Rep. Cliff Bentz plans Sept. 8 ‘Tele-Town Hall’ for Central Oregon constituents

Barney Lerten

UPDATE: Adding video

WASHINGTON (KTVZ) – Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-2nd District, announced Wednesday that he will be hosting a Tele-Town Hall on Sept. 8 to hear from his constituents and to answer questions about what he is working on in Congress.

WHO: The Counties of Klamath, Deschutes, Crook, Jefferson, Wasco, and Sherman

WHAT: Tele-Town Hall with Congressman Cliff Bentz

WHEN: Monday, September 8th, 2025; 5:30 PM PT 

WHERE: Join the conversation at Bentz.house.gov/live .

NOTE: I look forward to answering your questions. 

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Prosecution, defense paint differing views as trial begins of Smith Rock mass shooting plot suspect Samson Garner

Barney Lerten

(Update: First testimony, more from email to ex-girlfriend)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – The attempted murder trial of a Portland man accused of plotting a mass shooting at a Smith Rock climbing event in 2023 began Wednesday with a prosecutor and defense lawyer painting sharply contrasting views of his actions and words in the days and weeks before his arrest. 

Many of the facts are not in dispute – that Samson Garner, now 41, left his Portland home and headed to Central Oregon shortly before the Craggin’ Classic at Smith Rock, and that his departure was only learned hours later during a review of surveillance video, sparking an urgent and ultimately successful search by Deschutes County sheriff’s deputies. 

Garner was arrested at a Maston Trailhead campsite north of Bend and was found with an AR-15 rifle, two handguns, ammunition and body armor in his vehicle. 

In her opening statement, Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Mary Anderson stepped through a timeline of worrisome emails and text messages to friends, who struggled with what to do but eventually contacted authorities about Garner’s disturbing remarks and comments in emails and text messages about both specific suicidal and homicidal actions he’d pondered.

“His thoughts of violence, his thoughts of vengeance, his reasons why, his justification, his grievances and his target selection,” Anderson said.

“Those who knew the defendant knew he was devolving,” she said. “He was not the same person they knew.” His divorce had been finalized and his ex-wife and children were now living in another state. The family home where he lived was to be sold, as part of the divorce settlement, and financial obligations were rising.

“He had found a connection,” Anderson said, “a brief romantic interest,” but it ended a few months later.

Both sides agreed that the weapons and related items he had were purchased legally, but emails and text messages to friends laid out specifics of possible actions in chilling detail.

“I fantasize daily about murder, death and vengeance,” he wrote, “using my resources, life experience and skills … to punish others with the same pain that I feel.”

The avid skier and rock climber mentioned two specific possible targets, and spoke of dreaming about going to Mount Hood Meadows on opening day, “filling the field around Mt. Hood Express with bodies.”

After getting an email about the upcoming Smith Rock Craggin’ Classic, he wrote of “how easy it would be to rampage through the park, shooting belayers and spectators while their climbers watched and lived the horror.”

But he also wrote of going to a scenic mountain viewpoint and “blowing off my head with a shotgun before harming anyone else.”

Worried friends debated and wrestled with what to do, but eventually went to Portland police with their concerns. They investigated, also conducting surveillance, and unable to make contact. Others were notified, including the manager of Smith Rock State Park, about the potential for trouble.

Police planned to intervene with an Extreme Risk Protection Order, but on Oct. 19, 2023 learned through a review of surveillance video that he had left his home hours earlier. They quickly informed Deschutes County sheriff’s investigators, who put together a quick tactical plan and were able to ping Garner’s phone at the trailhead, pinning in his vehicle and using a “flash bang” to disorient and arrest Garner.

As DCSO body-camera video shown to the jury helped show, Garner was seated in a folding chair, in shorts and flip-flops, drinking a beer, apparently back in the area to mountain bike for the second time in a week, according to defense attorney Joel Wirtz.

“Hands up! On the ground!” deputies could be heard saying on the video.

Anderson explained the charges, saying that Circuit Judge Alison Emerson will instruct them on how to weigh their decisions. But both attorneys pointed to the attempted murder charges, meaning that the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Garner took a “substantial step” toward harming others – “more than mere preparation.”

Wirtz didn’t refute much of the state’s case and acknowledged that Garner’s situation “wasn’t ideal,” and that he had stopped hanging out with his friends in the months before his arrest. But he tried to point out that Garner also was living a fairly typical life that didn’t fit the mold of a person solely focused on hurting himself or others in violent fashion.

