Redmond man charged with hit-and-run, reckless driving for crashing dump truck into dental office

Gregory Deffenbaugh

(Update: Adding Video)

REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) – A Redmond man was located and cited by police on hit-and-run and reckless driving charges in the Sunday crash of a dump truck into a southwest Redmond dental office, after which the driver allegedly fled the scene.

The driver also was charged with criminal mischief, accused of slamming the truck into the Pacific Family Dental offices in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way, Lieutenant April Huey said. She added that the man was not the registered owner of the vehicle, but worked for its owner

KTVZ News policy is not to name arrested individuals until and unless formal charges are filed.

“RPD would like to remind the community if you are involved in a motor vehicle crash where you damage someone else’s property, you must remain on scene and attempt to locate the owner of the property and provide them with your information,” Huey said in Monday’s update.

“If you are unable to locate an owner, you must leave a written notice with your contact information in a place easily seen,” she added.

Shortly after 9 a.m. Sunday, the Redmond Police Department and Redmond Fire & Rescue responded to reports of a dump truck crashing into the building, Huey said.

The building, which was unoccupied at the time, sustained significant damage. Fortunately, no injuries have been reported. The driver of the dump truck fled the scene, and law enforcement is actively searching for the suspect.

RPD had asked anyone who witnessed the crash or has information regarding the driver’s whereabouts to contact non-emergency dispatch at 541-693-6911.

The department extended its thanks to RF&R and Pacific Power for their swift response and assistance.

‘Leave it better than you found it’: Ray Solley, the Tower Theatre’s longtime leader, is retiring this summer

Barney Lerten

(Update: Added video)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – The nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation board announced Monday that their longtime executive director, Ray Solley, will retire this summer after 16 years at the helm of Central Oregon’s iconic venue in downtown Bend.

“I’m proud to say this organization has never been in better shape, financially and operationally,” stated Solley. “We have resiliently navigated through a recession, the pandemic, and several significant transformations in Bend over the past two decades to become an essential part of the region’s performance, entertainment and arts education landscape. The Tower Foundation is perfectly poised to attain new funding and reach new audiences over the coming years.”

Here’s the rest of Monday’s announcement, including the start of a search for Solley’s successor:

Dr. Gary Gallagher, chair of the Theatre Foundation’s board of directors, shared, “We are deeply grateful to Ray for his dedication and commitment to the arts and artists of Central Oregon. His vision and guidance for more than 16 years have made the Tower Theatre the iconic and beloved symbol of our community that it is today. We look forward to building upon the strong bedrock of his legacy.”

“One of my guiding principles is that enduring Boy Scout maxim, ‘Leave it better than you found it,’” Solley declared. The numbers show that he did. Since 2009, attendance increased 50% to 60,000 patrons a year, with the venue now actively used 220 days a year. Full-time staff tripled to 15, memberships quadrupled to 1,314, and contributed income grew from $323,783 in 2009 to $824,516 in 2024. The Tower’s economic impact on Central Oregon was recently calculated to be $2.7 million.

In addition, Solley created the Tower’s award-winning educational initiative LessonPLAN (Performing Live Arts Now) in 2011. It has grown to more than two dozen events a year, impacting public, private and home school students in every school district in Central Oregon. The Tower’s innovative Community Engagement department that Solley established in 2021 wrapped up itsthirdyear, collaborating with 30 regional organizations on 20 different events tailored to local needs.

Solley’s last day at the Tower will be July 1. He will continue to consult with the Tower on grants and long-range planning.

Information and application details for the Executive Director position are posted at      app.dover.com/jobs/towertheatrefoundation. Key responsibilities are: empowering staff to continue efficiently and profitably running the Foundation and Theatre; serving as the public face of the Tower to supporters, businesses, government leaders and performing organizations; expanding education and community engagement efforts; creating new revenue streams.

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About Tower Theatre Foundation The historic 460-seat Tower Theatre is owned and operated by the nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation. For information on the Foundation, education programs and performing arts events, visit towertheatre.org.

Snow returns across much of the High Desert; winter weather advisory in place as forecasters warn of slick roads

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Light snow began falling over much of the High Desert on Monday, and the National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory for more to come.

Light snow was falling at mid-afternoon across the region, including Bend, La Pine, Prineville and Redmond, while it was overcast at Madras Airport.

NWS forecasters in Pendleton put the advisory in place until 10 a.m. Wednesday, predicting potential snow totals of 2-6 inches across areas of Central, north-central and northeast Oregon.

“Travel could be difficult due to periods of moderate to heavy snow,” they said, advising motorists to “slow down and use caution.”

KTVZ News Chief Meteorologist John Carroll has a similar warning for travelers.

