
personal information
of some St. Charles'
patients. This event
did not occur at St.
Charles, nor did it
impact the security
of St. Charles' com­
puter network and
systems.
St. Charles contracts
with Elekta to pro­
vide cancer reg­
istry software and
data management.
Though it was Elek­
ta that suffered the
security incident, St.
Charles is the entity
that is subject to the
breach notification
rules of HIPAA. As
such, St. Charles is
required to provide
notice to patients
whose
personal
health information
may have been ac­
cessed. This media
notice explains what
happened at Elek­
ta, the information
that may have been
affected, measures
Elekta is taking in
response, and steps
impacted
patients
can take to protect
themselves.
What happened?