Author Archives | Jack Pitcher

Male student sues UO over handling of sexual assault investigation

A University of Oregon student sued the school in federal court Monday, alleging that UO violated his due process rights and discriminated against him based on gender when he was accused of sexual assault in February 2016.

UO suspended the student after a female friend with whom he had had a past sexual relationship accused him of groping and kissing her while she was passed out drunk in his dorm room.

The incident occurred after the alleged victim, identified as Jane Roe in court documents, texted the male student (John Doe) asking for help because she was worried she might choke on her own vomit. John Doe lived two floors above her in Hamilton Hall, and she went up to his room where she fell asleep and says she was assaulted. 

At 3:24 a.m., she texted her ex-boyfriend, “Just for documentation, can you make it known I was almost raped tonight?”

John Doe asserts that this accusation is false and the two did not have sexual contact that night. 

Doe told investigators he was not interested in having sexual contact with the accuser because he believed she had herpes, and that she may have made the accusation to get attention from her ex-boyfriend.

UO Title IX investigator Carol Millie carried out a student conduct investigation that ultimately found the male student responsible for the assault, and suspended him from UO for one year. The accused student learned of his suspension on June 29, 2016.

But the accused student and his lawyer filed a challenge to the suspension in Lane County circuit court last September, and in December 2016 a judge ruled that the suspension should be overturned because the university had violated its own procedures during the course of the investigation.

The judge found that Millie violated school policy by considering evidence that was submitted late without allowing John Doe to respond, failing to provide John Doe full access to the record because Millie conducted undocumented interviews with Jane Roe and citing an expert opinion in her final decision on the case that John Doe did not get a chance to respond to.

A central issue to the student conduct investigation was a screenshot of iMessages between John Doe and Jane Roe the day after the alleged assault, in which John Doe appears to apologize for his behavior the night before.

Jane Roe says she deleted the original messages from her phone, and John Doe had an expert witness testify that it is impossible to determine the authenticity of screenshotted iMessages, because they can be manipulated by changing contact names and phone time settings.

UO appealed the judge’s decision to overturn John Doe’s suspension, but the appeal was denied in May 2017.

Represented by Portland lawyer Janet Hoffman, John Doe is now suing UO, Millie, Student Conduct Director Sandy Weintraub and former Vice President for Student Life Robin Holmes. He is seeking an undisclosed amount of money in damages for emotional distress, damage to his academic performance, damage to his reputation and attorney fees that he says he incurred as a result of UO’s investigation and his subsequent suspension.

“The University — concerned about the recent national and local attention focusing on the treatment of sexual assault complaints on college campuses—responded to Jane Roe’s accusations through arbitrary, discriminatory and illegal actions designed to reach a predetermined outcome, namely, John Doe’s suspension from the University,” the complaint alleges.

Hoffman has represented several high profile clients, including former Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber and current Seattle Mayor Ed Murray. She did not immediately return an email request for comment.

UO released the following statement in response to the lawsuit: “The university is dedicated to providing a student conduct process that is fair, neutral and compassionate to all of our students, complainants and respondents. To that end, the university seeks to ensure its processes are fair and equitable to all persons involved. The professionals in our conduct office acted in good faith in carrying out our collective responsibility to protect the safety of the campus.  Accordingly, we will address the plaintiff’s allegation in the court proceedings.”

The full legal complaint can be viewed here.

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20 . 

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Taggart dismisses Darren Carrington from football program

Darren Carrington is no longer a member of the Oregon football team, the university announced Friday afternoon.

“I have visited with Darren Carrington and informed him that he is no longer a member of our program. We will always consider Darren a Duck and support him in any way we can. We wish him all the best in his future endeavors,” head coach Willie Taggart wrote in a statement.

The announcement follows Carrington’s DUII arrest on July 1, along with a series of other behavioral issues, documented here. He was previously suspended for the 2015 national championship game against Ohio State after testing positive for marijuana.

Earlier Friday, Carrington appeared in a since-deleted post on the Taylor’s Bar and Grill Instagram account.

