A6 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Legislation bars ‘gay panic’ as a defense in murder cases By Peter Wong Oregon Capital Bureau A suspect could not assert so-called “gay panic” as a legal defense against second-de- gree murder in Oregon under a bill that is headed to Gov. Kate Brown. The Oregon House passed Senate Bill 704 without amend- ment on a 54-0 vote Thursday. The bill would bar the dis- covery of a victim’s sexual orientation or gender iden- tity as a reasonable explana- tion for someone undergoing an extreme emotional disturbance as an affirmative defense to sec- ond-degree murder. A person would not be justified in using physical force against another person upon discovery of the victim’s sexual orientation or gender identity. Oregon would join 13 other states, plus Washington, D.C., with similar laws. The Sen- ate passed it, 29-1, on April 14; Republican Dallas Heard of Roseburg was the lone opponent. Though Senate Bill 704 does not bear anyone’s name unlike bills in other states, its passage comes less than a year after the stabbing death of Aja Raquell Rhone-Stevens, a 32-year-old transgender woman, in July 2020 in Northeast Portland. She was attending a vigil for another homicide victim. No one has been arrested in connection with the case. She was one of a record 44 deaths tallied in 2020 by the Human Rights Campaign, a national advocacy group for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgen- der and questioning (LGBTQ) people. Many of the victims are transgender people of color. The organization has tallied 23 deaths so far this year. “When we finally see justice for Aja’s murder, we can ensure that, when we show up to the courtroom, her memory won’t be insulted by someone trying to use the panic defense to jus- tify her death,” Dana Spears, her sister, said in a statement after the House vote. “I’m thankful to everyone in the community who used their voice for Aja, and saw this bill passed.” It was one of the priorities of Basic Rights Oregon, the state’s leading LGBTQ advo- cacy group. “This legislation states, unequivocally, in Oregon, there is never an excuse for violence against transgender people,” Mikki Gillette said on behalf of the group. Under current state law, a suspect can assert an affirma- tive defense to second-degree murder if the extreme emo- tional disturbance is not the result of the person’s own inten- tional, knowing, reckless or criminally negligent act and if there is a reasonable explana- tion for the disturbance. “These cases often involve incredible and brutal acts of violence,” Rep. Karin Power, D-Milwaukie, the bill’s floor manager, said during House debate. “Defendants use these defenses to avoid full account- ability on the grounds that actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity is reasonable in and of itself to be considered adequate provocation. “Passage of this bill would send a strong and proactive message that the perpetrator of a second-degree murder will not be able to excuse the crime simply based on who the vic- tim is.” Power, a lesbian, is one of four House chief sponsors of the bill. So is Rep. Rob Nosse, D-Portland, who has identi- fied himself as gay for 30 years. He said he considered him- self lucky that he was unable to think of a negative long-term consequence to himself or his husband for being gay. “But I know that is not true for every LGBT person in our state and country,” he said. Nosse described the 2020 death of Rhone-Stevens. “When we finally see jus- tice for her murder, we want to ensure that we can show up to the courtroom and her memory is not insulted by someone try- ing to use the panic defense for her death,” he said. Also a chief sponsor is Rep. Janeen Sollman, D-Hillsboro, who said transgender women of color are more likely to be the targets of violence. “Many of these attacks are motivated by nothing other than the victim’s gender or orienta- tion,” she said. “I have heard from constituents, friends and family on how important the passage of this bill is to them,” including a nephew who sent her a text message. “I was proud to say to him that I do know,” she said. Rep. Anna Williams is a Democrat from Hood River whose district includes Sandy, where a gay pride rally drew a counterprotest barely two months ago. “A law that excuses crim- inal behavior against certain groups of people is essentially a law that diminishes the human- ity of that group,” Williams said. “The existence of the LGBTQ panic defense means that as a state, we sanction vio- lence against members of this community.” Wednesday, May 19, 2021 Bentz backs ouster of Cheney from GOP leadership By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau “IF WE ARE TO WIN BACK THE HOUSE IN 2022, THE REPUBLICAN CAUCUS MUST BE UNIFIED, AND WE MUST FOCUS ON THE REAL