Oregon Shuts Down Death Row

Angela McAnulty Oregon Death Row

The Governor of Oregon, Kate Brown, has used her power and shut down the death row in Oregon. So basically all of the death row inmates are now serving life without the possibility of parole including Angela McAnulty, pictured above, who would murder her teenage daughter. Oregon Governor Kate Brown gave a number of reasons for this decision including the death penalty does not reduce crime rates and she called it immoral. Now the death penalty across the United States has been used less and less plus the amount of executions has gone down drastically over the last few years so her decision is not surprising especially considering a number of States have issued moratoriums regarding executions. I would imagine in the next decade the death penalty is going to disappear across the USA

Oregon Governor Kate Brown Death Row Decision

Gov. Kate Brown announced Tuesday that she will use her executive clemency powers to commute the sentences of the 17 individuals on Oregon’s death row to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

“I have long believed that justice is not advanced by taking a life, and the state should not be in the business of executing people — even if a terrible crime placed them in prison,” the governor said in her announcement, which continues in full below.

“Since taking office in 2015, I have continued Oregon’s moratorium on executions because the death penalty is both dysfunctional and immoral,” Brown continued. “Today, I am commuting Oregon’s death row, so that we will no longer have anyone serving a sentence of death and facing execution in this state. This is a value that many Oregonians share.

“Unlike previous commutations I’ve granted to individuals who have demonstrated extraordinary growth and rehabilitation, this commutation is not based on any rehabilitative efforts by the individuals on death row. Instead, it reflects the recognition that the death penalty is immoral.

“It is an irreversible punishment that does not allow for correction; is wasteful of taxpayer dollars; does not make communities safer; and cannot be and never has been administered fairly and equitably. My action today is consistent with the near abolition of the death penalty that has been achieved through SB 1013.

“I also recognize the pain and uncertainty victims experience as they wait for decades while individuals sit on death row — especially in states with moratoriums on executions—without resolution. My hope is that this commutation will bring us a significant step closer to finality in these cases.”

The Governor’s order takes effect Wednesday, Dec. 14.

Brown’s list, attached to her order, of the 17 death row inmates whose sentences are being commuted includes notorious killer Randy Lee Guzek, now 53, who was sentenced to death his role in the brutal 1987 shooting deaths of Rod and Lois Houser at the couple’s Terrebonne home.

Guzek, who was 18 at the time of the robbery with two accomplices, shot Lois Houser three times with a handgun, chased her up a staircase and shot her once more as she huddled in a closet, then ripped the rings off her fingers.

Guzek was first sentenced to death in March of 1988, but the Oregon Supreme Court overturned the death sentence three times on procedural grounds, leading to a new trial each time over the years, at a cost to the state of millions of dollars.

After the governor’s announcement, Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend) released the following statement:

“Did the people of Oregon vote to end the death penalty? I don’t recall that happening. This is another example of the Governor and the Democrats not abiding by the wishes of Oregonians. Even in the final days of her term, Brown continues to disrespect victims of the most violent crimes,” said Knopp.

Knopp said that Brown has used her executive authority to pardon or commute more sentences than any other governor in the state’s history and more than all of Oregon’s governors from the last 50 years combined.

 Knopp’s House counterpart, House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson (R-Prineville) also criticized Brown’s action, taken just 27 days before the end of her term.

“Yet as has been her objective throughout her governorship, Governor Brown continues to, with the stroke of a pen, exercise a lack of responsible judgment,” the statement began. 

“Governor Brown has once again taken executive action with zero input from Oregonians and the legislature. Oregon has not executed an individual since 1997 and has only executed two criminals since voters adopted the death penalty in 1984,” said Breese-Iverson. “Her decisions do not consider the impact the victims and families will suffer in the months and years to come. Democrats have consistently chosen criminals over victims.”

Breese-Iverson’s news release added, “Oregonians have been clear for decades that the death penalty is a constitutional punishment for our state’s most violent offenders. Time and again, the people of Oregon have supported this punishment as a deterrence and protection from those who have no regard for the lives of others.”

Former Deschutes County prosecutor and retired Clatsop County DA Josh Marquis said the governor misspoke in her announcement, when it came to Guzek’s case, which he personally retried each time.

“I wish she could give him ‘true life’ (without parole), as the (exhibit attached to her executive order) claims, but she cannot,” he told NewsChannel 21.

