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Judge Orders Boy Who Started Oregon Wildfire To Pay $36 Million In Restitution
The teenager who threw fireworks into a canyon last year, starting a fire in Oregon's Columbia
River Gorge that burned nearly 47,000 acres, has been ordered to pay $36.6 million in restitution
— although the judge acknowledges that the boy won't be able to pay it in full.
The teen, whose name has not been released, was 15 at the time he threw the fireworks.
Oregon's juvenile delinquency statute calls for restitution that equals the full amount
of the victims' injury, loss or damage as determined by the court.
Police Say Teenage Boy Suspected Of Starting Massive Oregon Wildfire
Police Say Teenage Boy Suspected Of Starting
Massive Oregon Wildfire In February, the teen admitted to throwing
the fireworks and wrote an apology "to everyone in the gorge."
He was sentenced to 1,920 hours of community service and five years of probation.
The boy's attorney, Jack Morris, had argued that the amount the prosecutors requested
for restitution was cruel and unusual punishment.
In court last week, Morris had said that the slightly higher restitution figure was "absurd"
and "absolutely silly," according to The Oregonian.
But Oregon Circuit Court Judge John Olson wrote in his opinion that the "restitution
is clearly proportionate to the offense because it does not exceed the financial damages caused
by the youth."
Pacific Northwest Winemakers Worry Wildfire Smoke Could Ruin Harvest
Pacific Northwest Winemakers Worry Wildfire
Smoke Could Ruin Harvest Olson also pointed to "safety valves" within
the statute, "which serve to ensure that the restitution statute as applied in any particular
case, even one as extreme as this one, does not 'shock the moral sense of reasonable people.'
" Those valves include the establishment of a payment schedule, which the judge authorized
the Hood River County Juvenile Department to do.
And after 10 years, if the boy successfully completes probation, doesn't commit additional
offense and complies with the payment plans, the court can grant full or partial satisfaction
of the restitution judgment.
The judge ordered payment to a number of entities, though it's not clear how much any of them
will actually receive: $21 million to the U.S. Forest Service, $12.5 million to the
Oregon Department of Transportation, $1.6 million to the Oregon State Fire Marshal,
and $1 million to Union Pacific Railroad, among others.
It also includes a $5,000 payment to Iris Schenk, who was living in a rental home that
burned in the fire.
Tim Heuker, who owned the rental home with his brothers, told Oregon Public Broadcasting
that Schenk had suffered a total loss:
" 'She lost everything,' Heuker said.
'Personal stuff that can't be replaced.'
"Heuker said making the teen pay for the damage he caused is the right thing.
He's not sure whether he'll actually receive any payments given the amount other parties
are seeking.
" 'I think they're going to try to prioritize stuff, and put stuff like ours more on the
front end,' he said.
'I'm not 100 percent clear on that.'
"
A witness recounted to OPB how she saw a boy in a group of teenagers light a smoke bomb
and lob it into Eagle Creek Canyon, which was soon consumed by a forest fire that blazed
for months, eventually burning an area as large as Washington, D.C.
OPB notes that the repayment in this case is far higher than judges have ordered in
similar situations elsewhere: "In California, for example, a 13-year-old girl responsible
for starting the 2014 Cocos Fire, which destroyed 36 homes, was ordered to pay $40,000 in restitution
for the blaze."
In November, the Oregonian spoke with the boy's mother and brother, and reported that
he is from a large Ukrainian family in Vancouver, Wash., part of a Russian-speaking Pentecostal
community.
He likes to snowboard and was a high school freshman last year.
"This is a trauma for him," his mother told the newspaper, speaking in Russian.
"It was his mistake."