PROBLEMS THE COUNTRY IS FACING.” Oregon’s lone Republi- can in Congress said his par- ty’s House caucus will be better focused now that it has removed an outspoken critic —Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Oregon of former President Donald Trump from its leadership. the chambers and fought with ty’s most conservative House U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, members, to remove Cheney R-Ontario, declined to respond police. Several hundred rioters are for her impeachment vote. to a direct question of whether In a closed-door meeting, he voted May 12 to remove being prosecuted for a wide U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo- range of assault and other Cheney told colleagues, “I ming, as the GOP House Con- charges stemming from the won’t apologize for the vote,” ference Chair. according to the Associated attack. But in a state- After National Press. ment after the cau- McCarthy, who himself had Guard troops and cus meeting where a police removed the said Trump bore responsibility voice vote removed last rioters several for some of the turmoil on Jan. Cheney, Bentz praised hours later, Bentz 6, said he accepted Cheney’s the result as positive joined other Repub- explanation. licans in challenging for Republicans in “Liz has the right to vote Pennsylvania’s vote. the narrow 222-212 her conscience,” McCarthy Rep. Conor Lamb, said. “At the end of the day, minority in the House. Rep. Cliff Bentz D-Pennsylvania, dis- we’ll get united.” “If we are to win back the House in 2022, the missed the objections by Bentz Bentz said he was con- Republican Caucus must be and other Republicans as “lies” vinced by Cheney’s argument that she had voted as an indi- unified, and we must focus on that killed people that day. “These objections don’t vidual House member, not in the real problems the coun- try is facing,” Bentz said in a deserve an ounce of respect, her role as conference chair. statement. Immediately after the not an ounce,” Lamb said. It was a reversal of Bentz’s “Let’s be clear about what hap- attack, criticism of Trump was earlier stance backing Cheney pened in this chamber today — not rare. Sen. Mitch McConnell, following her vote to impeach invaders came in for the first Trump for “incitement to time since the War of 1812. R-Kentucky, took to the Sen- insurrection” by encouraging They desecrated these halls, in ate floor to slam the president the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capi- this chamber, and practically he had aided through numer- tol that left five dead. every inch of ground where we ous political and judicial bat- tles over the prior four years. A longtime Republican work.” “We’ll either hasten down state lawmaker from Ontario, Congress rejected the chal- Bentz was elected in Novem- lenges to Pennsylvania and a poisonous path where only ber 2020 to represent Oregon’s other votes and certified the the winners of an election actu- 2nd Congressional District, election of Biden as president ally accept the results, or show which takes in most of eastern, and Kamala Harris as vice we can still muster the patri- otic courage that our forebears central and parts of southwest- president. ern Oregon. In a press release issued showed, not only in victory, but Bentz replaced U.S. Rep. just before 4 a.m. the day in defeat,” McConnell said. “If Greg Walden, R-Hood River, after the riot, Bentz said that this election were overturned who retired following 20 years the certification meant Biden by mere allegations from the in the House. Like Walden, was the legally elected pres- losing side, our democracy Bentz is the lone Republican in ident. He said he had ques- would enter a death spiral.” But after Biden’s inaugu- the Oregon congressional del- tioned the outcome because egation that includes two sen- he had heard from constituents ration on Feb. 20, much of the ators and the other four House who believed the election was Republican criticism of Trump members. ceased. tainted by unspecified fraud. McConnell, now minority After he lost his re-elec- “My goal was to protect the tion bid for the White House integrity of our elections and leader, made no more pub- to Democrat Joe Biden, Trump to prompt all states to uphold lic rebukes. McCarthy sought continued to tout conspiracy election laws as determined by Trump’s favor, while the Free- theories. He also promoted their state legislatures — all in dom Caucus launched plans debunked claims that the elec- accordance with our Constitu- for primary challenges against tion had been stolen from him tion,” Bentz said. Cheney and GOP House mem- Soon after the siege, Bentz bers who voted to impeach. by widespread voter fraud. Cheney said she was Bentz had been among a sided with House Republican group of incoming GOP law- leaders who sought to