Imperial Valley Press

Police find no bias, terror motive in Portland road rampage

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PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Investigat­ors have found no evidence that terrorism, politics or any bias motivated the rampage of a 64-year-old Oregon man who witnesses said repeatedly drove into people along streets and sidewalks in Portland, killing a 77-year-old woman and injuring nine other people, police said.

Police identified the driver as Paul Rivas of Oregon City. He was booked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on initial charges of second-degree murder, assault and failure to perform the duties of a driver, the Portland Police Bureau said in a news release.

Rivas is accused of striking the woman, who was dragged a short distance beneath the wheels of a small SUV, and then continuing to drive, hitting other people and vehicles. After the driver fled on foot, neighbors surrounded him until police arrived.

The Oregon State Medical Examiner determined that Jean Gerich died of blunt force trauma and ruled her death a homicide, according to police. Police released a statement from her family thanking the people at the scene who tried to help her.

“Jean Gerich was not a nameless victim. She was a loving mother of two. She was a proud grandmothe­r of five, ages 4 to 16. She would have turned 78 in twelve days. She beat cancer five years ago. She received her first vaccinatio­n shot last week and was overjoyed to get out in the world again,” the family said.

Larry Wolfe told The Oregonian/ OregonLive that he had an appointmen­t with the woman who was killed and saw her get hit by the car and scream. He was walking toward her when the car came back, hit her again, did a U-turn and dragged her along the pavement, he said. The driver eventually crashed and ran away before a group of people corralled him, Carmon said.

Police said Rivas’ actions did show he intended to hit and injure people, but that “detectives did not find evidence that this was an act of terrorism. Detectives did not find bias indicators, nor do they believe this is politicall­y motivated.”

The Oregonian reported that Rivas had a history of driving dangerousl­y, citing court records that show he got his license reinstated in 2014 after being convicted three times for failing to obey tra c signals, in 2007, 2011 and 2013.

The driver hit pedestrian after pedestrian while speeding down residentia­l streets at up to 60 mph, police spokesman Derek Carmon said. Callers to police said someone driving a Honda Element was striking people and vehicles over a 15-block span.

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