“Icy roads are a concern, as the snow is melting first on the roadways where it is falling, and that will ice up overnight,” he said.

Check the latest travel conditions at KTVZ News’ travel webcams and TripCheck pages.

A winter storm warning is in place to the south and east, including the Ochoco and John Day Highlands, for higher amounts.

Join us on KTVZ News for your latest Local Alert Weather forecast for the rest of this potentially snowy week, from John Carroll and Sunrise Meteorologist Shannon Brady.

City of Bend working on Olney and Wall; expect detours until June

Triton Notary

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ)– A detour has come to downtown Bend you’ll want to watch out for. Starting today, the intersection of Olney Avenue and Wall Street is closed. The city is working on water and sewer in the area. As they finish that, they will also be adding a bike lane to the road. According to the city’s plans the upgrades should be done in June. Later in the year, the project will move up Olney to 1st and 2nd street.

Central Oregon school closures and delays: February 4th, 2025

KTVZ – News Team

Here’s a list of current school closures and delays reported to KTVZ News:

-All schools in the Redmond School District will be closed today

-Redmond Proficiency Academy will be closed today

-All Redmond Head Start classes are cancelled today due to inclement weather

-Central Christian School will be closed today

-Trinity Lutheran School will be closed

We will continue provide updates as we learn more.

Bend man admits to sharing child sex material online from day care, faces 7-year prison sentence in plea deal

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – A man who was living at a northeast Bend day care facility when he was arrested last year, accused of distributing child sex abuse material online, has pleaded guilty to four of the charges and is expected to be sentenced next month to seven years in prison.

Jack Bergeron Jr., 62, was arrested last May during a raid on the home on NE Burnside Avenue on 20 first- and second-degree felony counts of encouraging child sexual abuse and one misdemeanor count of encouraging sexual assault of an animal.

At the time of Bergeron’s arrest, authorities said there was no evidence to indicate the day care facility’s children were victims, but that they had offered contact information for parents with questions or concerns.

A week ago, Bergeron, who was scheduled to go on trial Feb. 11, signed a petition in which he pleaded guilty to three first-degree and one second-degree counts after a settlement conference, admitting to incidents in March and May of last year.

A prosecutor said they would recommend the seven-year prison term at a sentencing hearing scheduled for March 10 before Deschutes County Circuit Court Presiding Judge Wells Ashby.  Bergeron remains held on $500,000 bail, jail records show

Bend Police community survey finds more than 1 in 5 feel less safe than a year ago; homelessness still key issue

Barney Lerten

(Update: Added video)

But police department still trusted by sizable majority; percentage who feel less safe is down from 2023

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – A sizable majority of Bend residents say they still trust Bend Police, though more than 1 in 5 survey respondents said they feel less safe than they did a year ago, according to a report on the results released Tuesday.

About 10 percent of 2,000 residents invited to take the survey filled them out. While 22% said they feel less safe than a year ago, that was actually an improvement from a year earlier, when nearly a third reported feeling less safe. The small percentage who said they felt safer than a year ago held about the same, up from 3% to 4%.

Of those who said they felt less safe, “A large majority of respondents reported that homelessness and related behaviors (public use of intoxicants, erratic behavior, loitering, etc.) led to a decreased sense of safety,” the report stated.

Here’s the full news release and report:

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The City of Bend Police Department is pleased to share the results of its biannual online community survey, conducted in October and November 2024.  

The Department, with its partners at Portland State University, sent out invitations to 20,000 households in the city, inviting them to fill out the survey, which was available in both English and Spanish. The survey sought to gauge our community’s feeling of safety in Bend, and to learn more about community members’ experience with police officers and their safety priorities for the Department.  

Of the 20,000 households, approximately 10 percent took the time to fill out the survey.  

78 percent of respondents reported they trust Bend Police, and 76 percent agreed they have confidence in the Bend Police Department. 73 percent said Bend Police can be trusted to make decisions that are right for the community. This is consistent with past community surveys.  

More than four in five respondents said their trust in Bend Police was unchanged, though more people said their trust had increased than decreased.  

Of those surveyed, 97 percent said they would call Bend Police to report a crime as either a bystander or a victim. And 93 percent said they’d work with the police to address public safety concerns in their neighborhood.  

Nearly all of the survey respondents (96 percent) feel safe in their neighborhood during the day, and 77 percent feel safe in their neighborhood at night. A similar percentage feel safe walking in a city park or downtown Bend during the day, although those numbers do dip at night.  

Notably, 22 percent of respondents say they feel less safe than they did 12 months ago. Of the public safety problems facing Bend, 89 percent of respondents cited drug offenses, while 79 percent identified alcohol offenses. Others that topped the list were theft, Internet Crimes Against Children, fraud and property damage.  

