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Opinion: Bill to ease expungements shifts burden onto victims, prosecutors
Updated May 05, 2021;
Posted May 05, 2021
The Oregon Legislature is considering a bill that would make it easier for people to clear their criminal records.
Brooke Herbert, staff
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Joshua Marquis
Marquis retired as Clatsop County district attorney in 2019 after 25 years in office. He is a past president of the Oregon District Attorneys Association and previously served on the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission. He lives in Astoria.
In an April 21 op-ed, Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt joined the head of the Metropolitan Public Defender in support of making it even easier to erase criminal records and convictions – even those involving felonies and violence to people (“Ease expungement of past crimes and help people gain second chances”).
February 08 2021
In the middle of an outbreak affecting one in five inmates, some took over a dorm for three hours, injuring two deputies.
Inmates at Multnomah County s Inverness Jail in Northeast Portland took over Dorm 11 for nearly three hours early Monday night, Feb. 8, even as authorities are fighting an outbreak that has resulted in one-fifth of the occupants of the 512-bed facility testing positive for COVID-19.
The confrontation, which inmates called a protest and deputies dubbed a riot, reportedly began shortly before midnight, Sunday night, Feb. 7 running past 2:30 a.m., Monday morning as inmates threw furniture at deputies. At least one inmate engaged in a struggle with deputies as the inmates took control of the dorm, a medical unit housing approximately 60 inmates.