Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/751950
Johnson:RobertaJean Johnson, 68, of Red Bluff died Tuesday, Nov. 15 at Red Bluff Healthcare Center. Arrangements are under the direction of Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service. Published Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2016 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Deathnoticesmustbe provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Deathnotices pressreleaseissuedbythe Tehama County Sheriff's Department. The Glenn County Sher- iff's Office identified San- chez and Madera as sus- pects in Magdeev's murder during the investigation in 2014. Further investi- gation in 2016 by the Te- hama County Sheriff's Of- fice found corroborating evidence that detailed San- chez and Madera as sus- pects and identified the lo- cation of the homicide as south of Corning. The two men, along with another defendant, Lucio Madera, 21, are charged with the murder of Dani after an altercation and shooting that occurred at Crossroads Market on the Corner of Gyle Road and 99W on July 9, 2014. Sanchez and Madera have since been charged with the murder of Mag- deev. Further information has not been released as to how the evidence iden- tified the two men as the suspects. According to Tehama County Jail's inmate in- formation, Sanchez is be- ing held in custody on $2,003,000bailandMadera on a $2 million bail. Homicide FROM PAGE 1 PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS Capt. Quintan Ortega pins on the badge for Red Bluff Police Department Community Services Officer Casey Camp Monday at a swearing-in ceremony at Red Bluff City Hall. Anderson Police Department Sgt. Sean Miller pins on the badge for Red Bluff Police Department Cpl. Steve Harper, who was promoted Monday at a swearing-in ceremony. Red Bluff Police Department Community Services Officer Casey Camp is sworn in by Deputy City Clerk Cheryl Smith. Red Bluff Police Department Cpl. Steve Harper is sworn in Monday by Deputy City Clerk Cheryl Smith. enforcement in 2004 with the Shasta County Sheriff's Department at the Bur- ney substation, eventually transferring to the McAr- thur station before joining the Anderson Police De- partment in 2007. At An- derson he was a k-9 han- dler and watch commander along with a active shooter trainer. He moved to the Te- hama County Sheriff's De- partment in January 2013, where he worked until join- ing Red Bluff Sept. 14, 2015. Harper enjoys spending time with his wife, Tammy, and their family and watch- ing his children play sports. His hobbies include hunting and fishing and soon will in- clude school as he plans to enroll in January to work on his associate degree. Ander- son Police Sgt. Sean Miller pinned on Harper's badge. Camp was born and raised in the Reno, Nevada area before moving to Or- egon at 11. He is a 2004 graduate of Umpqua Val- ley Christian School and a 2012 graduate of Western Oregon University with a degree in Psychology. He lives in Cottonwood with wife Jessica and son Troy. Camp began a career in law enforcement as a secu- rity officer including a po- sition at a hospital before moving to Alaska, where he joined the Juneau Po- lice Department and at- tended the Alaska State Troopers Academy, gradu- ating in August 2015. The family moved to California after his wife got a job in Shasta County. Camp ob- tained a position with the Shasta County Sheriff's De- partment as a corrections officer. Camp's hobbies include spending time with his fam- ily and hiking, fishing and horses. Police FROM PAGE 1 CLIFF OWEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wis. speaks with reporters on Capitol Hill on Tuesday a er a House Republican leadership meeting. By Brady McCombs and Lindsay Whitehurst The Associated Press OREM,UTAH Five students were stabbed inside the boys' locker room of their Utah high school Tuesday and a 16-year-old student was taken into custody af- ter school workers risked their lives to box him into a corner, police said. The suspect, a straight A student with no record of disciplinary problems, stabbedhimself inthe neck at Mountain View High School before he was sub- dued with a Taser by an of- ficer working at the school, said Gary Giles, the police chief in the small city of Orem about 40 miles south of Salt Lake City where the attack happened. The suspect used a knife with a 3-inch blade to at- tack the five male victims, Giles said. The school staff- ers managed to contain him for several minutes and prevent any more pos- sible bloodshed until po- lice arrived, he said. He said police were in- vestigating why the stu- dent attacked his class- mates at about 8 a.m. as they were getting ready for the morning physical edu- cation class at the start of the school day. The student was not identified but school dis- trict spokeswoman Kim- berly Bird said he was a new student at the high school who had previously been homeschooled. All of the victims were stabbed at least once and