Oregon’s U.S. attorney won’t pursue criminal charges in Michael Fesser wrongful arrest case
Updated Feb 20, 2021;
Posted Feb 19, 2021
Three members of Congress last February had urged a federal inquiry into the actions of West Linn police in building a questionable theft case against Michael Fesser after The Oregonian/OregonLive revealed that West Linn had paid $600,000 to Fesser to settle his federal discrimination and wrongful arrest lawsuit.
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The U.S. Department of Justice won’t pursue criminal charges against West Linn police or anyone else after investigating the 2017 wrongful arrest of Portland resident Michael Fesser, Oregon’s U.S. Attorney Billy J. Williams announced Friday.
Teen Admits Dumping Deer Heads Near Biden and BLM Signs Was Really Stupid, Police Say
On 2/17/21 at 6:55 AM EST
A teenager who left severed deer heads near Biden/Harris and Black Lives Matter signs in Oregon last year has told police it was a really stupid move.
Police in Lake Oswego said the two deer heads, which were dumped on lawns in the Palisades neighborhood, were reported to police hours apart on October 29.
The following month, the department announced that 19-year-old Thomas Jakmauh had been charged with two counts of second-degree disorderly conduct and two counts of offensive littering.
Defendant guilty in Lake Oswego severed deer head incident
Lake Oswego resident Thomas A. Jakmauh is sentenced to 12 months of probation, community service.
The suspect in the severed deer head case that left Lake Oswego community members outraged pleaded guilty to one of four charges filed against him in Clackamas County Circuit Court Tuesday, Feb. 9.
Thomas Austin Jakmauh, 19, was charged by the Clackamas County District Attorney s Office with two counts of second-degree disorderly conduct and two counts of offensive littering all misdemeanor charges for leaving two severed deer heads at or near homes in the Palisades neighborhood.
On Tuesday Jakmauh pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree disorderly conduct a class B misdemeanor and was sentenced to 12 months of probation and 40 hours of community service work to be performed in the city of Lake Oswego to make reparations to the affected community, as well as a fine of $360.
Wilsonville teen guilty in crash that killed Milwaukie man
Clackamas County Circuit Court places Reymon Reyes in the custody of the Oregon Youth Authority .
Wilsonville resident Reymon Reyes was sentenced to a maximum of 10 years in Oregon Youth Authority custody by Clackamas County Circuit Court following a crash that resulted in a death and three injuries in 2019.
The Oregonian first reported on this decision, which was made Friday, Feb. 5. According to the news organization s report, Reyes graduated from Wilsonville High after the wreck and had taken responsibility for the crime. Reyes will serve his sentence at MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility in Woodburn.
Wilsonville teen sent to juvenile lockup for role in wreck that killed well-known fishing guide
Updated Feb 08, 2021;
Posted Feb 05, 2021
Frogner, 65, of Milwaukie, was killed in 2019 when a Clackamas County teen sped through a stop sign and slammed into the truck Frogner was driving.
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A Clackamas County teen on Friday was ordered into the custody of the Oregon Youth Authority for causing a wreck that killed a well-known fishing guide who had recently retired and was savoring time with his family and looking forward to teaching his young grandson about the outdoors.
Reymon Reyes, 18, of Wilsonville tearfully apologized as more than a dozen family members and friends of the man he killed Gregory Frogner spoke of their loss.