Marquis said Senate Bill 1013, passed in 2019, narrowed what crimes qualify as aggravated murder — and said that law change “already took Guzek off death row, and the only question is when his parole hearing will be.”

He pointed to last year’s Oregon Supreme Court ruling that struck down one inmate’s death sentence and which experts said could eliminate the death sentence for all inmates facing the penalty.

In Brown’s first news conference after becoming governor in 2015, she announced she would continue the death penalty moratorium imposed by her predecessor, former Gov. John Kitzhaber.

So far, 17 people have been executed in the U.S. in 2022, all by lethal injection and all in Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, Missouri and Alabama, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Like Oregon, some other states are moving away from the death penalty.

In California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom imposed a moratorium on executions in 2019 and shut down the state’s execution chamber at San Quentin. A year ago, he moved to dismantle America’s largest death row by moving all condemned inmates to other prisons within two years.

In Oregon, Brown is known for exercising her authority to grant clemency.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Brown granted clemency to nearly 1,000 people convicted of crimes. Two district attorneys, along with family members of crime victims, sued the governor and other state officials to stop the clemency actions. But the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled in August that she acted within her authority.

The prosecutors, in particular, objected to Brown’s decision to allow 73 people convicted of murder, assault, rape and manslaughter while they were younger than 18 to apply for early release.

The Oregon Department of Corrections announced in May 2020 it was phasing out its death row and reassigning those inmates to other special housing units or general population units at the state penitentiary in Salem and other state prisons.

Oregon voters reinstated the death penalty by popular vote in 1978, 14 years after they abolished it. The Oregon Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional in 1981 and Oregon voters reinstated it in 1984, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

A list of inmates with death sentences provided by the governor’s office had 17 names.

But the state Department of Corrections’ website lists 21 names. One of those prisoners, however, had his death sentence overturned by the Oregon Supreme Court in 2021 because the crime he committed was no longer eligible for the death penalty under a 2019 law.

Officials in the governor’s office and the corrections department did not immediately respond to an attempt to reconcile the lists.

Daniel Gore Teen Killer Charged In Milana Li Murder

Milana Li

Daniel Gore a sixteen year old alleged teen killer from Oregon has been charged with the murder of thirteen year old Milana Li. According to police reports thirteen year old Milana Li body was found at Westside Linear Park near the southern border of Beaverton, Oregon after the sixth grader was reported missing earlier this month. Beaverton Oregon police have announced that sixteen year old Daniel Gore has been arrested and charged with the murder. Beaverton police have not announced how Milani Li died

Milani Li More News

A 16-year-old boy was charged Friday with first-degree murder in the killing of a missing 13-year-old Beaverton girl found dead in a shallow stream earlier this month.

Daniel Ryan Gore appeared via video conference in Washington County Juvenile Court and did not enter a plea in the May 8 death of Milana Li.

The circumstances of Li’s killing remain unclear. Investigators have not said whether Gore knew Li or how Milana Li died.

Milana Li’s parents and grandmother sat in the back of the courtroom next to a Russian language interpreter who translated the proceedings for the family. They moved to Beaverton three years ago from Pavlodar, a city in the northeast of Kazakhstan, near the Russian border.

Li’s mother, Assel Li, stood up to speak, clearing her voice between words and staving off tears.

“I feel that my family will be not safe if he will be out and I feel that it’s dangerous for him to be outside, inside the community,” she said. “And I have a small kid, another girl. She’s 5. That’s all.”

Judge Brandon Thompson said Gore will remain in custody until his next court appearance on June 3, citing probable cause that the teen had committed a violent felony.

Gore appeared on video from the Donald E. Long Juvenile Detention Center in Portland, wearing a green shirt and sitting alone in a brightly lit room.

Gore did not speak during the hearing.

Deputy District Attorney Dustin Staten told the judge the state has requested that Gore be tried in adult court. The judge confirmed he had received that request, along with a request from the state for an order sealing the probable cause affidavit.

According to Staten, Gore had a criminal history stretching back to fall 2020, when he and another juvenile tried to set a movie theater on fire. On two other occasions, Gore and a co-defendant went into a movie theater to damage and steal from it, Staten said in court.

Gore is accused of second-degree arson, criminal mischief and second-degree theft in those cases.

Gore violated his probation in February after he stole a men’s sport coat and a jacket, Staten said.

