W EDNESDAY , J ANUARY 25, 2017 The • N O . 4 • 18 P AGES • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com Blue Mountain EAGLE PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE DECADE Wyllie shares rodeo lifestyle through his lens By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle P hotographer Lindsey Wyllie of John Day has done it again. He won “Your Competitor News” rodeo magazine’s Photog- rapher of the Year award — for the sixth con- secutive year. He also won Cover Photo of the Year with a photo he took at the Spray Rodeo. The magazine is the largest rodeo publi- cation in the West, covering 25 states. “It’s an honor to be recognized by so INSIDE many people for so long,” Wyllie said. “I like capturing that piece of history that they can hold onto.” Wyllie, who grew up on a ranch and was involved in rodeo in his younger years, has been in the rodeo photography business for more than 12 years. One of his highlights this year was being invited as the exclusive photographer to the Baker Bulls and Broncs Rodeo, which boasts the highest one-day payout in bull riding and saddle bronc riding. “The opportunities that opened up for me in the PRCA world is phenomenal,” he said. Wyllie’s personal favorite cover photo this year, a picture of young cowboy John Barry Rose, a Burns resident, competing at the Burns Junior High Rodeo, holds a spe- cial meaning to him. The photo appeared on the June 2016 edition of “Your Competitor News.” “John Barry had not reached his 16th birthday this year when his life was taken in an auto accident,” Wyllie said. “He was well on his way to greatness and had enjoyed be- ing at the top of his game, competing with the big guns in the NPRA and ICA world.” See WYLLIE, Page A18 The Eagle/Angel Carpenter Lindsey Wyllie received the 2016 “Your Competitor News” magazine’s Photographer of the Year award for the sixth consecutive year. In the photo, Wyllie stands with his camera near a Grant County Fair sign in John Day. TOP PHOTO: Wyllie won “Your Competitor News” magazine’s Cover of the Year award for this photo, which shows steer wrestler Ty Sherman performing at the 2016 NPRA Rodeo in Spray. The photo appeared on the June 20 cover of the magazine. Locals join La Grande women’s march By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle Family Health Guide special section inside Roughly 250 protesters gathered in La Grande to speak out against newly elected President Donald Trump and threats to women’s rights. Protesters marched from the Union County Clerk’s Offi ce to Max Square in solidarity with hundreds of other international organized marches. “I’m marching because as an American I want future generations to enjoy the same, if not better, ac- cess to public lands that we do today. I hunt and fi sh on public lands and, if we don’t speak up, Oregon may soon look like Texas where only the wealthy have opportunities to har- vest wild game,” John Day resident Ashley Stevick wrote after the march. “I want our country to move forward rather than backwards on LGBTQIA, civil and reproductive rights. These rights along with immigrant, disability and worker’s rights are essential to our freedom. I want the compassion and The Eagle/Rylan Boggs Kate Olsen, left, Katie Sprovkin, right, and her daughter Fiona march towards Max Square in La Grande during Saturday’s women’s march. They were among roughly 250 protesters from across Eastern Oregon who attended the march. kindness I’ve found within this small Eastern Oregon town to be mirrored in Washington, D.C.” Marilyn Dudek came from Bak- er City with friends to stand in solidarity with the marchers and ex- ercise her fi rst amendment rights on issues ranging from climate change to women’s rights. “To see all of these like-minded people in one place makes us feel pret- ty good. It makes us feel hopeful,” she said. “For me it’s a feeling of solidari- ty, to be with like-minded people and have a sense of optimism for the fu- ture, that’s why I’m here,” protester Ann MeHaffy said. The march coordinated with similar events in Salem and Pendleton, which both boasted crowds of hundreds, as well as a march in Washington, D.C., that organizers said was attended by 500,000 people. Within hours of being sworn in, Trump signed an executive order to “minimize the economic burden” of the Affordable Care Act, which allows government agencies to stop enforcing certain regulations associated with the law. See MARCH, Page A18 Emry pleads guilty to possessing machine gun in John Day Maximum sentence: 10 years, $10,000 fine Blue Mountain Eagle Michael Emry Michael Ray Emry faces up to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fi ne after pleading guilty to pos- sessing a machine gun illegally in John Day. Emry, 54, pleaded guilty Mon- day, Jan. 23, before U.S. District Court Judge Ann Aiken to unlaw- ful possession of a fully automatic .50-caliber machine gun that was not registered to him, according to a press release from the U.S. De- partment of Justice. After accepting the guilty plea, Aiken scheduled Emry’s sentenc- ing hearing for April 3. Emry faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, a $10,000 fi ne and three years of supervised release. According to court documents and statements made in court, on May 6, 2016, federal agents ex- ecuted a search warrant on Em- ry’s trailer at the Grant County Fairgrounds and RV Park in John Day and recovered a Browning M2 machine gun with an oblit- erated serial number. Emry told agents that the fi rearm was fully automatic and could fi re between 550 and 650 rounds per minute, that he had stolen it from a man See EMRY, Page A18