One thing that has remained consistent over time is the public’s concern about traffic safety, especially distracted driving and DUII.  

Bend Police appreciate the community members who took the time to fill out the survey. The data help to inform policy and to create the Police Department’s goals for the coming biennium. The survey results also help our team make decisions about what community safety initiatives to prioritize. 

To access the complete report and past survey reports, go to https://www.bendoregon.gov/government/departments/police/community-info  

2025 Bend PD Public Safety Community SurveyDownload

Judge reschedules Bend murder suspect Caleb Cegers’ trial for next January

Barney Lerten

(Update: Jan. 2026 trial date set)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – The trial of a downtown Bend murder suspect, originally set for last month, was rescheduled on Monday to take place next January, despite the judge’s original intent to have Caleb Cegers tried before 2025 comes to a close.

With Cegers, 21, watching by video from jail, Deschutes County Circuit Judge Beth Bagley reset the 10-day jury trial to begin next Jan. 13, after a trial readiness hearing on Dec. 15.

A week ago, Bagley denied Cegers’ bid for a new court-appointed lawyer after he claimed his defense attorneys had not kept in close enough contact with him, “yelled and cussed” at him and called him stupid.

The judge rejected those allegations by Cegers, who faces second-degree murder and other charges in the August 2023 fatal shooting of Taylor Wyss, 33, of Redmond on the sidewalk outside a downtown Bend bar.

Cegers had a delay in his trial, which was set for last month, much to the dismay of Wyss’s family. Instead, Bagley set last Monday’s hearing and instructed the prosecution and defense in the case to come up with mutually agreeable dates to hold the 10-day trial before the end of the year.

Attorney Lisa Valenta of the Bend Attorney Group had filed a motion to withdraw from the case, which Bagley denied last week after hearing Cegers’ complaints.

The defendant, who remains held without bail, said his relationship with Valenta and recently appointed co-counsel Dylan Potter “has completely deteriorated” and that it took six months at first for Valenta to contact him.

“As of today, Miss Valenta has yelled at me, cussed at me and screamed at me on multiple occasions,” he said, and in “one outburst even called me stupid.”

Cegers also said that he has found it “extremely difficult to get in contact with Miss Valenta,” and that she “flakes on me” and doesn’t show up as promised.

At one such meeting, he claimed, “She rolled her eyes, shrugged her shoulders and told me, ‘So what? I didn’t have the time.’”

Cegers accused Potter of the same behavior, and later, when asked by the judge if she could continue to work with him, Cegers first said perhaps as co-counsel, but later said that he did not want him as his lawyer, either.

“This is my life on the line, your honor,” Cegers said, claiming the standard of practice attorneys take an oath for was not being upheld.

But Bagley told Cegers that while he is entitled to competent representation, both attorneys “are qualified to handle a trial of this magnitude.”

The judge first told Cegers a new trial date is “most likely 6-12 months in the future,” which would “give your attorney plenty of time to work with you to prepare” for the case.

Valenta told the judge did not address her client’s claims directly but said she had spoken with Cegers several times by phone but on one recent occasion involving a full jail she had to leave before their planned meeting. The next day, Jan. 14, she did explain the issues involved with his request to move the trial elsewhere.

“That’s caused a breakdown in the attorney-client relationship,” Valenta said.

The judge denied the attorney’s motion to withdraw from the case.

“I don’t find there’s any real problem here,” Bagley said. And said they had been meeting “frequently and regularly” with Cegers.

“I’m going to encourage everybody to maybe start fresh,” the judge said, “and try to work on the relationship” going forward.

“Mr. Cegers, you need to have realistic expectations,” Bagley said, noting that his attorneys are “very experienced. They do know what they’re doing. You may not agree with their legal advice, but that’s their job. They probably cannot speak to you every single day. They have obligations to other clients. To the extent that there’s anything happening, you apprised of that. I don’t see sufficient basis to remove them.”

As the talk moved to trial dates, Cegrers asked the judge, “Could I say something?”

“Yes,” Bagley replied.

“I don’t feel it’s right that should be represented by someone who called me stupid,” Cegers said.

The judge replied: “I am not convinced that’s what happened, Mr. Cegers. They are good lawyers.  … If you want something different, you are welcome to represent yourself – which is a terrible idea – or you can hire your own attorney. I find no reason or cause to remove them from your case. They will be your lawyers, and you need to accept that.”

Bagley also was firm on not pushing the trial too far out – and did not want it to happen in 2026: “This trial will be conducted this year,” she said, a goal not quite reached in Monday’s subsequent hearing.