were being treated for neck and torso injuries at local hospitals. Their con- ditions ranged from crit- ical to fair, Orem police Lt. Craig Martinez told re- porters. The suspect was also hospitalized. Students described a gruesome scene immedi- ately after the stabbings, with victims covered in blood running from the locker room. Junior Karen Martinez said she saw three run to the school's office, one suf- fering from a head wound and another with an injury to his neck. One victim had blood running down the back of his shirt, she said. STRAIGHT-A STUDENT 5 Utah students stabbed at high school By Jonathan Drew The Associated Press FORT BRAGG, N.C. A mil- itary judge questioned whetherjurors wouldreach unfair conclusions about ArmySgt.BoweBergdahlif they're allowed to consider serious wounds to two sol- diers who searched for him after his 2009 disappear- ance in Afghanistan. The judge, Army Col. Jeffery Nance, heard ar- guments Tuesday about whether to allow the evi- dence, but ended a pretrial hearing without ruling. Trial is set to open in April 2017 for Bergdahl. He is charged with desertion and misbehavior before the enemy, the latter of which carriesamaximumpenalty of life in prison. Prosecutors argue that two wounded soldiers' in- juries should be allowed to show Bergdahl put soldiers in harm's way when he walked off his post in July of 2009. The soldiers were wounded in a firefight — one shot in the head — as they searched for Bergdahl, according to testimony ear- lier this week. Prosecutors have saidev- idence of injuries will help them show that Bergdahl endangered his comrades, one of the elements of the misbehavior before the en- emy charge. "Individuals were in fact harmed, and that's the best evidenceofendangerment," said Capt. Eileen Whipple, a prosecutor. Leaving out evidence of the injuries "leaves us with a gap in how dangerous these mis- sions were." The judge posed tough questions for the prosecu- tors about such evidence. "You're not entitled to use that evidence if it's un- fairly prejudicial," Nance told them. "This trial be- comes a trial about that op- eration, that mission, and not a trial about what's on the charge sheet." Nance suggested the "horrific nature" of the one soldier's head wound might provoke jurors to decide based on emotion that "be- cause Sgt. Allen was so hor- rificallyinjured,he'sguilty." "That's an unfair conclu- sion," Nance added. Bergdahl hasn't yet cho- sen whether to have a jury of military members, or trial by judge alone. Prosecutors cited a search mission involving a half-dozen U.S. service members embedded with 50 members of the Afghan National Army. They were attacked near a town in Af- ghanistan on July 8, 2009. U.S. Army National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Mark Allen was shot in the head during the firefight. Prose- cutors said Allen suffered a traumatic brain injury that has left him in a wheelchair and unable to communi- cate. Another soldier had hand injuries and required surgerybecauseofarocket- propelled grenade. "It's important to keep in mind that the proximate causeoftheseinjuriesisthe Taliban. Members of the Taliban are the ones who fired the weapons, not Sgt. Bergdahl," said Maj. Oren Gleich, a defense attorney. PRETRIAL HEARING Ju dg e qu es ti on s in cl ud in g injury evidence in Army Sgt. Bergdahl case By Erica Werner The Associated Press WASHINGTON Speaker Paul Ryan unanimously won his GOP colleagues' votes on Tuesday for an- other term at the helm of the House. He told fellow Republicans he had Presi- dent-elect Donald Trump's support, and heralded "the dawn of a new, unified Re- publican government." "It feels really good to say that actually," Ryan told reporters. "This will be a government focused on turning President-elect Trump's victory into real progress for the American people." While victory was the GOP unifier, Democrats were verging on disarray. House Democrats abruptly announced Tuesday that they were delaying their own leadership elections set for Thursday until Nov. 30 to give lawmakers more time to process disastrous election results. It's not clear whether the election delay might morph into a real challenge to Mi- nority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. She has led House Democrats for more than 12 years and has consolidated support with strong fund- raising and an ability to de- liver votes, but there's long been grumbling from Dem- ocrats who say new leader- ship is needed at the top. As for Ryan, the Wiscon- sin Republican still has to win a floor vote for speaker in January, when all mem- bers of the House will cast ballots, including Demo- crats. But he secured the nomi- nation at a closed-door GOP conference vote Tuesday afternoon with the strong backing of his fellow House Republicans, even though a few conservative dissenters pushed unsuccessfully to delay the balloting. Those grumblings of dissent could hardly be heard over the buzz of en- thusiasm as House Re- publicans