LOCAL NEWS Wednesday, May 1, 2019 BENT paid more than $27,000 to informant By PHIL WRIGHT STAFF WRITER The arrests of dozens of locals in January for drug crimes was the result of one confidential informant who received more than $27,000 for working with police. The Blue Mountain Enforcement Narcotics Team’s Operation Wild- fire relied on the informant from June until December 2018 to buy drugs through- out Umatilla, Morrow and Gilliam counties, accord- ing to court documents the Umatilla County District Attorney’s Office filed. He arranged the vast majority of the sales though Face- book Messenger. He wore a microphone to record trans- actions during drug deals. The drug team searched him before and after each buy. And BENT also paid him more than $27,000 as of February. Stuart Roberts, Pendle- ton police chief and head of BENT’s board, said Wild- fire’s informant came to BENT on his own, told police drugs affected his family and he was fed up with drugs poisoning his community. The informant also guaranteed he could deliver. “He said he could buy from 63 different people,” Roberts said, “and he did.” The district attorney’s office on Jan. 8 presented 58 Wildfire cases to the grand jury to decide charges. The informant was among the indicted. BENT on Jan. 16 rolled out with warrants and arrested 54 people at homes across the area, plus several who were in jails or prisons. Roberts explained police work with three kinds of confidential informants. One is the “unwitting,” the person who gets in a jam with police and makes a deal to get out. The second is the “non-testifier,” the person who agrees to con- staff photo by e.J. Harris Defendant Antonio Reaves and his attorney Justin Morton listen to Umatilla County chief deputy prosecutor Jackie Jenkins during Reaves’ sentencing Friday at the Stafford Hansell Government Center, Hermiston. Reaves was one of dozens the local drug task force arrested in January during Operation Wildfire. duct a drug buy but will never testify in front of a jury. Roberts said these types are often “one and done.” Then, he said, is the tes- tifier, and they are rare. Wildfire’s informant is a testifier. He took the wit- ness stand this week in the first jury trial of a Wildfire case. Antonio Reco Reaves, 35, of Burien, Washington, faces charges for selling heroin. Court documents and the public trial identified the informant. But the East Oregonian is not identify- ing him in this story for two reasons: the EO was not able to contact the infor- mant directly, and out of concern for his safety. Defense attorney Kara Davis in early April filed a motion in 20 Wildfire cases, including the Reaves case, to compel the state to pro- duce a full accounting of how much BENT paid the informant for services and what other actions it took on his behalf. Davis said last week the informant even received cash to testify to the grand jury. The drug team’s bud- get runs about $150,000 a year. Roberts said most of that pay is overtime for the police on the task force and for drug buys. The $27,000-plus for the infor- mant included $2,000 cash for information leading to a search warrant, accord- ing to court documents, and at least $2,600 for lodging. Roberts said BENT had to move the informant and his family to keep them safe. He said the expense seems large, roughly a one- fifth of BENT’s budget, but the cost was not out of line with some past operations. “The way we justify this is, if you can take that many dealers off the streets, you’re going to have an impact,” Roberts said. “Once we did Wildfire, things dried up. People couldn’t get their hand on anything.” Roberts said BENT could have paid Wildfire’s infor- mant $1,000 for a couple of buys and moved on. But he questioned if the public would want that when the team had the resources and the informant willing to do much more. Davis said she had evi- dence the informant used drugs, conducted drugs deals on the side and pres- sured women for sex in exchange for not ratting out their boyfriends, all while taking cash from BENT. Those actions would dis- qualify BENT from using the informant under its own policies, she said, yet no one investigated him. Roberts said Davis nor anyone else reported those allegations. Until some- one contacts the police and makes an accusation, there’s nothing to investigate. He also said the drug team followed its policies. The informant on a few occasions showed up high, Roberts said, and the team scrapped the buy and sent the guy home. The police chief also said informants tend be be offenders and have connections to crime and are not going to be the most upstanding of citizens. District Attorney Dan Primus said it is hard to know how paying an infor- mant plays to a jury. Prose- cutors present the evidence to bolster the state’s case, he said, but prosecutors and defenders don’t always get to know why a jury makes the decisions it does. Fram- ing informant pay for a jury, he said, is “one of the things we have to evaluate with each case.” Wildfire has plenty of cases still marching through the court. The jury this week found Reaves guilty of sell- ing heroin, a Class A felony in Oregon. Primus said several Wildfire defendants cut plea deals, but Reaves was the first jury trial. Reaves’ sen- tencing was Friday after- noon. The district attor- ney’s office recommended a prison sentence of 20 months, in part because Reaves has convictions in 2015 and 2016 for possess- ing drugs, attempting to elude, resisting arrest and more, and he committed the heroin crime a month after he finished serving probation. Reaves received a sen- tence of three years proba- tion. The Umatilla County Jail released Reaves Friday. HeRMIsTOnHeRaLd.COM • A7 Hermiston learning service offers music, special needs tutoring By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER For kids with develop- mental disabilities or spe- cial needs, one-on-one edu- cation can make a world of difference. A Hermiston couple is hoping to fill