The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Sheriff in conservati­ve Oregon county defends free press

- By Andrew Selsky

SALEM, ORE. >> Journalist­s are defending a small newspaper after a county attorney asked the sheriff to investigat­e whether a reporter broke the law by trying repeatedly to get comments from an official for a story.

Staffers at the Malheur Enterprise, a weekly newspaper in the remote town of Vale, said they were just doing their job. “We’re not going to be bullied,” said editor Les Zaitz.

Brian Wolfe, the sheriff of deeply conservati­ve Malheur County, said Wednesday an inquiry determined no laws had been broken.

“As an elected sheriff, we will always respect the constituti­onal rights of anybody and everybody. We do

believe in freedom of the press and free speech that we believe are our rights given by the Constituti­on

of the United States,” Wolfe said.

The newspaper had been investigat­ing why a car wash did not receive a fiveyear exemption from local property taxes that was allegedly promised. Bluebird Express Car Wash built a $4.5 million installati­on in the town of Ontario after it understood it received the exemption, representi­ng about $335,000, the newspaper reported.

Greg Smith, the director for economic developmen­t for Malheur County — a stretch of high desert almost twice the size of Connecticu­t — is responsibl­e for determinin­g and negotiatin­g property tax exemptions. Malheur Enterprise reporter Pat Caldwell sought several times to get comment from Smith, who is also a Republican member of the state Legislatur­e.

“This is an effort to get accurate informatio­n,” said Zaitz, a former investigat­ive reporter with the Oregonian newspaper and a two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist. “The public is entitled to that informatio­n — not only entitled to that informatio­n, it deserves it.”

Smith responded only after the story was published on Aug. 14 with the headline “Malheur County lured company to Ontario with tax break promise, then doesn’t deliver.”

In a statement that the newspaper published online, Smith said no “preapplica­tion” for a property tax exemption had been approved or signed.

“Over the last six months, me and my staff have been subjected to endless phone calls, hostile emails at all hours of the day and unwelcome office visits,” Smith asserted.

Zaitz said Caldwell sent two emails to Smith during business hours seeking comment. Zaitz said he felt it was his duty to email Smith on Saturday to provide every opportunit­y to comment before the newspaper went to press. Located in a small Old Weststyle building, the weekly publishes 1,400 copies, with additional paid online subscriber­s. The county has 31,000 residents, with almost 10 times as many cattle, and is heavily Republican.

County Counsel Stephanie Williams asked the sheriff to determine if emails and calls to county economic developmen­t officials constitute­d a crime.

“We looked at harassment, telephonic harassment — really neither one comes close in this situation,” Wolfe said.

 ?? E.J. HARRIS — EAST OREGONIAN VIA AP ?? Publisher Les Zaitz looks over mug shots for a story with reporter Jayme Fraser at the Malheur Enterprise in Vale, Ore. Journalist­s in Oregon and beyond have risen in defense of a small newspaper that is being investigat­ed by a county sheriff for trying to get comments after business hours for an investigat­ive story. Staffers at the Malheur Enterprise, a weekly newspaper in the remote eastern Oregon town of Vale, say they are just doing their job.
E.J. HARRIS — EAST OREGONIAN VIA AP Publisher Les Zaitz looks over mug shots for a story with reporter Jayme Fraser at the Malheur Enterprise in Vale, Ore. Journalist­s in Oregon and beyond have risen in defense of a small newspaper that is being investigat­ed by a county sheriff for trying to get comments after business hours for an investigat­ive story. Staffers at the Malheur Enterprise, a weekly newspaper in the remote eastern Oregon town of Vale, say they are just doing their job.

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