The Washington County District Attorney’s office recommended that month that Gore be held in a detention center, saying he had twice run away from Harkins House, a temporary shelter in Hillsboro for minors with pending criminal cases.

The Washington County Juvenile Department recommended Gore be released to his family instead. Washington County Circuit Judge Michele Rini agreed, and Gore was sent to stay with his father and stepmother in Salem, according to Staten.

He ran away two weeks later, Staten said.

Gore’s father emailed a Juvenile Department counselor April 4 that his son was likely staying in the Progress Ridge area of Beaverton, Staten said. Neither Beaverton police nor the Washington County District Attorney’s Office were notified by the Juvenile Department, he said.

A little over a month later, Milana Li’s body was found in a small stream near the Westside Regional Trail to Barrows Park.

Milana Li was last seen May 8 at her family’s apartment near Southwest Murray Boulevard and Scholls Ferry Road, when she left for a walk around 4 p.m. Li’s family started worrying when she didn’t make it back to the apartment by her 8 p.m. curfew.

Milana Li was reported missing at 1 p.m. the next day, Beaverton police said. About 24 hours later, officers were called to the Westside Regional Trail, near the intersection of Southwest Barrows Road and Horizon Boulevard, for what they described as “suspicious circumstances.” Barrows Park is less than a mile from the girl’s home and school.

An autopsy found Milana Li had died in a homicide, Beaverton police said, but they have released no other details of the killing.

Representatives for the Washington County Juvenile Department did not immediately respond to inquiries from The Oregonian/OregonLive.

Juveniles charged with Measure 11 crimes no longer are automatically sent to adult court under a 2019 law that aims to keep young defendants in Juvenile Court, where sentences are shorter and the focus is on rehabilitation.

But prosecutors under the law may request a hearing where they can ask to have a youth moved to adult court – and Washington County prosecutors have done that in Gore’s case.

During those proceedings, known as waiver hearings, a judge must determine whether the youth possessed “sufficient sophistication and maturity” to appreciate the crime and whether keeping the youth in Juvenile Court is in their interest.

The court can also consider “the aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner” of the crime among other factors.

According to state court data, 819 juveniles have been accused of Measure 11 crimes since the law went into effect.

Prosecutors have sought to move 50 of those cases into adult court. So far, data shows judges approved those transfers in four cases. The cases are in Jackson, Marion, Washington and Clackamas counties, according to the state.

If found guilty and Gore remains in Juvenile Court, he would be released from Oregon Youth Authority custody no later than age 25.

A first-degree murder conviction in adult court carries a minimum sentence of 30 years in prison, but juveniles waived to adult court and convicted can seek parole after 15 years.

Under the new law, they also are eligible for what’s known as a second look hearing halfway through their sentence. Their release may be considered during that proceeding.

GoFundMe for the Li family had raised more than $38,000 as Friday afternoon.

https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2022/05/teen-boy-charged-with-first-degree-murder-in-beaverton-girls-killing.html

Keenan Harpole Charged In Amara Marluke Murder

keenan harpole Amara Marluke

Keenan Harpole has been charged in the murder of Portland State University student Amara Marluke murder. According to police reports Keenan Harpole and Amara Marluke were involved in a relationship that ended violently as Keenan would fatally shoot Amara. Keenan Harpole would later turn himself into police and has been charged with econd-degree murder, unlawful use of a weapon and domestic violence.

Keenan Harpole More News

The Portland Police Bureau has identified the woman who was shot and killed in the downtown area early Monday morning.

Police said 19-year-old Amara Marluke died after she was shot near Southwest College Street and Southwest 6th Avenue at about 1 a.m. The medical examiner determined Marluke died from gunshot wounds and ruled her death a homicide.

The suspect, later identified as 20-year-old Keenan Harpole, was not found at the scene.

Later Monday, police said Harpole was taken into custody in Bend. Deschutes County deputies arrested Harpole in the 55000 block of Homestead Way, after he agreed to turn himself in.

Harpole was taken back to Portland and booked into the Multnomah County Jail on charges of murder and unlawful use of a weapon.

Marluke was known for her musical talents and had big plans for the future. She has already released a song on Spotify called ‘Love is Blind’.

“She had a beautiful voice and she told me someone reached out wanting to make a song with her,” Baylie Martin, her friend, said.

