Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 1994-current, August 31, 2022, Page 11, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    AROUND OREGON
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 2022
HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A11
Witnesses to Bend shooting describe chaos, fear
BY ZACK DEMARS, BRYCE DOLE
AND ANNA KAMINSKI
The Bulletin
Ray Shields was walking
through the parking lot of the
Safeway on Bend’s east side Sun-
day, Aug. 28, to buy a macaroni
and cheese dinner when the
rattle of gunfire filled his ears.
The 62-year-old Bend resident,
who walks with crutches due to
his osteoarthritis, spun around
and fled when a man nearby
screamed: “Live shooter.”
Shields could hear the words
of his Marine Corps drill in-
structor in his head from de-
cades ago, screaming and swear-
ing at him to run faster, faster.
Shields picked up his crutches
and sprinted maybe 30 feet be-
fore his hips gave out. He
collapsed to the asphalt and
started to crawl.
Shields is among the wit-
nesses to the shooting at Safe-
way who are trying to compre-
hend what happened when a
gunman entered the store and
opened fire on shoppers with
an AR-15-style rifle, killing two
people and injuring two others.
Some witnesses stayed awake
through the night, scrolling
through the news articles and
internet threads and reading the
rumors, trying to find some way
to make sense of the violence.
Others returned to the scene
Aug. 29, wanting to speak to po-
lice, journalists and anyone who
would just stop and listen. Some
still bear the physical and emo-
tional marks that come with the
traumatic event.
“Nothing justifies this. That’s
it,” Travis Connor, a 31-year-old
employee at a local solar com-
pany said.
“If we give him the wrong
type of attention, it’s just going
to inspire more people.”
Connor was approaching the
Safeway when he saw Shields
running in a zig-zag pattern, ap-
parently trying to avoid bullets
flying through the air. Nearby,
Connor saw Safeway employees
pouring out of the grocery store.
Connor took off his noise-can-
celing headphones when
another burst of gunshots
rang out. He leaned down to
Shields and said: “Don’t hate
me for this.”
Connor threw Shields over
his shoulder and sprinted down
the street. They ran nearly
100 yards before they ducked
behind the tires of a parked
Ford F-150.
NEIGHBORS SHELTER
FLEEING SURVIVORS
A woman, speaking loud
and urgent orders in Spanish,
pulled Connor and Shields into
an apartment, where nearly
a dozen more people stacked
chairs and mattresses against
the doors and walls as a sense
of terror and foreboding filled
the room.
Inside, a woman in her late
teens told the group the shooter
Fire kicks
up again at
Pendleton
flour mill
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Emergency personnel respond to the shooting at The Forum Shopping Center in east Bend on Sunday, Aug. 28, 2022.
had pointed his AR-15 style ri-
fle directly at her. She repeated
to them again and again: “He
pointed the gun directly in my
face.” Then, she began to vomit
in the bathroom.
“There’s no amount of ther-
apy that can fix that,” Shields
reflected. “She’s going to be
messed up for life … When she
closes her eyes, that’s all she’s
gonna see.”
Another man was in the
apartment with his wife, his
2-year-old daughter and his
4-year-old son. He panicked
that they were now trapped in
the apartment and their only
exit, the front door, was blocked.
Connor and Shields opened the
window for the man, took the
screen out and helped his
children out of the apartment,
and they ran.
The group kept the lights
off in the apartment as the sun
went down and the light faded.
As the night wore on, they were
able to exit the apartment. But
the next day, Shields and Con-
nor came back to the scene,
arriving in different parts of
the shopping center, hoping to
speak with someone.
“We had never met before in
our lives, but we became very
good friends. We got each oth-
er’s phone numbers and ev-
erything,” Shields said, adding:
“When you’re over someone’s
shoulder and running from a
live-fire situation, you get to be
friends real quick.”
For Connor, he knows it was
actually Shields who saved his
life. Without seeing Shields
running away, it’s possible his
noise-canceling headphones
would have prevented him from
hearing the gunshots, sending
him directly into the line of fire.
But Aug. 29, standing near the
caution tape outside the Safeway,
what stuck in Connor’s head was
not running across the street
with Shields over his shoulder.
It was the sound of the wom-
an’s voice in the apartment as
she told them, again and again,
about the man who aimed the
gun directly at her face.
