JOURNEY THROUGH GRANT COUNTY AND BEYOND | INSIDE Wednesday, July 27, 2022 154th Year • No. 30 • 14 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com Crooked River flows falling fast Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin The Crooked River trickles into Prineville Reservoir. “CROOK COUNTY HAS BEEN IN EXCEPTIONAL DROUGHT FOR ALMOST A YEAR. IT’S THE ONLY COUNTY IN THE STATE WITH THIS DISTINCTION.” Bruce Scanlon, manager for Ochoco Irrigation District By MICHAEL KOHN The Bulletin RINEVILLE — Even in times of ation of the dam in 1961, according to the Oregon drought, the amount of water fl ow- Water Resources Department. The lower levels ing into the Crooked River from mean less water for Crook County farmers to Prineville Reservoir typically use on their fi elds, as well as lower levels in hovers at or near 50 cubic feet the river for fi sh to survive. per second. But this fall — after succes- Exactly when these low fl ows will trigger sive dry years and with Crook County still is up to the weather and water usage by irri- in the throes of severe drought — the fl ow is gators. Hot temperatures like those expected expected to drop to 10 cfs. this week will speed up the decline. Bruce Scan- The lower fl ow out of Bowman Dam lon, manager for Ochoco Irrigation District, Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin believes the district supply will be exhausted will occur after irrigation districts in Crook County run out of water this year, said Gregg A sign at the decommis- by late summer. Garnett, Bend fi eld offi ce manager for the sioned Jasper Point boat “Crook County has been in exceptional ramp at Prineville Reservoir. drought for almost a year. It’s the only county U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. As of Thursday, July 21, Prineville Res- in the state with this distinction,” said Scanlon. ervoir was just 24% full. The reservoir this year had the See River, Page A14 lowest maximum fi ll on record dating back to the cre- P Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin The extreme drawdown at Prineville Reservoir gives way to cracked earth. Judge drops Smith child neglect charges By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY — After more than a month of delib- erating, a Circuit Court judge has tossed out misdemeanor charges against a former Grant County sheriff ’s deputy but ruled that trial can proceed on three felony counts. In a written ruling issued July 18, Circuit Court Judge Dan Bunch stated he would dismiss four counts of child neglect but not charges of fourth-degree assault, attempted fi rst-degree rape and attempted fi rst-degree sex abuse against Tyler Smith. The ruling comes in response to a motion by Smith’s attorneys to dismiss all the charges against him, which they alleged were part of a plot by former Grant County Sheriff Glenn Palmer, other sheriff ’s offi ce employ- ees and Smith’s accuser to get him fi red and prosecuted. Smith was arrested on Sept. 9, 2019, and then fi red by the Grant County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce on Dec. 17, 2019, several months before having an opportunity to enter a not guilty plea on April 30, 2020. Smith’s trial was slated to begin in late October of 2021. However, it was abruptly put on hold to give defense attor- neys time to sift through hun- dreds of pages of discovery materials fi led just one day earlier by the prosecution. The evidence in question included documents and inter- nal reports from the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce. Additionally, there were two recorded interviews with Smith’s accuser, including one in which she acknowledged placing a tracking device on Smith’s vehicle and keep- ing the Grant County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce informed of his whereabouts. In his ruling, Bunch writes that Smith’s accuser created “proof problems” for the pros- ecution by not disclosing the alleged assault when she was asked by law enforcement Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle, File Tyler Smith appears in Grant County Circuit Court on April 20, 2022. whether there was reason to be concerned regarding Smith’s potential for violence. However, the judge writes, it “simply strains logic” to believe that Smith’s accuser and the Grant County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce colluded to make a false accusation of assault to further her goals and those of the sheriff ’s offi ce. Bunch adds that he stopped short of concluding that law enforcement deliberately withheld evidence that could be used by the defense to exonerate Smith. However, in the child neglect case, the questions become more complicated. While the judge disagreed with the defense that internal See Smith, Page A14 Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle Ron Lundbom, left, shakes hands with new owner Gary Snair on Monday, July 25, 2022, at John Day NAPA. Lundbom sells auto parts store By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — The NAPA auto parts store in John Day is under new ownership. The change came with Ron and Sherri Lundbom’s sale of the store to Gary and Gayln Snair of Redmond for an undisclosed amount of money. Gary Snair was pre- viously the co-owner of the Bend, Madras and Redmond NAPA stores. The sale was fi nalized on July 1. The John Day NAPA auto parts store was opened by Lundbom’s father, Don, in April of 1966, and Ron Lund- bom started working part- time at the store in 1976. He began taking on more of a hands-on role with the store in the mid-90s and took over management of the business following the retirement of his parents in the early 2000s. Lundbom had hoped his son Stefan would take over operation of the store, but cir- cumstances in his son’s life took that option off the table. “I kind of thought my son was going to take over, and then his wife changed career fi elds and he followed her in her career,” Lundbom said. Once it was clear that Lundbom didn’t have a suc- cessor lined up to take over the business, Snair reached out to Lundbom and asked him what is plans for the business were. “The business was in a trust — my mom and dad set up a trust for us,” Lundbom said. “Once that was cleaned up and the estate was taken care of, we started talking and made the deal on July 1.” Lundbom said he owed it to Stefan to wait until he decided he wasn’t going to take over the business before deciding to make the move to sell. See NAPA, Page A14