Darren Carrington was featured on the Taylor’s Instagram account Friday morning in a post that has since been deleted.

The post read: “You still got work to do out here! We all know you can make everyone forget about one poor decision!”

It is unclear if the post was related to Taggart’s decision to dismiss Carrington.

More details to come as this story develops.

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20

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Former student gets 16 months in prison for sexual assault

Former University of Oregon student Sean Donald Wood, 23, was sentenced to 16 months in prison on Monday for charges related to a 2016 off-campus sexual assault. Following his prison sentence, he will serve three years probation and be required to register as a sex offender for life.

Wood pleaded guilty to second degree sexual abuse in May. He was originally charged with five other crimes, including assault in the fourth degree, strangulation, attempted sodomy in the first degree, unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree and sexual abuse in the first degree. Those were all dropped after he pleaded guilty to the sexual abuse charge, a class C felony. 

Sean Wood was booked in Lane County Jail Monday afternoon after being sentenced to 16 months in prison. (Lane County Jail)

A UO senior at the time of the assault in March 2016, Wood was accused of penetrating the vagina of a non-consenting woman, also a UO student at the time, with his fingers.

It wasn’t the first time he had been accused of a sexual assault. Other charges were filed after a different woman accused him of a sexual assault in 2013, but were dropped after the victim decided not to participate in the court process.

Wood was booked in Lane County Jail shortly after 1 p.m. Monday. According to a court memorandum, Wood was expelled from UO following the March 2016 incident. He has lived with his parents in San Diego since that time, traveling to Eugene for court appearances.

In a memo to the court, Lane County prosecutor Katherine Green noted that Wood was “youthful and has the potential to be a productive member of the community,” which factored into the state’s decision to reach a plea deal with him and drop other charges. Based on these factors, and the fact that the case had already significantly impacted Wood’s life, Wood’s attorney’s requested he only get probation, rather than a prison sentence.

Arguing for the prison sentence, Green wrote that, “the factors that also must be weighed are the defendant’s use of force during this event and his repeated behavior in similar types of misconduct. These factors distinguish this defendant’s case from others and make a prison sentence appropriate.”

Ultimately, the judge agreed, sentencing him to 16 months.

According to the Register Guard, the victim’s attorney read a statement in court that said Wood had ripped off her dress, held down her hands and feet, bit her and grabbed her by the throat, despite her telling Wood “no” and “stop.”

Wood was apologetic and cried throughout the hearing, the Register Guard reported.

The Lane County District attorney’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20 .

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Man dies following car accident near LLC residence hall

This post was updated at 9:52 p.m. to include additional information from police. 

A man died in a car accident between Hayward Field and the LLC residence hall Thursday night after experiencing a medical emergency behind the wheel and striking multiple parked cars.

UOPD identified the man as Todd Jeffrey Hanson, 53, of Carlsbad, California. He was visiting the University of Oregon with his family for IntroDUCKtion.

Police were called at 6:37 p.m. after a westbound GMC truck struck multiple parked cars on the south side of East 15th Avenue, near the Bowerman Family building. The driver may have experienced a heart attack, according to his wife who was a passenger in the car. The wife was not injured.

Paramedics Pronounced Hanson dead just after 7 p.m., trying to revive him.

According to a witness, the truck swerved into several parked cars before coming to a stop. The truck struck five to six vehicles. Two fire trucks and an ambulance arrived on the scene shortly afterward.

Several vehicles were towed away from the site just after 9 p.m., including a Toyota Camry with its airbags deployed.

A Toyota Camry with airbags deployed getting towed away from the site on Thursday evening. (Jack Pitcher/Emerald)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Our community would like to offer our heartfelt condolences to the family involved,” Vice President for Student Services Roger Thompson wrote in a statement Thursday.  “IntroDUCKtion is a time of excitement and new beginnings, and to suffer such a loss during what should be a positive experience is beyond my comprehension. My thoughts are with them during this difficult time.”

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20. 