The defense attorney also called it “very, very important” to note that Garner’s campsite where he was arrested was a half-hour drive from Smith Rock, which he apparently had not visited since the previous April.

Wirtz pointed out that Garner’s ex-girlfriend, also a climber, was going to be at the Smith Rock event.

And he said Garner was in the process of getting new stereo equipment installed in his car, had booked two ski trips later in the year, in Wyoming and Idaho, and bought a new pair of skis in Portland earlier in the month. He said Garner had visited a couple of bars earlier in the month and traveled to the same Maston mountain bike trails area to ride in Central Oregon less than a week earlier.

Wirtz explained that he brought up such everyday actions to correct any “mistaken impression that he hadn’t left his house.”

The defense attorney said Garner also owned but didn’t bring two rifles with a much higher caliber that would have been more useful to commit such a mass shooting from a great distance away. He also left “a ton of ammunition,” a backpack and camouflage clothes at home.

Wirtz said there was no evidence found of planning and preparation for such an attack.

And then, he also stated the obvious.

“Nobody got shot,” he said. “No gun was fired. No gun was even pointed” at anyone.

When the testimony ends in a trial expected to take about three weeks, Wirtz told the jury, “I’ll ask you to say, ‘Hey, they haven’t proved their case beyond a reasonable doubt.'”

The first witness called by prosecutors as testimony began Wednesday afternoon was Deschutes County sheriff’s Sergeant David Turkington, part of the team of four that used an unmarked pickup to approach and take Garner into custody that day.

But in describing his role, such as filing for a search warrant for Garner’s vehicle, Anderson also had him read the whole lengthy Sept. 30, 2023 email Garner sent to his former girlfriend, Penny Knighten, that had much of the violent talk that’s the focus of the case against him.

He first told her he had left climbing gear on her front porch, and of how his dream of traveling with her to some of the world’s best climbing spots had fallen apart, and how he’d been unable to see his children for 14 months – and learned he would have to pay $6,000 a month in child support for 14 years.

“I’ve barely left my home in three months,” Garner wrote, adding at one point, “I will soon be gone.”

He talked of his violent father, who had beaten and left his mother in a coma, then killed his grandfather and “ate his brain.”

Garner spoke of his fantasized killings at Mt. Hood Meadows and Smith Rock, “killing people rock climbing” or the belayers and spectators, with the climbers “unable to help or do anything to save themselves or their friends.”

“My brain isn’t supposed to work this way,” he wrote. “I’m turning into my father. I have nothing to live for. I am broken.”

Turkington also characterized the weapons and gear found in Garner’s car as “very consistent with going to battle, going to war.” And later, speaking of the AR-15, he said, “If it was to shoot many people, I would choose this gun right here.”

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UPDATE: Missing Deschutes County man found safe in Portland area

Barney Lerten

(Update: Missing man found safe in Portland area)

UPDATE: 5:22 p.m. August 20: The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office is pleased to share that 34-year-old Michael Gifford has been located safe in the Portland area. We thank the community and media for helping share this information. Your vigilance and support are vital, and we appreciate your assistance. We do not have additional details to share, but we are thankful for the outcome.

Earlier story:

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office asked for the public’s help Wednesday as it actively investigates a missing person case involving Marshall Gifford, a 34-year-old Deschutes County man with deep ties to the community, who hasn’t been seen since going to southwest Washington a week ago.

Gifford was last seen on Monday, August 11, around 9 p.m. at a residence off Shoshone Road southwest of Bend, DCSO Public Information Officer Jason Carr said.

Gifford was transported by an unknown man in an unknown vehicle to the Clark County Courthouse, 1200 Franklin Street in Vancouver, Washington, where he appeared for a personal matter on Wednesday, August 13.

Investigators believe Gifford may have attempted to use public transportation — possibly a bus — that day to return to Deschutes County.

“However, he has not been heard from since, and attempts to reach him by cell phone have been unsuccessful,” Carr said.