SHOPPER WAS ARMED
AND READY
Molly Taroli, 40, had been
shopping with her husband for
about 10 minutes before the
shooting started. They were
walking down the store’s front
aisle, behind the registers, when
they heard shots, followed by a
woman’s scream.
Taroli bolted for the back of
the store while her husband
CONCEALED CARRY
PERMIT CLASS
SEPTEMBER 17 TH • 9AM
Hermiston Ranch-&-Home
Multi-State $ 80
Oregon Included No Fee
BY JOHN TILLMAN
Hermiston Herald
MULTI-STATE
Valid 35-States, including Washington
Shaun
Shaun Curtain
Curtain 360-921-2071
360-921-2071
or or email:
email: ShaunCurtain@gmail.com
ShaunCurtain@gmail.com | www.ShaunCurtain.com.com
| www.ShaunCurtain.com.com
BACKED BY A YEAR-ROUND
CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE
EXCLUSIVE LIMITED TIME OFFER!
NATIO
R GU
2
15 % & 10 %
RD
GU
TE
1
’S
TH
E
T
N
Fire kicked up again Saturday,
Aug. 27, at the Grain Craft flour
mill in Pendleton, sending black
smoke steaming into the sky.
Pendleton Fire Chief Jim
Critchley said there are a few
reasons why the fire continues
after the blaze that tore through
the structure on Aug. 10.
Multiple hot spots remain
that are inaccessible, he said,
particularly in the basement.
Wind often causes the hot spot
to flare up, which is what hap-
pened Aug. 27.
Firefighters are trying to put
out those deep-seated embers,
he said, but they probably will
remain hot until the building
comes down and crews can ac-
cess the basement.
The basement’s dirt floor is
another problem. Critchley said
the water seeps through, so the
room does not fill up. All
firefighters are doing then,
he said, is sending water back
to the aquifer.
He also said Grain Craft’s
insurance company and the
Oregon State Fire Marshal are
investigating the fire, and he an-
ticipates receiving a report in a
couple of weeks.
“I’m pretty sure the cause of
the fire is going to be undeter-
mined,” he said.
Oregon Only $ 45
A
OFF
YOUR ENTIRE
PURCHASE *
FINANCING THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET!
1
+
Promo Code: 285
1
Subject to credit approval. Call for details.
CALL US TODAY FOR
A FREE ESTIMATE
5 % OFF
OFF
SENIORS &
MILITARY!
WE INSTALL
YEAR-ROUND!
TO THE FIRST 50
CALLERS ONLY! **
LIFETIME
WARRANTY
1-855-536-8838
Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST
For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. *Off er valid at time of estimate only 2The leading consumer reporting agency
conducted a 16 month outdoor test of gutter guards in 2010 and recognized LeafFilter as the “#1 rated professionally installed gutter guard system in America.” Manufac-
tured in Plainwell, Michigan and processed at LMT Mercer Group in Ohio. See Representative for full warranty details. CSLB# 1035795 DOPL #10783658-5501 License#
7656 License# 50145 License# 41354 License# 99338 License# 128344 License# 218294 WA UBI# 603 233 977 License# 2102212986 License# 2106212946 License#
2705132153A License# LEAFFNW822JZ License# WV056912 License# WC-29998-H17 Nassau HIC License# H01067000 Registration# 176447 Registration# HIC.0649905
Registration# C127229 Registration# C127230 Registration# 366920918 Registration# PC6475 Registration# IR731804 Registration# 13VH09953900 Registration#
PA069383 Suff olk HIC License# 52229-H License# 2705169445 License# 262000022 License# 262000403 License# 0086990 Registration# H-19114
Smart security.
Professionally installed.
Protection starts with prevention
Peace of Mind
Starts Here
Get FREE Professional
Installation and Four FREE
Months of Monitoring Service*
CALL NOW TO CUSTOMIZE
YOUR SYSTEM
844-894-8790
Use Promo Code 4FREE
Know When People
and Packages Arrive
*Qualifying system purchase requires minimum $599.99 equipment purchase, professional installation and applicable services agree-
ment. DIY system purchases and reactivations of previouslyinstalled systems not eligible for off er. Off er not available in all states or
provinces. Equipment purchase may be fi nanced separately subject to an agreement with one of Vivint’s third-party fi nancing partners.
