A man from Klamath Falls was sentenced to life for kidnapping and sexually assaulting two women, leading to his conviction for a July 2023 crime spree.
He then drove hundreds of miles to his home in Klamath Falls, Oregon, and locked the woman in a cinder block cell in his garage, according to the FBI. After the woman escaped after repeatedly ...
A Klamath Falls man was sentenced to life in prison Friday after being convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting two women in separate incidents and holding one of them in a makeshift cell constructed from cinder blocks,
An Oregon man has been sentenced to life in federal prison after being convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting two women in separate instances Portland television station KGW reports 31-year-o
The man convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting two women, one of whom he locked inside a homemade cinder block cell, was sentenced to life in prison.
The man who has been sentenced to life in prison kidnapped the woman from Seattle, Washington in 2023, federal officials said.
Earlier this month, a levee separating Agency Lake and the Upper Klamath National Wildlife Refuge was breached, reconnecting 14,000 acres of wetland habitat to Upper Klamath Lake.
A man who kidnapped, sexually assaulted, and locked a woman in a cinderblock cell in his Klamath Falls garage in 2023 received a life sentence on Friday.
He then drove hundreds of miles to his home in Klamath Falls, Oregon, and locked the woman in a cinder block cell in his garage, according to the FBI. After the woman escaped after repeatedly ...
He used a taser and handcuffs to kidnap a woman and drive her 450 miles south to his Klamath Falls, Oregon, home, sexually assaulting her along the way, prosecutors said. Contact information for ...
There are now hundreds of agencies licensed by the state to provide caregiving services at home for people with disabilities—and a backlog of nearly 300 new applications for more. While none is so big as Rever Grand, the next five largest each pull in more than $20 million a year.
A network engineer named Raymond Parenteau in 2013 founded what became the state’s largest provider of caregivers for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The Oregon Journalism Project has learned that Parenteau should never have been allowed to grow his company in Oregon.