Description of Marshall Gifford:

White male, 34 years old

Blue eyes, brown hair

Approximately 5’9” and 130 lbs

Scar on left elbow

Clothing/Items Last Seen Worn:

Red flannel shirt, jeans, black tennis shoes

Black chain necklace with a ring containing a purple stone

Carrying a black shoulder sling-style backpack

The sheriff’s office is asking anyone who has seen Gifford or has information about his whereabouts to contact Deputy Matthew Houston at matthew.houston@deschutes.org or call the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office non-emergency dispatch line at (541) 693-6911.

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‘Times are harder now’: La Pine Community Kitchen hosting Labor Day food drive to address drop in donations

Jillian Fortner

(update: Adding video, adding comments from kitchen guests, kitchen manager)

LA PINE, Ore. (KTVZ) –  La Pine Community Kitchen is calling on the community to rally together this Labor Day for a Canned Food Drive and BBQ. They hope to bring people together for a day of food and fellowship, while helping restock shelves for neighbors in need. 

Organizers say shelf-stable food donations have dropped in recent months as more families are turning to the nonprofit for support. Right now, the kitchen’s shelves are running low. 

“They’re up about 40% from last year. That’s a huge increase,” said Mistie Manning, Kitchen Manager. “When we were doing approximately 40 lunches, we are now doing 100.”

The nonprofit provides food, clothing, and hygiene products to the community, running on grants, donations, and volunteers.

For many guests, the kitchen provides more than just meals, it’s a sense of security.

“It’s really been a big blessing, and have extra groceries that we can use. Saving $100 that can go to gas, just for traveling, commuting. My wife and I both work, so, it’s very helpful to have that,” said La Pine Resident, Matthew.

And beyond the meals, it creates a sense of community.

“When you’re single and older and you want to stay involved in the community, this is a place to meet people. It keeps you involved,” said La Pine resident, James Walden.

But when donations run low, staff worry about how long they can keep it up.

“We’re being creative. Luckily we have some back stock, a freezer, some items, but we’re really reaching out to the community.” said Manning.

La Pine Community Kitchen is asking for help to continue supporting neighbors in need, accepting canned goods, nonperishable items, or cash donations.

“Times are harder now, and they’re getting harder. More people need these kinds of services. So if you can donate that is really a good thing,” said Karen Rippberger from La Pine Chamber of Commerce.

La Pine Community Kitchen says every donation makes a difference in ensuring no one in the community goes hungry. 

“We really would hope that more people that that live here would stop by and and see just what this place accomplishes on a regular basis. It’s pretty amazing,” said La Pine resident, Terry Mowry.

The upcoming food drive and BBQ will be held on August 30th from 10:30am to 3pm.

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30 Oregon school districts selected to receive literacy funding boost

Kelsey Merison

OREGON (KTVZ) — 30 school districts across Oregon have been selected to receive a funding boost, all in the name of literacy.

The Oregon Department of Education said the investment of approximately $11 million annually will support districts in improving literacy outcomes for many of Oregon’s historically marginalized students from birth through 12th grade.

“Through a competitive process, the Oregon Department of Education was awarded $55 million in federal grant-in-aid over four years. District eligibility to apply for the grant was determined based on federal requirements,” the department stated in a recent press release.

The Comprehensive Literacy State Development (CLSD) grant will help districts:

-Implement high-quality, evidence-based literacy practices.

-Strengthen educator capacity through curriculum-based professional learning.

-Promote intentional family and caregiver engagement to enhance children’s literacy development.

Click here to view the 30 districts selected through the highly-competitive process.

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Bend-La Pine Schools honors exceptional AP Exam students

Triton Notary

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ)– The Bend-La Pine School District is celebrating the academic achievements of some outstanding students. Those who earned a top score of 5 on an AP exam got special yard signs to celebrate their success. Superintendent Steve Cook joined faculty members in hand delivering the signs to proud students and families. Educators also distributed more than 130 signs honoring students who’ve achieved the seal of bi-literacy or multiliteracy. It’s a distinction awarded to graduates demonstrating high proficiency in two or more languages including English. A big congratulations to all our scholars from everyone at KTVZ.

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Pursuit of speeding, reckless driver who hit patrol car, missed several other vehicles ends in Bend man’s arrest

Barney Lerten

(Update: DCSO clarifies some details of events)

SUNRIVER, Ore. (KTVZ) — A pursuit of a reckless driver that began in Bend ended in Sunriver Tuesday morning in the arrest of a Bend man who Deschutes County sheriff’s deputies said drove recklessly through several communities, struck a patrol car and endangered both the public and law enforcement.