Monthly $1.48 cellular network maintenance fee applies. Taxes and local permit fees may apply. New Vivint Customers only. Financing
eligibility and terms subject to credit approval by one of Vivint’s third-party fi nancing partners. Qualifi ed customers may fi nance equip-
ment purchase at 0% APR for up to 60 months. Month-to-month service agreement available when equipment is purchased upfront.
System supports up to six cameras subject to suffi cient WiFi speeds. Without a Vivint services plan, product and system functionality is
limited (including loss of remote connectivity). Speak to a Vivint representative at the phone number in this off er for complete equipment,
services, and package details, including pricing and fi nancing details. Products and services in Louisiana provided by Vivint Louisiana
Commercial Certifi cate #58280. See comprehensive Vivint license numbers on Vivint.com.
ran out the front, to get his own
weapon from his truck. As she
went, Taroli gripped the gun
she kept in her purse. She said
she’s been carrying it for the
past several years.
“This is the exact reason
why,” Taroli said. “It’s because
we live in a very unsafe, unpre-
dictable world.”
As the shooting continued,
Taroli heard it moving closer.
When she felt the vibration of a
round near her, Taroli said she
threw her shopping cart to the
side in the hope of distracting
the shooter for enough time to
get away. When she got to
the back of the store, Taroli
stood behind an open door to
the store, holding her gun
in case the shooter came in
that direction.
Neither Taroli nor her hus-
band, who she found safe at the
front of the store when police
arrived, fired any shots at the
shooter, who police said took his
own life. She pointed to mental
health systems lacking resources
and being too forgiving, and not
the shooter’s apparent access to
guns, as the cause of the shoot-
ing, alluding to unconfirmed
rumors that Ethan Blair Miller,
20, had posted disturbing jour-
nal entries for months leading
up to the shooting.
She also lauded the bravery of
first responders who ran
onto the scene.
“It made me appreciate even
more those whose duty is to
protect and serve,” Taroll said.
“This is what they do every day.”
DELIVERY DRIVER HEARD
SHOTS FROM PARKING LOT
Minutes before Taroli reached
for her gun, Jordan Campbell,
34, walked out of the same en-
trance the gunman used to en-
ter the store.
Campbell said the scene re-
minded him of his experience
near a 2017 mass shooting. He
lived in Las Vegas at the time
and was working at a Verizon
Wireless store, just 2 miles from
where a gunman shot and killed
60 people at a music festival
in what became the country’s
deadliest mass shooting. Had
Campbell taken his
normal route home the day
of that shooting, he would
have been right in its path,
Campbell remembered.
“It’s just crazy to me person-
ally that this is the second one
I’ve been so close to, I guess,”
Campbell said.
Campbell on Aug. 28 had
been filling an Instacart order
at Safeway, where he said he
usually shops. He’d parked in a
different spot than usual — far-
ther away from the store than
his typical spot — and went
through the self-checkout lane
since the other lanes were busy.
By the time he walked past
the shopping cart return,
he heard the first few shots
ring out from behind him, in-
side the store.
“That’s when I heard what I
thought was fireworks,” Camp-
bell said. “I started thinking to
myself, ‘No way, that can’t be
fireworks from inside the store.’”
By the time he got to his
car, Campbell heard a “barrage
of shots.”
“Then people started spill-
ing out of both entrances there,”
Campbell remembered.
He stayed at the edge of the
parking lot as people continued
rushing from the store and as the
scene lit up with the lights from
dozens of emergency vehicles.
Campbell said the shoot-
ing in Las Vegas five years ago
heightened his awareness in
public places.
“From that first instance in
Vegas, it’s not paranoia, but it’s
being super aware of all the ex-
its, all the entryways, how to get
away if something were to hap-
pen,” Campbell said.
The Safeway shooting
heightened that awareness
even further.
“I’m looking around way
more. Today it’s been more
paranoia, like now it can happen
again,” Campbell said, speak-
ing to a Bulletin reporter on the
phone after having just finished
a shopping trip at Target with
his 4-year-old son Monday. “I
just feel like I’m looking over
my shoulder a lot more today,
and it’s definitely directly
related to yesterday.”