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Campus crime wrap-up: 2016-17 school year

With nearly 24,000 students, 80 buildings, and its own health center and police department, the University of Oregon often feels like a city within a city. And like any city, the university has to deal with crime.

Those crimes are documented every week in UOPD’s Clery crime log — a requirement established in the 1990s to ensure college campuses were being transparent with crime and safety issues.

By saving and compiling data and making records requests for old logs, the Emerald has established a database of every offense reported in the Clery log since the 2012-2013 school year.

Offenses in the log range from assault, rape, kidnapping and possession of cocaine to more minor infractions such as alcohol violations in the dorms. There have been 10,837 violations listed in the log since September 2012. What follows is an analysis of the most common and serious crimes, and trends that have emerged over the last five school years.

For the purposes of this story, a school year is defined as the beginning of September to end of June. July and August were omitted from the data because a majority of students are not on campus.

Sexual assault

Sexual assault is one of the biggest issues facing U.S colleges. UO is no exception.

The basketball team faced a sexual assault scandal in 2014, when it was revealed that three Oregon basketball players played in the NCAA tournament while being investigated for a sexual assault at an off-campus party.

The players were never charged, but were eventually expelled. Legal battles between the school, the accused players, and the victim ensued. The school ended up settling with the victim, paying her $800,000 and awarding her free tuition.

There were 23 sex-related crimes reported in the Clery log this school year: 16 rapes, three cases of sex abuse, two sexual assaults, and two cases of attempted rape. If that number sounds high, it is — 2016-17 saw the highest number of reported sex-related crimes in the last five school years.

However, the increasing number of reported rapes doesn’t necessarily mean that crime is occurring more or campus is becoming more dangerous.

According to a UOPD spokesman, any reports of rape that appear to have been made in good faith now appear in the crime log, even if they weren’t reported directly to UOPD as a crime. These include rapes reported by a student to the Title IX office, or reports made on UO’s anonymous online reporting form.

“We think we’re seeing this increase in reports because more reporting services are now available,” UOPD spokesman Kelly McIver told the Emerald in November 2016.

“Sexual assault is too common of a problem in this age group.”

McIver says that sexual assault is a difficult crime to investigate. Often the crime is reported long after it occurs, making it hard to collect evidence. Many of the rapes in the crime log from 2016-17 were reported weeks or even months after the crime occurred.

Notably, 15 of the 23 sex-related crimes occurred on campus. Most of those cases simply list the location as “on-campus” or “on-campus residence hall,” although one case is specifically listed as occurring in the Bean Complex. Another case occurred in a “fraternity chapter house,” but the name of the fraternity isn’t available.

Driving under the influence

A trend that sticks out in the crime log is the dramatic increase in DUII cases this school year. UOPD arrested one person for DUII in the 2012-13 school year. In 2016-17, campus police arrested or cited 74 people.

Does that mean there’s been a massive increase in people driving while intoxicated near campus? Not quite. According to UOPD officer Adam Lillengreen, UOPD didn’t focus on enforcing DUIIs until recently, leaving that to Eugene police instead.

But, because it seemed to be an issue affecting campus, UOPD decided to train its officers in DUII enforcement over the past year. As a result, campus area DUII arrests have skyrocketed. In 2017 alone, there have been 50 DUII arrests by UOPD. Thirteen of those were current UO students, including star football player Darren Carrington.

Carrington was arrested early in the morning on July 1 after crashing his car into a pole at the McDonald’s drive-thru on Franklin Boulevard. He then made an illegal turn and was stopped and arrested by police.

UOPD received a $3,400 grant last year from Oregon Impact, a nonprofit dedicated to reducing drunk driving. As a result, the police department has put more resources into enforcement.

“Now we can have officers who come on duty and the only thing they do is investigate DUIIs,” Lillengreen said. “They are paid for by the state and federal grant.”

DUII arrests in 2016-17 are up 32 percent from 2015-16. Before that, UOPD hardly arrested anyone for DUII.