Matthew James Hammer, 40, who apparently had just appeared in court Tuesday morning on reckless driving and other charges, now faces several new charges, including attempted assault, reckless endangering, criminal mischief and attempting to elude an officer, sheriff’s office Public Information Officer Jason Carr said in a news release Tuesday evening.

Around 9:20 a.m. Tuesday, a deputy assigned to the agency’s main office in downtown Bend saw a black Cadillac Escalade being driven recklessly on the property. When the deputy attempted a traffic stop, the driver — later identified as Hammer — refused to pull over and fled the area, Carr said.

The pursuit was initially discontinued for public safety while law enforcement agencies across the county began searching for the vehicle.

Around 10 a.m., a Sunriver Police sergeant spotted the Escalade traveling southbound on Highway 97 near the Sunriver exit. Carr said Hammer again attempted to elude law enforcement, driving at high speeds, swerving into oncoming traffic and nearly colliding head-on with a patrol vehicle.

Deputies successfully deployed spike strips, deflating two tires, but Hammer continued driving recklessly, Carr said.

As Hammer fled down South Century Drive, Spring River Road and nearby residential streets, he nearly struck several responding officers’ vehicles. He then rammed into a Deschutes County K-9 vehicle, causing damage and minor injuries to the deputy inside. The K-9 was not injured.

Hammer also drove onto private property, striking a parked vehicle while a resident was outside, before returning to the roadway, Carr said.

“As Hammer’s driving continued to endanger the public and law enforcement, deputies re-engaged the vehicle,” Carr wrote in the news release. They discontinued that pursuit a second time, also for public safety concerns, but kept working to coordinate a response to the reckless driver, Carr clarified Wednesday.

A deputy attempted to use a Pursuit Intervention Technique (PIT) controlled maneuver to force the suspect off the road safely. But it turned into a situation of forcing the Escalade off the road with the patrol car’s bumper and onto the highway shoulder, ending the pursuit. Both the suspect’s vehicle and the Sheriff’s Office patrol vehicles were damaged.

Hammer was evaluated at the scene and later at St. Charles Bend before being lodged at the Deschutes County Jail, held without bail pending arraignment on the 17 charges listed below.

Oregon State Police is investigating the crash involving DCSO patrol vehicles, consistent with standard pursuit protocols. The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office thanks the Sunriver Police Department, Oregon State Police, Sunriver Fire Department, and Deschutes County Road Department for their assistance during this incident.

ARRESTED: Matthew Hammer (DOB 9/24/1984)

CHARGES:

Criminal Mischief II – 1 count

Attempted Assault I – 1 count

Attempted Assault on a Public Safety Officer – 3 counts

Recklessly Endangering – 5 counts

Reckless Driving – 3 counts

Attempt to Elude a Police Officer (Felony) – 3 counts

Criminal Mischief I – 1 count

Court records reviewed by KTVZ News show Hammer was arraigned at 9 a.m. Tuesday morning on a felony charge of first-degree criminal mischief and three misdemeanor charges – two counts of recklessly endangering another person and one of reckless driving. He was conditionally released after his arrest late last month and is due back in court for arraignment on an expected indictment on Sept. 18.

District Attorney Steve Gunnels confirmed to us Tuesday’s arraignment and said Hammer was directed by the court to contact his attorney.

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Summer should end with memories, not arrests: Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office urges sober driving

Barney Lerten

UPDATE: Adding video

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — As summer winds down and Labor Day weekend approaches, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office is joining the nationwide Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over campaign that started August 13 and runs through September 1.

While the Community Action Target Team (CATT) will increase patrols to deter impaired driving, this effort focuses on awareness and prevention. The Sheriff’s Office would rather see everyone enjoying the last weeks of summer safely than make DUII arrests.

“Labor Day and the last weeks of summer should be about creating good memories with family and friends,” said Sheriff Ty Rupert. “We’re asking the community to help us by planning ahead and making safe choices. If you’re going to drink, please arrange for a sober ride home.”

The Sheriff’s Office encourages residents and visitors to:

Choose a sober driver before heading out

Use a taxi or rideshare service if you’ve been drinking

Take the keys from friends who may be about to drive impaired and help them get home safely

Call law enforcement if you see a suspected impaired driver

Every year, impaired driving crashes take lives that could have been saved by planning ahead. Deputies are reminding drivers that impairment affects judgment, coordination, and reaction time, making it dangerous to wait until after you’ve been drinking to decide how to get home.

The Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over campaign is supported by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and law enforcement agencies nationwide. DCSO encourages everyone to do their part to ensure Labor Day ends with celebrations, not arrests or accidents.

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Feline overload: More than 100 cats are up for adoption at the Humane Society of the Ochocos

Spencer Sacks

 BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — A recent large-scale cat rescue has left nearly 100 cats up for adoption in Prineville.

The Humane Society of the Ochocos stepped forward to care for the cats after their owner moved out of the state. 

These adorable feline friends are mostly barn and outdoor cats.

Volunteers originally thought there were only about 30, but after days of trapping, the number quickly surpassed 100.

Rosi Gray, a volunteer with the Humane Society, told our media partners at the Prineville Review:

“We have absorbed 100 cats. We’re working really hard to get them into barn homes. We always need ranches, farms, who need ‘cat workers,’ I call them, who take care of the mice population. We need homes for these cats.”

 While these cats are up for adoption at no charge, the shelter still bears the costs of spaying and neutering surgeries, vaccinations, and medical treatments. 

The Humane Society asks for donations to the shelter, and to consider adopting one or more of these wonderful cats.

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President Trump plans executive order in an attempt to end mail-in ballots. How could it affect Central Oregon voters?

Claire Elmer

(Update: Adding video, comments from Sec. of State Tobias Read/ Republican Chair for Deschutes Co. Keith Rockow)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — President Trump says he plans to sign an executive order ending mail-in ballots nationwide. Opponents say the move would bring major challenges — especially in states like Oregon, where vote-by-mail has been the standard for decades.

Oregon was the first state in the US to adopt vote by mail after President Trump announced intentions to end the system. Many leaders and citizens across the state are pushing back. Secretary of State Tobias Read says Trump’s attempt is not just controversial, it’s unconstitutional.

Tobias Read told KTVZ News, “The Constitution is very clear. It says that states decide how to run elections, and we’re very proud of what we do in Oregon. We’ve seen higher turnout, lower costs, accurate results and we should continue down that path. If our rights to run our own elections are infringed upon we will use every tool at our disposal to make sure that Oregonians get to decide how to run elections.”

Supporters say the system balances convenience and security. Secretary Read argues mail-in voting is essential for many Oregonians, including those with limited transportation options and military members. “Think about rural people. Think about elderly people, people who are working for an hourly wage. Mail-in votes, meet them right where they are in their living room, around their kitchen table, and gives them the chance to engage in that most fundamental of American activities, holding politicians accountable.” said Read

Here in Central Oregon, Deschutes County clerk Steve Dennison says the system has been refined, successful, and the only way Oregonians have voted for over 20 years.

Dennison tells KTVZ News, “100% of the voters vote by mail in Deschutes County and throughout the state of Oregon. We do mail a ballot to every registered voter.”

Dennison spoke of the multiple safeguards to keep ballots secure and logistics to consider if vote by mail were eliminated, such as costs associated with setting up and staffing numerous polling stations.

Dennison told KTVZ News, “All ballots are returned to our offices and reconciled within our four walls, so you’re centralizing the process, which is always going to be something that’s secure, as opposed to something that’s decentralized. I don’t want to say that polling places, uh, polling place elections are not secure, that’s not true, just other considerations, and costs that would go into that. If we’re talking about a big change like this. Who is going to pay for it?”

But not everyone feels confident in the system. Deschutes County Republican Party Chair Keith Rockow has major concerns about flaws he sees with vote-by-mail, and he’s not alone.

Rockow told KTVZ News, “I have a lot of concerns, three specifically, they cover security, transparency, and accountability. Don’t know what’s gonna happen to it once it gets dropped in a mailbox. You don’t know who fills it out. The machines that they are wireless, how secure are they? Can they be accessed from an outside source?”

Rockow believes if everyone works together, arguments regarding cost of in-person voting and transportation issues could be remedied.

Rockow also told us, “If people wanted to get to a polling station, I know we could find a way to get them there. I always have. A healthy group of volunteers wanna do things. Um, I’m sure it would easily find volunteers to work polling places.”

Even as debate over mail-in voting continues nationwide, Oregon officials say the state system is secure, reliable, and here to stay, at least for now.

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