Marluke’s estranged, biological mom, Kesha Slowik said in court Tuesday she hopes Harpole never gets the chance to do this to someone else

“I’m just very concerned about if he could do this to one person, he could do this to somebody else. She did not deserve to get shot downtown leaving her work,” Slowik said. It’s just heartbreaking, heart wrenching. She has siblings who don’t get to grow up with her and she doesn’t get to get married and have her own children.”

According to Portland State University, Harpole is a first-year student and former football player. Marluke was also a student at PSU.

PSU President Stephen Percy released at statement Tuesday saying, in part:

“This morning, Portland police confirmed that the shooting victim, Amara Marluke, was also a student. Amara was an artist and an activist and a vibrant member of our community. Her death is mourned by all of us.

I am profoundly affected by the sheer tragedy of this loss. My heart breaks for Amara’s family and for everyone who knew her. I offer my deepest sympathies. We will work together as a campus community to heal.

There are resources within our community for individuals to gather and process their feelings and thoughts with others. I urge students and employees to reach out in the way that they feel is most appropriate.”

Harpole was arraigned Tuesday, at 2 p.m. and charged with second degree murder and unlawful use of a weapon.

No additional details about the investigation have been released by police at this time. Anyone with information about the shooting should contact Portland police.

https://www.kptv.com/2022/04/05/police-identify-19-year-old-woman-killed-downtown-portland-shooting/

Kassandra Kitchens Arrested In Oregon Murder

Kassandra Kitchens

Kassandra Kitchens was arrested for a murder committed in Oregon which investigators are calling an execution. According to police reports Kassandra Kitchens allegedly lured the victim,  Andrew Sherrell, to a location where he would be brutally murdered.  Kassandra Kitchens was the last person to be arrested for the Andrew Sherrell murder as police in Oregon had already arrested: Cesar Estrada-Nava, D’Sean Maurice Baker, Andrew Bushnell, and Christian Joshua Wobbe who have all been charged with murder. According to police reports the murder which was committed in September 2021 was over a drug debt as Andrew Sherrell is alleged to have been a drug dealer in Oregon. Along with the murder charge Kassandra Kitchens is facing kidnapping and conspiracy charges

Cesar Estrada-Nava, D’Sean Maurice Baker, Kassandra Kitchens, Andrew Bushnell, Christian Joshua Wobbe
Cesar Estrada-Nava, D’Sean Maurice Baker, Kassandra Kitchens, Andrew Bushnell, Christian Joshua Wobbe

Kassandra Kitchens More News

Police are searching for a 26-year-old who is wanted in connection with an execution-style murder that took place in September of 2021.

Kassandra Kitchens is wanted on several charges, including second-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping, Gresham Police said.

The charges stem from the murder of 35-year-old Andrew Sherrell.

Investigators say they believe Sherrell was lured over from his home in Bend “with the help of Kitchens” before he was ultimately murdered on September 24, 2021 in the 18900 block of Northeast Portal Way.

Police said Kitchens knows she has open warrants for her arrest and is trying to avoid law enforcement.

If you have any helpful information on her whereabouts, police want you to contact Detective Aaron Turnage at 503-618-3136 or non-emergency as appropriate at 503-823-3333.

https://kpic.com/news/local/wanted-gresham-woman-linked-to-execution-style-murder-of-oregon-man

Kassandra Kitchens Other News

The fifth and final suspect in an execution-style murder was arrested by Portland police on March 3 for a murder that took place in September 2021.

Kassandra Kitchens, 26, was believed to have been involved in luring victim Andrew Sherrell from his home in Bend to downtown Portland, then to Gresham, where he would be murdered.

On Sept. 24, Gresham police officers responded to a report of a body found along the side of the road in an industrial area of Gresham. Police found Sherrell face down, with his arms bound and a single gunshot wound to the head in the 18900 block of NE Portal Way. Investigators learned that Sherrell was involved in selling illegal drugs from Central Oregon to the Portland metro area and that Kitchens and four others conspired to commit felonious acts against Sherrell.