derail alarmed by the party’s turning makers who issued a state- efforts to punish 10 Repub- away from such recent events ment in December calling for licans who voted to impeach that she found devastating to “a congressional investiga- Trump for “incitement to riot.” the core institutions of Ameri- tion and review into what has Cheney, a former state can democracy. In frequent statements, happened in states where elec- department official and daugh- tion irregularities have been ter of former Vice President Cheney repeated her call for Dick Cheney, was the most the party to reject Trump as the observed.” On Jan. 6, Bentz came to high-profile Republican to first step in rehabilitating the the Capitol planning to chal- favor the impeachment of image of Republicans as a part lenge the certification by Con- Trump. of the long history of peaceful gress of the Electoral College Bentz initially helped two-party government. votes in Pennsylvania. A mob House Minority Leader Kevin Cheney wrote a guest of pro-Trump rioters stormed McCarthy, R-California, opinion piece for the Wash- the Capitol, forcing lawmakers repulse an attempt on Feb. 3 by ington Post last month, say- into hiding as they ransacked the Freedom Caucus, the par- ing the party “is at a turning point, and Republicans must decide whether we are going to choose truth and fidelity to the Constitution.” While Cheney saw GOP silence as breaking trust with Americans, the House Republican Caucus increas- ingly looked at her drum- beat of criticism of Trump as undercutting her role as the face and voice of Republican policy in the House. Bentz joined with McCa- rthy, other former Cheney backers and the already disen- chanted Freedom Caucus to question Cheney’s effective- ness as a GOP leader. In a speech to a nearly empty chamber earlier this week, Cheney seemed resigned to her fate, but would continue to call on the party to dump Trump as its leader. “We must speak the truth — our election was not stolen and America has not failed,” Cheney said. Cheney said she had made a promise to uphold the U.S. Constitution, not perpetuate the rule of one president who refused to admit defeat — no matter the cost. “This is not about partisan- ship,” Cheney said. “This is about our duty as Americans. Remaining silent and ignoring the lie emboldens the liar.” It took the House Repub- lican Caucus a little over 20 minutes on Wednesday to vote Cheney out. Cheney said afterward that, if Trump runs for the White House in 2024 as he has sug- gested, “I will do everything I can to ensure that the former president never again gets any- where near the Oval Office.” Bentz says he backs the choice of U.S. Rep. Elise Ste- fanik, R-New York, to replace Cheney. Stefanik is endorsed by both McCarthy and his top lieutenant, U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Louisiana. Some Freedom Caucus members sought to derail Ste- fanik’s rise, saying earlier votes against Trump’s tax cuts and some immigration policies showed a moderate streak out of step with the caucus. But Stefanik has risen as an ardent Trump backer since the then-president’s first impeach- ment trial in early 2020. Trump himself has called Stefanik “a winner.” In his statement on Tues- day, Bentz said Stefanik would put the party’s focus on fight- ing Biden. “There is no doubt in my mind that Congresswoman Stefanik, with Leader McCar- thy and Whip Scalise, will look forward, not back, and that together Republicans will win back the House in 2022.” Pendleton housing plan sent to Senate for final vote By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau Pendleton would join Bend and Redmond in an affordable housing pilot program under a bill now one step from legisla- tive approval. The Senate Committee on Natural Resources and Wildfire Recovery on Monday approved House Bill 2160 by a vote of 4-1. The bill now goes to the full Senate for final approval. It’s expected to win overwhelming approval sometime in the next few weeks. The legislation would add Pendleton to a state pilot pro- gram that allows cities to exper- iment with affordable hous- ing projects beyond their urban growth boundaries. Advocates say the pilot projects could be a model for widespread use around the state in the future. House Bill 2160, sponsored by Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo, would greenlight Land Conser- vation and Development Com- mission approval for an eventual plan to build on up to 50 acres outside of Pendleton’s current development limits. The bill passed the House unanimously last month. Bend was the first city to receive approval for a project outside of the UGB, which usu- ally requires a longer, more rig- orous review process. Redmond joined the program as the second project, and if approved, Pendle- ton would become the third. S226603-1