Seaside signal. (Seaside, Or.) 1905-current, April 15, 2016, Page 2A, Image 2

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    2A • April 15, 2016 • Seaside Signal • seasidesignal.com
Man linked to gun in Goodding shooting Airman graduates
from basic training
Accused of witness
intimidation, drug and
firearm crimes
Air Force Airman Mar-
shall J. Schirman-Ferré
graduated from basic mil-
itary training at Joint Base
San Antonio-Lackland, San
Antonio, Texas. The airman
completed an intensive,
eight-week program that
included training in mil-
itary discipline and stud-
ies, Air Force core values,
physical ¿tness, and ba-
sic warfare principles and
skills. Airmen who com-
plete basic training earn
four credits toward an as-
sociate in applied science
degree through the Com-
munity College of the Air
Force. Schirman-Ferré is
the son of Darren and Jen-
By Kyle Spurr
EO Media Group
Jamie Lee Jones, a former
Nevada resident who was liv-
ing in Seaside this year, was
indicted Thursday, March 31,
on federal charges in connec-
tion with the gun used in the
shooting death of Seaside Po-
lice Sgt. Jason Goodding.
Authorities allege that a
pistol tied to Jones was used
by Phillip Max Ferry, who shot
and killed Goodding after a
struggle in downtown Seaside
in February.
Jones, 44, is accused of
violently threatening and in-
timidating witnesses against
sharing information with law
enforcement.
Jones is being charged with
possession with intent to dis-
tribute methamphetamine, fel-
on in possession of a ¿rearm,
two counts of tampering with
a witness by physical force
or threat and use of a ¿rearm
during a crime of violence.
The charges were an-
nounced by the U.S. De-
partment of Justice after a
JOSHUA BESSEX/EO MEDIA GROUP
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Air Force Airman Marshall
J. Schirman-Ferré
nifer Gooch of Warrenton.
He is a 2015 graduate of
Seaside High School.
Investigators worked the scene of an officer-involved shooting in Seaside in February.
Jamie Lee Jones
two-month, multi-agency in-
vestigation into the gun used
in Goodding’s death.
The case is being prosecut-
ed by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Leah K. Bolstad.
Jones was in custody in
Clatsop County Jail Thursday
awaiting arraignment in Port-
land.
The Clatsop County Dis-
trict Attorney’s 2f¿ce ¿led
similar charges against Jones.
District Attorney Josh Marquis
said someone can be prosecut-
ed for the same crimes in state
and federal court.
Jones has pleaded not
Sea Star Gelato raises funds
for Seaside high choir
guilty to 15 charges in Clatsop
County Circuit Court and is
scheduled for a status hearing
later this month.
Goodding was shot and
killed in February while at-
tempting to arrest Ferry on a
felony assault warrant.
Ferry, a Seaside man with
an extensive criminal history,
was shot and killed by anoth-
er Seaside of¿cer. An inves-
tigation found that the police
shooting of Ferry was Musti¿ed.
Sea Star Gelato held a ka-
raoke night fund raiser for the
Seaside High School Choir
April 1. The choir is heading
to Disneyland to perform in
June and needed help with
covering the costs. The choir
receiving $200 in tips from
song requests and in addi-
tion, Sea Star Gelato donated
$500 of their pro¿ts.
Sea Star Gelato owner
Margo Nye offers a thank-
you to all the kids, teachers
and families that supported
the choir, and offers to help
other groups in their fund-
raising efforts as well.
Stranded dolphin: ‘There wasn’t anything we could do for him’
Right whale dolphins a
rare sight in Oregon
By Natalie St. John
EO Media Group
TIFFANY BOOTHE/SEASIDE AQUARIUM
A northern right whale
dolphin, a species normally
found in warmer waters,
beached in Seaview, Wash.,
Sunday night.
SEAVIEW, Wash. — A
type of dolphin rarely seen
in this area died on the beach
south of Seaview Sunday eve-
ning.
Police received a report of
a stranded dolphin that was
injured, but still alive, around
8 p.m., Sgt. Tony Leonetti of
the Washington Department
of Fish and Wildlife said in an
email.
The male northern right
whale dolphin “appeared to
have a large laceration on its
¿n and along its side,´ Leon-
etti said. Responders attempt-
ed to put it back into surf, but
the “dolphin appeared to be
exhausted and was unable to
swim.´
Wildlife of¿cers noti¿ed
marine mammal experts at the
National Oceanic and Atmo-
spheric Administration and
the Seaside Aquarium, but no
one was immediately avail-
able to respond to the animal,
and experts believed it was
already too late to save him.
“There wasn’t anything
we could do for him,´ Tiffany
Boothe of the Seaside Aquari-
um said. Boothe said respond-
ers don’t know yet if the cut
caused the dolphin’s death.
“Most likely it was sick.
Top ĝrandU. ġaEtory-DKreEt īrKEeU.
When a cetacean is on the
beach, there’s usually a rea-
son. Most of the time they’re
sick,´ she said.
Boothe is part of the Ore-
gon Marine Mammal Strand-
ing Network, a coalition of
scientists and volunteers who
help with rescue and recovery
of stranded ocean mammals
and research the causes of
strandings. She and her aquar-
ium colleague Keith Chan-
dler coordinate responses to
beached whales, dolphins, sea
lions, seals and other marine
mammals on the northern Or-
egon and southern Washing-
ton coasts.
Northern right whale dol-
phins are social animals that
often travel in packs of 100
or more members, accord-
ing to the NOAA website.
Worldwide, there are about
68,000 of the animals. They
are protected under the fed-
eral Marine Mammal Protec-
tion Act, and since the 1970s,
there have been international
efforts to protect this and oth-
er dolphin species. However,
northern right whale dolphins
are still sometimes acciden-
tally caught in gillnets, drift-
nets and purse seines, and are
sometimes deliberately taken
in Japan. Northern right whale
dolphins inhabit the “deep,
cold temperate waters of the
north Paci¿c Ocean´ off the
coasts of northern Baja Cali-
fornia, the West Coast, Alaska,
Russia and Japan, according
to NOAA. In the U.S., Boothe
said, the species tends to con-
centrate in the waters off the
coast of central California.
“It’s a very unique animal
for us to have in this area.
They tend to stay in warmer
waters. But there is warm-wa-
ter current that runs off the
Oregon Coast that sometimes
gets pushed up north,´ Boothe
said. “That’s when you’ll see
them in our area.´
You don’t have to move to
get that new-home feeling.
ġree Ğoupon ĝooM at WKne & ĝeer HauU or onNKne,
YYY.UeaUKdeoutNetU.EoO
ĝOOĦ WAREHOİSE o ĝRİĞElS ĞAĩDY ĦITĞHEĩ
o ĞARTERlS o ĞHRISTOīHER & ĝAĩĦS o ĞħAIRElS
o DAISY MAYlS SAĩDWIĞH SHOī o DRESS ĝARĩ &
DRESS ĝARĩ WOMEĩ o EDDIE ĝAİER o ġAMOİS
ġOOTWEAR OİTħET o ĢĩĞ o HEħħY HAĩSEĩ
o ĦITĞHEĩ ĞOħħEĞTIOĩ o ħlEĢĢS HAĩS ĝAħI
īħAYTEij EijīRESS o ĩIĦE ġAĞTORY STORE o OSH
ĦOSH ĝlĢOSH o īEĩDħETOĩ o īERġEĞT ħOOĦ o
RAĞĦ ROOM SHOES o RİE 21 o SEASIDE SHIīīIĩĢ
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