Authorities had arrested four other people who were charged with crimes relating to the murder of Sherrell:

  • Cesar Estrada-Nava, 31
  • D’Sean Maurice Baker, 43
  • Andrew Bushnell, 36
  • Christian Joshua Wobbe, 23

Kitchens was the last of the suspects to be apprehended. Police sent out a news release on Valentine’s Day asking for tips from the public on her whereabouts. Portland police arrested her on March 3, according to a release. She was indicted by a grand jury in December 2021 for the following charges:

  • Murder in the second degree
  • Kidnapping in the first degree
  • Criminal conspiracy to commit kidnapping in the first degree
  • Assault in the third degree
  • Criminal conspiracy to commit assault in the third degree
  • Criminal conspiracy to commit unlawful delivery of oxycodone

https://www.kgw.com/article/news/local/execution-style-murder-suspect-arrested/283-e2480195-0ca0-498d-a0bf-bd216cd2d387

Robert Jackson Sexually Assaults 10 Year Old Girl

robert jackson oregon

Robert Jackson is a man from Oregon who was convicted in breaking into the room of a ten year old girl who was sexually assaulted and had her throat cut. According to court documents Robert Jackson would break into the home through a window, go to the little girl’s room where she was sexually assaulted and her throat was cut. The little girl would scream and her father rushed into the room and Robert Jackson would flee. Thankfully the little girl survived. Robert Jackson who was already on the sex offender list in Oregon would be arrested months later after his DNA would tie him to the crime scene. Robert Jackson would be convicted of one count each of attempted murder, first-degree assault, first-degree sexual abuse, first-degree attempted sodomy, and first-degree burglary. Robert Jackson was sentenced to twenty five years in prison

Robert Jackson 2022 Information

robert jackson 2022
Offender Name:Jackson, Robert Wade
Age:24dot clearDOB:10/1997dot clearLocation:Coffee Creek Intake Center
Gender:Maledot clearRace:White Or European Origindot clearStatus:AIC
Height:5′ 10”dot clearHair:Browndot clearInstitution Admission Date:02/17/2022
Weight:190 lbsdot clearEyes:Browndot clearEarliest Release Date:02/28/2043

Robert Jackson More News

A 20-year-old man sought by police since July when he allegedly climbed through the bedroom window of a 10-year-old Beaverton girl and cut her neck while attempting to sexually assault her was arrested Tuesday in Washington.

Robert Jackson was indicted the day before by a Washington County grand jury for the July 29 break-in and attack in the 13700 block of Southwest 6th Street. He was arrested on an outstanding warrant in Auburn, Washington, where he has relatives, said Officer Jeremy Shaw, a Beaverton police spokesman.

Robert Jackson remained held Wednesday in the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, Washington on a fugitive hold. He is accused in Oregon of attempted aggravated murder, first-degree assault, first-degree attempted rape, first-degree attempted sodomy, first-degree sexual abuse, first-degree attempted sexual abuse, first-degree burglary, unlawful use of a weapon and coercion.

The 10-year-old survived the attack, Shaw said.

The girl was asleep in her room on the first floor when Jackson went through her open window and its screen, Shaw said. She awoke, began fighting Robert Jackson off and screamed for her parents, according to Shaw.

Jackson had a multi-tool with a blade and cut the girl during the attack, the police spokesman said. The girl’s father came into the room and Jackson fled through the window, leaving the multi-tool behind.

DNA found in the room was linked to Jackson in October, Shaw said. The officer also said Jackson is suspected of having suspicious contact with a woman around the time of the July attack and was living at the Stone Creek Apartments in 5000 block of Southwest Murray Boulevard at the time.

https://www.oregonlive.com/beaverton/2018/11/man_accused_in_beaverton_break.html

Robert Jackson Other News

A Beaverton man who faced charges of burglary, assault and attempted murder has been sentenced to 25 years in prison.

Court documents say Robert Wade Jackson, 24, broke into an apartment in his complex and snuck into the room of an underage girl on July 29, 2018. Investigators say Jackson kissed the girl on the lips and held a knife up to her throat, cutting her neck when she struggled. The victim yelled and her father came rushing into the room.

Jackson dropped the knife as he fled, which investigators used to tie Jackson to the crime.

A DNA analysis by the Oregon State Police Crime Lab matched the knife to Jackson, who is a registered sex offender.

Jackson fled the state to Washington but was arrested by Auburn police on Nov. 6, 2018.

He initially pleaded not guilty to all charges but amended his plea to guilty on Wednesday, Feb. 16, of attempting to commit murder, first-degree assault, first-degree burglary, first-degree sexual abuse, and attempting to commit a Class A felony.

Jackson was sentenced to 25 years in prison by Washington County Circuit Court Judge Oscar Garcia.

https://pamplinmedia.com/bvt/15-news/537037-430085-beaverton-man-gets-25-years-for-2018-attempted-murder