Potter mentioned requesting funds from the state for a firearm/ballistics expert and as the talk turned to what dates are available, Bagley said, “These are issues for all of you to work out… We’re resetting the trial on Monday.”

Dozens of crashes reported as snow lingers across the High Desert; police urge drivers to make safety a priority

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Snowfall returned and lingered across much of the High Desert on Tuesday in the wake of Monday’s first round in weeks, leading to dozens of crashes, rollovers, slide-offs and fender-benders on area highways and reminders about proper preparation and safe winter driving.

Deschutes County 911 dispatch reported that they sent first responders to at least 50 crashes from 3:30 p.m. Monday to mid-afternoon Tuesday.

A dispatcher told KTVZ News the median divider installed on Highway 97 at Deschutes Junction between Bend and Redmond has definitely helped prevent more serious injuries, as a couple of crashes in that area didn’t cause issues in the oncoming lanes.

Bend Police Communications Manager Sheila Miller told KTVZ News, “We’ve had 30 calls for service reporting motor vehicle accidents yesterday and today.”

“Ours are mostly fender-bender, non-injury crashes,” Miller said. “I count seven hit-and-runs as well. We’ve also responded to at least 23 hazards – typically vehicles that are stuck in the snow.”

Redmond Police responded on Monday and through mid-afternoon Tuesday to a dozen crashes, three of them hit-and-run, and two hazards involving vehicles stuck due to the snowy weather, Lieutenant April Huey said.

PulePoint data showed Redmond Fire & Rescue responding to at least six crashes on Tuesday and one Monday evening.

All of the High Desert was under a winter storm warning Tuesday, generally to the east, or a winter weather advisory for more snowfall until Wednesday morning, and the chances of more snow continue off and on through the week.

Miller said she wants to remind people: “It is your responsibility as a driver to make sure you have decent tires, brakes, windshield wipers, etc.”

“We want people to clean off their cars so that they can see out their windshields, and preferably clear the tops of their vehicles as well, so they’re not leaving snow billowing behind them as they drive down the road, blinding the people behind them,” she added.

In fact, Bend PD made that point in a Facebook post Monday, noting that it’s illegal to drive without clearing your view:

“And of course, slow down – give extra space, especially when coming to a stop or trying to get started on an icy or snowy road,” Miller urged. “Just because you have snow tires or studs doesn’t mean you can drive like you normally would. You need to account for the weather and drive for the conditions.”

Several snowplows hit in the past week; ODOT pleads not to pass on the right – it’s dangerous, often illegal

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — As the next winter storm moves across the state Tuesday, ODOT said its crews are working around the clock to help keep highways safe. Very cold temperatures overnight will create icy and dangerous conditions. 

The safest place to be during a winter storm is at home. If you must travel, stay alert on the road and use caution when approaching snowplows. 

Remember, passing a snowplow on the right is illegal when there is no lane available and the driver lacks a clear view ahead. It’s not just against the law, it’s dangerous. Passing snowplows puts you at risk of hitting the plow blades, damaging your vehicle, or even losing control and going off the road. 

“Please don’t pass us. Leave room and understand that we are here to keep people safe and traffic flowing,” said Warren Nelson, coordinator of the ODOT crew in Bend.

Many plows have retractable wing blades that extend eight feet into the right lane. Dual-wing plows used on some multi-lane highways also have plow blades that extend from the left side of the truck. 

Plowed snow may contain rocks and other debris, so the safe choice is to stay several car lengths behind plows. They travel slowly but will pull over periodically to let you pass. 

There were multiple snowplows hit over the past week alone. Crews say they appreciate when drivers give them extra space. 

“When a snowplow is damaged, it is placed out of service. With one less plow able to help clear our roads, it means more delays and closures for travelers,” said Jeremiah Griffin, ODOT district manager in the Rogue Valley. 

If you must travel during a winter storm, here are a few tips: 

Know before you go. Visit TripCheck.com for road conditions along your entire route. 

Remember that many TripCheck.com cameras include temperature, elevation and other critical details. It’s worth noting that cameras may be temporarily disabled during winter storms due to power outages or extreme conditions.  

Drive for conditions. If encountering rain, mud, snow, ice or extra traffic, be sure to slow down and give extra space for stopping. 

Keep your vehicle in good operating shape, checking brakes, lights, tires and wipers regularly. 

In wintry conditions, visibility can be poor. Turn on your headlights and watch out for people walking and biking.  

Pay attention to roadside message signs. They contain critical information about conditions on the road ahead. 

Remember your basic safety rules — wear your seat belt, reduce distractions and do not drive impaired.

If you’re not comfortable traveling in snow and ice, consider using public transportation. Be aware that service may be delayed or offline during severe weather, so always check schedules and updates before heading out.