convened for their first regular confer- ence meeting since Trump won the presidential elec- tion. Even though a num- ber of House Republicans, including Ryan, had op- posed Trump or were crit- ical along the way, most said they're now firmly on board and prepared to try to enact Trump's agenda on immigration, infra- structure, energy and jobs. Republicans also backed California's Kevin McCar- thy for majority leader and Steve Scalise of Louisiana for the No. 3 job of House whip. ELECTION AFTERMATH House GOP nominates Ry an a s sp ea ke r, w it h Trump's support LOISNORINECOOK Lois Norine Cook passed away November 10, 2016 at Paradise Hospice House in Paradise, CA. Lois was proceeded in death by her husband of over 50 years, Elmer H. Cook. She is survived by a son Ronald E. Cook and a daughter Laurel J Cook, 4 Grandchildren, 7 Great Grandchildren and 4 Great Great Grand- children. Services will be held Thursday November 17th, 2PM at the Presbyterian Church in Red Bluff, CA. Obituaries 744MainSt.,RedBluff FineQualityGifts & Accessories (across from the clock tower) FALL SPECIAL OFFER 20% OFF ANY SINGLE ITEM (Somerestrictionsapply NEW ARRIVALS: •CHOCOLATECHERRIES • CHEESE STRAWS COOKIES • CROCHET HEADBANDS • CRYSTAL JEWELRY COME AND SHOP WITH US RUNNINGS ROOFING and CONSTRUCTION SheetMetalRoofing ResidentialCommercial • Composition • Shingle • Single Ply Membrane ServingTehamaCounty 530-527-5789 530-209-5367 NoMoney Down! "NoJobTooSteep" " No Job Too Flat" FREE ESTIMATES CA.Lic#829089B&C39 ARetirementCommunity 750 David Avenue Red Bluff, CA. 96080 (530) 527-9193 www.tehamaestatesretirement.com Tours Provided Daily LaCorona Garden Center & Feed Store 7769Hwy99E,LosMolinos 530-576-3118 LaCoronaHydoponic@gmail.com Home&GardenSupplies AdvancedNutrient•RootsOrganic Humboldt Counties Own • Humboldt Nutrients General Hydroponic Supplies & Fertilizers Scratch • Wild Bird Feeds Is the place for all your Garden Supplies & Livestock Feeds Open8-6pmMonday-Sunday ThePassingParadeisbroughttoyoubyMinchPropertyManagement, 760 Main Street specializing in commercial leasing and sales. 530 527-5514 THEPASSINGPARADE (FrommyISayColumnofSeptember 1972) This column appears on the obituary page. The obits describe those who have deceased. Therein religion often intrudes in the form of "has gone to his/her reward"…or "is now in the hands of the lord" or perhaps "has now met his/her maker". Well and good, but such generic recit- als seldom provide solace for the unaffiliated wanderers who have not seen the light. Therefore, this "I Say" edition might be of help. The newly reconstructed Presbyterian Church now needs a galvanic and mesmerizing minister to regain local title of "Protestant Super Church". Although other churches may be gaining strength, it is still the aforementioned Presbyterian that appears to have the greatest number of prominent business and professional people on their attendance roles. However, some folks may not need organized religion to fill philosophic and spiritual needs. Young Stanford Carey avows that yoga and yogurt go a long way toward spiritual guidance… but says I am on the right track by contemplating squirrels in our oak trees. The missus, on the other hand, once thought it would "set a good example for the children" if I were to dress up and sit with the likes of Judge Wetter at her Presbyterian Church. But she has long given up that plea and is content nowadays if I merely avoid religious controversy in my column. Right! And yet I note that the new DN Sports Editor Dave Oliveira also moonlights in spirit watching, and has been generating a lot of interest on the weekly church page. It is therefore my duty to afford those of my persuasion equal time. We are dedicated to the principle that one should just move comfortably through life, not rocking the Rock of Ages but avoid kicking dogs and small children, laugh a lot, buy an occasional Easter Seal, stand at attention during the playing of the Star Spangled Banner…and close one's eyes during prayers at fu- neral services. By observing the foregoing rituals we may enter our appropriate kingdom at the appointed time while saving Sunday mornings for horse rides. Ours is a simple religion that may appeal to people in all walks of life. And yet, when the day of reckoning draws near, our dog- ma may suffer revision and compromise, ever so slightly. * * * * * In response to the above came this Letter to The Editor: "I would like to direct this letter to the "I Say" columnist. I feel that I know Mr. Minch and his family and animals personally through his detailed and expressive stories. I would especially like to commend him for writing such a splendid column on religion. In these days of confusion many people of all ages feel exactly as he does, but have no way of conveying their feelings. I admire him for his frankness. He is truly the next best thing to Herb Caen." Peggy Nolan, Ashland, Ore. Ahem! WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 5 A

