NEWS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Last-minute fi lings alter picture of county commissioner races lost in the runoff 50-48. Shafer’s other challenger is con- servative activist HollyJo Beers, who also is making her second attempt at county offi ce. Beers came in second during the 2020 primary for an open Position 3 seat, but she ended up los- ing the runoff to Dan Dorran. Regardless of the results during the primary, the two candidates who get the most votes in each commis- sion race will advance to a Nov. 8 runoff . Hermiston campaigns competitive By ANTONIO SIERRA Hermiston Herald David Nelson made a sudden return to local politics on March 8. On the last day candidates could fi le for local offi ce ahead of the May 17 election, Nelson, a former state senator, joined a packed race to replace Position 1 Commissioner George Murdock. The Pendleton resident repre- sented District 29 as a Republican in the Oregon Senate from 1997- 2013, including a stint as the majority leader. After retiring from the Legis- lature, Nelson served on the Eastern Oregon University Board of Trustees before stepping off in 2020. Then-Commissioner Bill Hansell won election to succeed Nelson in the senate. A decade later, Nelson now is seeking the county board seat Hansell once held. It’s not unprecedented in Ore- gon for legislators to seek county offi ce after serving in Salem. Former Republican Minority Leader Her- man Baertschiger left the senate in 2020 after he was elected to a seat on the Josephine County Board of Com- missioners. And in 2016, former state Rep. Jessica Vega Pederson success- fully ran for a county commissioner seat in Multnomah County, although Hermiston City Council Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald, File A ballot is dropped into a drop box in Hermiston on Nov. 3, 2020. unlike Nelson, both legislators immediately transitioned from state to county offi ce. While Nelson brings plenty of name recognition to the race, he won’t have a glide path to a seat on the board. Before Nelson entered his name, fi ve other candidates already fi led. Two business owners — Susan Bower of Pendleton and Cindy Tim- mons of Milton-Freewater — were the fi rst to join the race. Bower has spent more than $18,000 on her cam- paign while Timmons has reported more than $3,000 in expenditures. The rest of the fi eld is composed of Bob Barton, a Hermiston construc- tion business owner; Jesse Bonifer, an Athena city councilor and Sec- ond Amendment activist; and Alvin Young, a Hermiston store manager. A late entry means voters also will weigh in on Position 2 in the May primary. Rick Pullen, a former Umatilla County employee, fi led a last-min- ute challenge to incumbent Com- missioner John Shafer. In 2018, Pullen ran against Murdock for Position 1. He came in second during the primary and narrowly Hermiston voters will have a choice in all but one race in May, but as of 5 p.m. on March 8, the one exception is set to be decided by write-in votes. The race for Ward 1 will feature a rematch between incumbent Lori Davis and retiree Jackie Linton. Lin- ton also was a candidate for Ward 1 in 2018, but she narrowly missed the runoff and Davis would go on to pre- vail in the general election. Ward 2 Councilor Roy Barron is facing a challenge from Stan Strad- ley, the executive director of the Umatilla County Housing Authority. Barron fi rst won offi ce in 2018. In Ward 4, former Coun- cilor David McCarthy is challeng- ing incumbent Phillip Spicerkuhn to rejoin the council. Spickerkuhn won a special election unopposed in March 2021 to represent Ward 4 on the council. Ward 3 has been represented by Councilor Jackie Myers for nearly 30 years. At the deadline, Myers sub- mitted her application and will be on the ballot to resume her position on the council. City offi cials confi rmed that she does intend to run again for her offi ce. Rounding out the slate of Herm- iston elections is the race for munic- ipal court judge, where incumbent Thomas Creasing will face a chal- lenge from Municipal Judge Pro Tem Cameron Bendixsen. Levy draws challenger Most races for state offi ces that represent Umatilla and Morrow counties will not be competitive, but state Rep. Bobby Levy of Echo is facing a challenge in the Republican primary. Skye Farnam, a Summerville business owner, is seeking to oust Levy. Farnam ran for the District 58 seat in 2018 as an independent but lost to then-incumbent Greg Barreto. State Rep. Greg Smith, R-Hep- pner, the incumbent in District 57, is all but assured another term in Salem after drawing no Republican or Dem- ocratic opponents. In Umatilla County Circuit, Posi- tion 2 Judge Jon Lieuallen and Posi- tion 3 Judge Daniel Hill are running unopposed. And in Morrow County, District Attorney Justin Nelson also is running unopposed. Hermiston man arrested in the disappearance of Moses Lake woman By CHARLES H. FEATHERSTONE Columbia Basin Herald Police in Hermiston have arrested a former Moses Lake, Washington, resi- dent in the disappearance of 30-year-old Yanira Cedillos of Moses Lake last week. At a press conference Thursday, March 10, at the Moses Lake Civic Center, Moses Lake Police Depart- ment Capt. Mike Williams said Hermiston police offi - cers arrested Juan Gastelum, 27, a former Moses Lake resident, the evening of March 9. Gastelum has been charged with second-de- gree murder and rape of Cedillos, who was last seen late March 3 and very early March 4 celebrating her birthday with friends at Papa’s Casino in Moses Lake, Williams said. MLPD detectives learned Cedillos received a num- ber of phone calls and text messages the night of her birthday celebrations from Gastelum, with whom she had lived with and been involved romantically, Wil- liams said. Williams also said MLPD determined Gastelum picked Cedillos up somewhere in the 900 block of North Stratford Road and took her to her apartment. Cedillos’ family reported her missing March 4, after she failed to show up for work. Williams said that while Cedillos’ body has not yet been found, MLPD detec- tives collected evidence from her residence at the Heron Creek Apartments in Moses Lake showing Cedillos was killed in her apartment. “The last evidence we have that she was still alive was a few minutes after midnight, approximately seven minutes after they arrived at the apartment,” Williams said. Williams said MLPD believes Cedillos is deceased, but added he was not at liberty to discuss the evidence that led the MLPD to reach that conclusion. Gastelum, who also goes by the name Johnny Tru- jillo, is sitting in the Uma- tilla County Jail, Pendle- ton, awaiting extradition to Washington. Williams said Gastelum was taken into custody without inci- dent and would not com- ment on the suspect’s crim- inal history. Williams also said the MLPD held off on com- menting about Cedil- los’ disappearance before March 10 because they did not want to tip Gastelum off about the status of the investigation. “Since (March 4), our detectives and other offi- cers assisting with this case have been working 16 to 18 hour days track- ing down leads and search- ing for Yanira,” Williams said. “We would not and could not risk releasing details that could cause Gastelum to flee or stop cooperating.” Williams said the inves- tigation into Cedillo’s mur- der is ongoing, and more information will be made public in the future. MLPD Chief Kevin Fuhr thanked the Hermis- ton police, the Washington State Patrol, the Othello and Quincy police departments, the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, Washington, and the Spokane County Sheriff ’s Offi ce as well as the FBI for their assistance in the investigation. “Were it not for the assistance of these agen- cies, we would not be as far along in this investigation as we are,” Fuhr said. The Columbia Basin Herald will continue to monitor this story for any additional information as it becomes available. SEEKING QUALIFIED PROVIDERS CAPECO is issuing a Request for Proposals (RFP) for qualified contractor(s) to provide Nutrition Program services, including Home Delivered Meal and Congregate Meal services within Morrow and Umatilla Counties. 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