Drug and alcohol violations

The student conduct code prohibits students from drinking or smoking marijuana in UO residence halls, but that doesn’t stop them. When a student is “written-up” or cited for possessing drugs or alcohol in the dorms, the violation goes into the Clery log. Drug and alcohol violations are the single most common offense listed in the log.

Over the last five school years, resident assistants have issued 4,989 alcohol or drug citations. The number issued per year peaked at 1,298 in 2014-15.

Bean Hall led the way for drug and alcohol violations this year, with 167. It was followed by Barnhart (142), Hamilton (131), and Walton (108).

Global Scholars Hall lived up to its name, coming in last place with 46 violations on the year.

Other crimes

Outside of drug and alcohol violations, theft is the most common crime reported in the Clery log. In 2016-17, UOPD reported 327 cases of theft, including burglary, vehicle theft, and unauthorized entry of a motor vehicle. This was a slight increase from the 295 cases of these crimes in 2015-16. Bicycle theft is common – UOPD reported 71 cases this year.

In the crime log, theft and possession of meth often go together. There were 21 cases of possession of meth and other drugs in 2016-17, including heroin and cocaine. Most meth/heroin possession cases occurred off campus, but meth-related arrests were made at Pacific Hall, Knight Library, Barnhart Hall, and the Walton Complex this year.

Violent crime is relatively rare compared with property crime. There were 13 assaults reported this year, along with six cases of carrying a concealed weapon. UOPD hasn’t reported any homicides in the last five school years.

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20 .

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UO hires new registrar

On Thursday June 1, the University of Oregon announced that Julia Pomerenk has been hired as the next university registrar and assistant vice president for student service and enrollment management.

The hiring came after a nationwide search in order to replace Sue Eveland, who retired in May and had worked as UO registrar for the last 16 years. Pomerenk has worked at Washington State University for the last 14 years as the registrar and will officially start at UO on July 20.

“I am very much looking forward to moving to Eugene and to building working relationships at the University of Oregon and am just excited to start and learn more.” said Pomerenk.

The search committee that was in charge of filling the position included Roger Thompson, vice president for student services and enrollment management, Jiselle Sheeran, a student majoring in architecture, as well as a few others. Sheeran currently works in the office of enrollment management with Thompson. She was also part of the recent hiring committee for the chief of staff and assistant vice president position.

“I found her to be incredibly genuine and interested in the University of Oregon,” said Sheeran. “She had done her homework, she knew everything about everyone on the search committee and she already knew about the structure of how we work in the registrar’s office.”

Jim Brooks, assistant vice president and director of financial aid, served as chair of the search committee.

Thompson described Pomerenk as “an outstanding professional” and a “people person.”

“I was impressed with how they spoke of her ability to effectively keep all constituents part of the change process and her integrity in all that she does across the WSU campuses,” Thompson said in a post from Around the O.

The registrar position is heavily involved in the student enrollment process. Pomerenk’s predecessor helped develop the uoregon.edu emails that all UO students use.

“If the registrar is doing a good job most students will not know who she is,” said Thompson. “Julia’s position impacts all 24,000 students at the UO.”

Pomerenk  has a bachelor’s degree in English and Psychology from Pacific Lutheran University, where she also worked as registrar at one time, and a master’s in English from Ohio State University.

“University of Oregon is a very attractive institution which I admired from afar and when I spent two days on campus for my interviews was very impressive,” said Pomerenk. “The overall positive impression was how pleased everyone I talked to seemed to be to be working at the University of Oregon.”

Pomerenk is quite familiar with the pacific northwest: in addition to working at WSU, she grew up in Longview, Washington and has vacationed often in Oregon for the last 30 years.

“My first impression really when I flew into Eugene was that it felt like home, having grown up on the western side of the state of Washington,” said Pomerenk. “It is very green in Eugene in April and it felt like home and my memories of what my growing up years were like.”

Follow Casey Crowley on Twitter @CaseyCrowley55 . 