that role. Jon- athan and Jazmin Lopez opened Einstein Learning Center in January, draw- ing on their different back- grounds to offer one-on- one tutoring services for students with a range of needs. The service, at 215 E. Main Street, Suite D, is open to students of all ages, from kindergarten to college. They offer communica- tion skills support for kids with special needs, as well as tutoring in math, writ- ing and reading. They also offer some music classes, as well as foreign language courses. Both Jonathan and Jazmin are bilingual, and offer tutoring services in Spanish as well as English. Jonathan said his wife, Jazmin, has been tutoring for about 12 years. “She started tutoring right out of high school, and got a part-time job in college,” he said. Initially, she wanted to be a teacher, but soon felt she could do more to help students in an individual setting. Though the service is open to anyone looking for tutoring, Jonathan said about half of their current clients are students with autism. They work with them to find ways to com- municate, whether using special apps or doing exer- cises to use different parts of the brain. “Technology is a big one,” Jonathan said. “Proloquo2Go is an app that allows the student to be able to communicate at ease by selecting emotions, thoughts and feelings,” he said. They also do simple brain and physical exer- cises, using different tools and toys to help students stimulate different parts of the brain. The couple also draws on their musical train- ing to help students. Jona- than plays guitar, bass and drums, and Jazmin plays and has taught piano. They now have a group of four students learning to play piano. But Jonathan said they also work music therapy into their sessions with students. “For kids with autism, music can be very help- ful,” he said. “We do a lot of music skills, and kids are able to pitch match — we’ve found it can be help- ful for them to remember things.” The prices for tutoring vary, but Lopez said they can be anywhere from $30 to $50 an hour. “We tailor services based on the student,” he said. The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. www.eomediagroup.com HERMISTON HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS BOOSTERS would like to thank our donors, sponsors and volunteers for making the 2019 Steak Feed and Auction a huge success. Without you, this event would not be possible!! 12H Farms, Hansell Family 16 Keys 60 Minute Photo A & M Supply AJ’s Printed Apparel Alex Osmin Andee’s Boutique Andrew Ross & Kire Barrara Apollo Mechanical Austin Kopacz Bank of Eastern Oregon Bellinger Farms Bellinger Gourmet Shoppe Bendixsen Law, PC & Kurt Bendixsen Big River Golf Course Bill Kik Blue Mountain Rentals Blueberry Silver Bob Brinkley Bracher Family Builders First Source Buttercreek Sod Byrnes Oil Cascade Automotive Cascade Specialities Christianson Realty Club 24 Fitness Columbia Auto Body Columbia Orthodontics - Dr. James West Columbia Outdoors Cost Less Carpet Cottage Flowers Craig and Janna Coleman Darren McNamee Dave Ego Dave Rademacher Desert Lanes Devin Oil Dr. Jeremy Larson Eagle Ranch and Art Prior Eastern Oregon Mobile Slaughter Eastern Oregon Physical Therapy Eastern Oregon Telecom Echo Hills Golf Course Elmer’s Irrigation Follet’s Meat Frazier Offi ce Supply G-2 Farming, LLC Getchell Family Golden Canyon Ranch Golden Valley Farms Great Wolf Lodge Greg’s Sleep Center GT Land and Cattle Hales Tavern Hawman Farms Heller & Sons, Inc Hermiston Brewing Company & Nookie’s Hermiston Drug Hermiston Glass Hermiston Golf Association Hermiston Gun Club Hermiston High School Athletics Hermiston Parks and Rec Hermiston Quicky Lube Hermiston Transmission Hermiston Vet Clinic Holiday Inn Express Home Depot of Hermiston Hukit Outfi tters Jared (JD) Walchli Jared and Julie Lathrop Jeff Edmundson John & Natalie Adams Josh Browing K & K Blueberries Kelsy Garton Tree Service Klint Mills Knot Doctor KOHU/KQFM Krisanthemums Larry Usher Last Chance Tavern Les Schwab Lifetime Vision Source Lucas and Tammy Wagner Lucky Endz Malmberg’s Maria Faaeteete Midway Bar and Grill Mike & Deannie Simon Mike & Diane Mehren Miracle Ear of Hermiston Mr. Insulation Neighbor Dudes NW Crane Service NW Farm Supply NW Metal Fab O So Kleen Opal Butte Outfi tters Ordnance Brewing Oxarc Pacifi c Ag Pat & Dawn Kerrigan Paul & Billie Jo Burns Pendleton Country Club Pete & Tressa Meenderinck Pure n’ Soft Purswell Pump Ranch and Home RDO Equipment Rick’s Car Wash Rock Electric Ross Machine and Steel Royale Columbia Farms Ryan McMasters & Columbia River Hookers S & S Equipment New Holland Sally and Tyler Hansell Sanitary Disposal , Inc Scott’s Cycle Shawn Lockwood Sherrell Chevrolet Shiki Hibachi Shipping Solutions Simplot Grower Solutions Simmons Insurance Simply Divine Day Spa Smitty’s Ace Hardware Stahl Farms Steve & Janet Williams Stoneway Electric Styling Arena Sugar Shack Sun Willows Golf Course Swire Coca-Cola Ted Pesicka Terry & Tamara Rowan The Gathering Place at Bellinger’s The Swanson Insurance Group Three Mile Canyon Farms Tom Shimp and Marlette Homes Umatilla County Fair United Rental Vazza Honey Walchli Farms Walchli Potato Walmart D.C. Ware’s Auto Body Westwinds Nursery Wilbur-Ellis Wild Goose Design WSU Alumni Ye Olde Pizza Shoppe Title Sponsors A & M Supply Banner Bank Barrett Business Services Columbia Bank Devin Oil Elmer’s Irrigation Farm City Fence Luke Dynes Pioneer Title & Escrow Ranch & Home RDO Equipment Robert Schaefer--Horace Mann Rogers Toyota Silver Creek Contracting, LLC Simplot Grower Solutions Threemile Canyon Farms Tom Denchel Ford Country Wyatt Enterprises Dinner Sponsor Custom Feed Services Special Thanks Barnett & Moro, P.C. Bud Rich Potato Bulldog Catering - Susie Cobb Columbia Bank Staff Columbia Crest Winery Craig & Janna Coleman Dennis & Cathy Barnett Destination Bartending Ford Bonney HHS Print Shop - Vickie Paola Hodgen Distributing Ordnance Brewing Painted Hills Natural Beef Swire-Coca Cola The O’Gorman Family