A4 The BulleTin • SaTurday, June 19, 2021 COOS BAY 3 killed, suspect sought after hit-and-run, shooting This security cam- era image shows a suspect in a hit- and-run crash and shootings in the small city of Noti in southwest Oregon that left three peo- ple dead. Authori- ties are seeking the publics help in find- ing and identifying the suspect. The Associated Press COOS BAY — Police searched Friday for a suspect believed to have killed three people in a wave of violence that included a hit- and-run crash and a shooting at a pot shop in a small Oregon city. The first person found dead was struck by a pickup truck at an RV park in the coastal city of North Bend, about 220 miles southwest of Portland, The Or- egonian reported. A woman also was injured in the crash and taken to a hospital, where she was in critical condition, Coos Lane County Sheriff’s Office via AP Defense Continued from A1 Those funds will only be released to the office if it can show satisfactory progress in several performance areas, such as financial manage- ment and office moderniza- tion. The changes are intended to increase transparency and “impose a heightened level of financial discipline and ac- countability on the agency,” wrote John Borden, senior analyst with the Legislative Fiscal Office, in a budget doc- ument. Public defense is a field where it’s often difficult to measure success, not-guilty verdicts being few and far between for most public de- fenders. That’s why Jones, a retired Multnomah County judge, says he’s a big believer in data-tracking, despite re- sistance by many attorneys to adding yet another layer of paperwork to their lives. The vast majority of crim- inal cases, more than 80%, go to a public defender. The number is even higher in ju- venile cases. In Oregon, the public de- fense office is responsible for representing defendants who can’t afford a lawyer. It’s over- seen by the Public Defense Services Commission, which was formed by the Legislature around 2000. In 2019, the nonprofit Sixth Amendment Center released a report calling the way Or- egon funded public defense unconstitutional and struc- turally flawed. That legisla- tive session, House Bill 3145, would have overhauled the state public defense system, though the effort failed. In 2020, another bill, House Bill 4004, would have imposed performance track- ing and other reforms in pub- lic defense in Oregon, though that bill died along with most others following the Republi- can walkout. Borg fought hard to win support for House Bill 3145, and sources said he struggled to maintain momentum after the effort failed. Reformers have high hopes for two current legislative ef- forts, one bill that passed ear- lier this month and the other that could receive approval as early as next week. House Bill 2003, which Gov. Kate Brown signed into law June 11, expands the commission overseeing the The changes are intended to increase transparency and “impose a heightened level of financial discipline and accountability on the agency,” wrote John Borden, senior analyst with the Legislative Fiscal Office, in a budget document. defense services office and makes other changes. The proposed House Bill 5030 contains the next biennial budget for the office, includ- ing the $100 million hold- back. Borg did enjoy at least one major victory in getting the commission to abandon the case-credit model as a way of paying public defense con- tractors, a provision of House Bill 2003. The method, which paid public defenders a flat rate per case, was criticized for providing no incentive for public defenders to secure a good result for clients. It led many to accept more clients to earn a living. Moving away from this model will also cost money. Jones was brought on to serve in a temporary ca- pacity. A national search is expected to yield his replace- ment in six to nine months. The hubbub has also led to anxiety at the local level. Private investigators in Or- egon work on two types of defense case: retained and indigent. Retained work pays better, and law firms are quick to hand over payments, said private investigator Thad Higgins. This isn’t the case with indigent work, he said. Higgins has three employ- ees at his firm WCN Investi- gations who assist him with fact-finding for defense attor- neys in Central Oregon. Today, Higgins typically waits seven weeks to receive payment for work on indi- gent cases. When he started 4½ years ago, he used to get his checks, in his mailbox, within seven to 10 days. “You want retained work,” Higgins said. “But so much of the work out there is the in- digent work through OPDS. Most people who commit crimes don’t have a lot of money set aside to defend themselves.” e Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com Find it all online bendbulletin.com T RINITY E PISCOPAL C HURCH Love God, Love Your Neighbor, Love Yourself Worship online @ trinitybend.org Meal schedule @ familykitchen.org County District Attorney Paul Frasier said at a news conference. A few minutes after the wreck, police received reports of gun- shots at a cannabis shop, where one person was killed. Officials believe the same suspect is re- sponsible for the shooting and the hit-and-run crash. After the shooting, Frasier said the suspect went to a nearby sporting goods store and bought more ammunition. Meanwhile, police had gone back to the RV park to search a trailer that was registered to the same person as the truck and found a body believed to belong to the owner of both, Frasier said. The prosecutor did not say how that victim died but that “there is no question in my mind this per- son died of homicidal violence.” None of the victims has been identified, and Frasier said it was unclear what, if any, connection they had to the suspect. Police began searching for a white 2019 Dodge 3500 pickup, which was later found on a high- way north of where the killings took place. The truck had crashed and been set on fire, Frasier said. A witness told investigators that the driver appeared to be armed with a handgun at the time of the crash and had run into the woods. Law enforcement agencies were conducting a manhunt in the woods, Frasier said. Law enforcement officials are searching the woods near an un- incorporated Lane County com- munity for the man. Deputies urged anyone who saw the man to call 911 and stay away from him. Residents of the Noti area were asked to stay inside. Western heat wave threatens health BY ANITA SNOW The Associated Press PHOENIX — Extreme temperatures like the ones blistering the American West this week aren’t just annoying, they’re deadly. The record-breaking tem- peratures this week are a weather emergency, scien- tists and health care experts say, with heat responsible for more deaths in the U.S. than all other natural disasters com- bined. With more frequent and intense heat waves likely because of climate change and the worst drought in modern history, they say communities must better protect the vulner- able, like homeless people and those who live in ethnically and racially diverse low-in- come neighborhoods. “This heat has an import- ant effect on people and their health,” said Dr. Suganya Karuppana, chief medical di- rector at the Valle del Sol com- Jack White leaps into his grandparents’ backyard pool in the heat at their home in Mesa, Arizona, while the fam- ily dog Jackson looks on. Randy Hoeft/The Yuma Sun via AP munity health clinics in Ari- zona. People — along with plants and animals — need cooler temperatures at night to re- cover from the stress of high heat, scientists and doctors said. But with overnight tem- peratures in the 90s, that’s not happening. Karuppana noted that many people she sees may have no car and have to take public transportation in the Phoenix heat, walking through neigh- borhoods with few trees and waiting at bus and light rail stops with no or little shade. Some people live in poorly ventilated mobile homes or without air conditioning.