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After being diagnosed with ALS at 21, UO student Osiel Mendoza fights back

Osiel Mendoza had big plans coming into his senior year at the University of Oregon last fall. Being diagnosed with ALS, and learning that his life expectancy is now approximately two to five years, wasn’t part of them.

A sports-minded business major, the 22-year-old from Martinez, California, has spent three years working for the athletic department as a football ambassador, served as vice president of the Warsaw Sports Business Club and volunteers each summer at the Manning Passing Academy in Louisiana.

In October 2016, he proposed to Bella Gonsalves, his longtime girlfriend. They started dating in eighth grade and have lived together in Eugene for three years since they both decided to attend UO.

Three days after Mendoza proposed, the newly engaged couple skipped class to drive to Salem and meet with doctors. Mendoza had been experiencing weakness and twitching in his muscles, and the doctors had run some blood tests to see what was causing it. That’s when the news came.

At 21, Mendoza was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a terminal and rare neurodegenerative disease that affects the brain and spinal cord, eventually causing paralysis. It causes stiff muscles, muscle twitching and weakness, and in its later stages, difficulty speaking and breathing. ALS is commonly called Lou Gehrig’s disease, after the famous Major League Baseball player whose career was cut short by the disease in the 1930s.

ALS currently has no cure, and the average life expectancy for someone diagnosed with the disease is 2-5 years. The rare disease is most common in people aged 50-60. It is almost unheard of to develop it at 21. A small percentage of cases are genetic, but otherwise scientists don’t fully understand what causes it.

“My fiancé and I have had goals and dreams with each other since eighth grade,” Mendoza said. “I want to work in sports and I want to start a family. I still want to carry out those things. But this is unpredictable for me; it’s going to change my life.”

Mendoza has already lost most of the strength in his right foot. It’s hard for him to take notes or written tests as he’s losing strength in his hands, and it’s difficult for him to walk to class. He struggles to brush his teeth and tie his shoes.

For months, Mendoza kept quiet about his diagnosis, telling only close friends and family. He doesn’t want to make people sad or feel bad for him.

But on Monday he went public with his story by launching a fundraising/awareness campaign on social media. Mendoza is hoping to make things better for people with ALS in the future.

“I’ve realized that ALS is a lot bigger than me,” Mendoza said. “It’s an underfunded disease, not an incurable one. Finding a cure for it is the biggest goal I have in my entire life right now.”

The Campaign

Many people have heard of ALS through the “Ice Bucket Challenge” videos that went viral in 2014, but they often don’t understand the severity of the disease, Mendoza says. He wants to educate students and raise money toward finding a cure.

Over the last few months, Mendoza has worked with his fiancé to create his own campaign on the UO campus: #YolkUp4ALS. The campaign launched on Monday with this video. 

Like the Ice Bucket Challenge, YolkUp4ALS involves making a video and calling out friends to also take the challenge.

The challenge starts by cracking an egg into a glass and drinking it raw. For the skeptical people, Mendoza emphasized that he’s done his research and it’s perfectly safe, and even healthy, to drink an egg yolk.

For every egg that participants crack and drink, the participants donate $10 to ALS research.

Cracking an egg for the #YolkUp4ALS challenge. (Ben Green/Emerald)

The second part involves doing the Ice Bucket Challenge (dumping a bucket of ice water over your head on video) while flexing, or “yolking up.” For each bucket of water dumped, participants donate another $10.

“People with ALS lose their strength, and you can’t work out when you have it. The idea behind this part is to show your strength and support for those living with ALS,” Mendoza said.

After completing the challenge, participants call out four friends, family members or idols to do the same.

All of the donations go to the ALS Therapy Development Institute. ALSTDI is devoted to finding a cure for ALS through scientific research.

Mendoza ended his video by calling out a long list of people from his life to participate in the challenge, including the entire UO student population, along with role models like Steph Curry. A Bay Area native, Mendoza has always been a Warriors fan, even “before all those bandwagoners joined,” he said.

Since Monday, Mendoza’s original Facebook post about the challenge has been shared more than 1100 times, and the video has more than 70,000 views.

Dozens of people have shared videos of themselves taking the challenge, including the team at ALSTDI.

Two days in, his campaign raised more than $7600 of his $30,000 goal for the next two months.

Mendoza and Gonsalves have been amazed by the response so far, but aren’t surprised that it picked up initially.

“Martinez, our home town, is a really small, close knit community,” Gonsalves said. “Once someone finds out about something, it spreads fast.”

Living with a deadly disease

Mendoza began noticing his symptoms in September, when he was working at Dick’s Sporting Goods to save up to buy a ring for his fiancé. He would come home from work, put his legs up and notice that they were twitching, and later started to notice the same issue in his arms.  By the fall he was seeing doctors for tests, and was alarmed when he was weighed at a doctor’s visit and had lost 15 pounds since his last visit two weeks earlier.

He went through blood tests, MRIs and saw neurologists during the first two weeks of October. At that time, he didn’t even know what ALS was.

He proposed to Gonsalves in October, just before being diagnosed.

“To make that next commitment was huge,” Mendoza said. “It was a great time for our families who we’re close with and who have been there every step of the way for us.”

He proposed on Oct. 22, and found out he had ALS on Oct. 25.

“I asked my doctor what the future would look like for me, and what I would still be able to do. She told me about the statistics and the life expectancy, and I really didn’t know how to respond after that,” Mendoza said.

“I had to call my mom, but I couldn’t really get the words out. I had to hand the phone to the neurologist, who told her.”

The first two months were really tough he says, and it was hard to have a positive outlook on anything. But the support of his fiancé along with listening to music from his favorite artists like Logic and Chance the Rapper has helped him cope with the situation.

Mendoza and Gonsalves got matching tattoos after he was diagnosed. (Ben Green/Emerald)

In the months since he was diagnosed, Mendoza’s perspective has changed. He focuses more on the present and worries less about small things that used to seem like a big deal.  

He’s had to change a lot of plans and switch some things up. Originally, he and Gonsalves had planned to get married in 2018. Now they’re getting married this September.

“I want to be able to walk and dance and enjoy myself at my wedding, so we moved it up.”

Mendoza wants to use his sports background to raise awareness and money toward finding a cure.

“My ultimate dream is to work for the ALS Association or ALSTDI and partner with sports companies, sports teams, organizations and league offices, to promote ALS and generate fundraising through that.”

Jack Rizzi, president of the Warsaw Sports Business Club, isn’t surprised that Mendoza has stayed positive and motivated.

“Working with Osiel these past three years, the biggest things that stick out to me are his work ethic and how genuine of a person he is,” Rizzi said. “He sees the best in every person, and he’s always been known to step up and stand up for people.”

Gonsalves echoed those thoughts.

“Osiel is a very determined, selfless individual. He really wants to make a difference and help people in need. He’s handled this so well because he’s such a positive person, and always has been,” she said.

For now, Mendoza is taking things day-by-day and enjoying the little things, like moments with the people he’s close to.

“How I look at it, is that if I dread everything, and I’m so down about everything, I’m not going to have a happy life for the time that I have remaining. But if I make the most out of every single day, make the most of the moments I have with friends and family and try to make a positive impact on other people’s lives, then one day when I do go, people will remember who I am and hopefully that will have an impact on their life. This disease is scary and unpredictable, but I always hope for the best.”

For those interested in taking the #YolkUP4ALS challenge or donating money toward finding a cure, visit als.net/osiel.

Email Jack Pitcher at jpitcher@dailyemerald.com . 

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Former UO student pleads guilty to second degree sex abuse

Former University of Oregon student Sean Donald Wood, 23, pleaded guilty to sexual abuse in the second degree in Lane County Circuit Court Tuesday. Wood took the plea deal on the first day of his trial, after jury selection had begun.

In exchange for pleading guilty to second degree sexual abuse, a class C felony, the other five charges brought against Wood were dropped. Those included assault in the fourth degree, strangulation, attempted sodomy in the first degree, unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree and sexual abuse in the first degree.

Wood was arrested in March 2016 following an incident that occurred the month before. He was a UO student at the time, but is no longer enrolled in the school.

Sean Wood. (Lane County courthouse)

Wood was accused of penetrating the vagina of a non-consenting woman, also a UO student at the time, with his fingers.

Prosecutors had also charged Wood in a separate incident with a different woman from September 2013. Wood was accused of subjecting the woman to non-consensual sexual intercourse. Those charges were later dropped.

Wood will be sentenced on May 23. Class C felonies carry a maximum prison sentence of five years in Oregon. Wood will most likely have to register as a sex offender, according to the Oregon State Police website.

Wood’s trial was delayed multiple times and the charges brought against him were modified several times. There was a 14-month gap between his arrest and the beginning of his trial. Wood was free from custody on bail during that time, with restrictions only allowing him to travel between Eugene and his San Diego home for court.

Wood accepted the plea deal after the jurors returned from lunch on Tuesday afternoon. Sentencing is decided by judges in Oregon, so jurors were dismissed. Wood is represented by Eugene defense attorneys Andrew Coit and Max Mizejewski.

This story will be updated after next week’s sentencing.

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20 .

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UO sends mistaken admissions emails, becomes subject of Twitter jokes

In an apparent mix up, University of Oregon Admissions sent a round of emails Tuesday afternoon congratulating people who didn’t apply to the school on their acceptance to UO.

The emails read, “Dear xxx: Congratulations on your acceptance to University of Oregon! May 1 is just days away and we hope we’ll be seeing you commit to becoming a Duck…”

People began tagging the school’s Twitter account with screenshots of the email, including a few graduates from rival schools Washington and Oregon State. UO’s social media team took the mistake in stride and responded with some gifs: 

Things could have been much worse. Columbia University, Johns Hopkins University and others have recently sent acceptance letters to students who were supposed to be denied, then walked back the acceptances. Time Magazine has a detailed history of college admissions notification blunders here. 

Twitter user @melisa_u_ , a UC Davis Grad, wanted to know if the mistaken offer was still good, but it looks like she’ll have to wait and apply next year if she wants to head back to school. She applied to UO in 2009 and tweeted, “when you get accepted 8 years after sending in your college application [laughing emoji].”

UO responded to seven twitter users total. A few others tweeted about the issue without tagging the school, and it’s unclear how many people total received the mistaken emails.  A university spokesman is looking into the issue, and this post will be updated if any more details become available.

On the bright side for the admissions office, it doesn’t sound like anyone is getting fired.

You can check out more of the tweets below.

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Colt Lyerla sentenced to six months in jail

Former Oregon tight end Colt Lyerla was sentenced to six months in jail on Wednesday, court records show.

Lyerla pleaded guilty to two counts of forgery after he was accused of using counterfeit $50 bills at stores in March. Washington County prosecutors added the forgery charges after Lyerla was arrested for heroin possession on March 27.

Colt Lyerla was arrested for heroin possession in Washington County on March 27, 2017. (Washington County courthouse)

Prosecutors agreed to drop the heroin possession charge and another forgery charge as part of the plea deal.

Lyerla has been previously convicted in separate cases of cocaine possession and heroin possession, but this will be his first significant jail sentence.

The former standout football player will serve one year of probation and enter drug treatment after his jail sentence is completed.

At his sentencing Wednesday, Lyerla told the judge that he plans to leave jail as a “better person and a better man,” The Oregonian reported.

Lyerla was one of the highest rated recruits in Oregon history, receiving over 30 division I offers and playing in the 2010 U.S. Army All-American game.

He played two seasons under Oregon head coach Chip Kelly, before quitting the team during Mark Helfrich’s first season as coach in 2013. Shortly after leaving the team, Lyerla was arrested for cocaine possession, and has had repeated run-ins with the law ever since.

For more background on Lyerla, click here.

Follow Jack Pitcher on Twitter @jackpitcher20.

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