Conservative political activist Bill Sizemore, who's had his share of legal problems, just got another one: An Oregon progressive organization filed a criminal complaint today charging him and his associates with fraud in gathering signatures for initiative petitions.
H. Bruce Miller
The Weirdness Continues
Is this Central Oregon's Summer of Weirdness? First we had the Pregnant Man giving birth to a baby girl, then the Balloon Man flying all the way from Bend to Idaho in a lawn chair … and now comes news that doctors have removed a 140-pound tumor from a Redmond woman.
Treasurer Race Turns Into an Alley Fight
You wouldn't normally expect a campaign for the prosaic office of state treasurer to get down and dirty, but the race between Republican Allen Alley and Democrat Ben Westlund just did.
When Bicyclists Go Wild
You think things are weird in Bend? Over in Portland, open war seems to be breaking out between motorists and bicyclists.
Physician’s Death Might Have Been Suicide
Dr. Lynn Barton McDonald, a longtime Bend physician whose body was pulled from the Deschutes River on Monday, might have been an indirect casualty of the Bend real estate boom and bust.
Merkley Ads Push the Legal Envelope
When is a campaign ad not a campaign ad? The outcome of the Gordon Smith - Jeff Merkley Senate race could hinge on the answer.
“Kent Couch: Helium Hero or Balloonatic?”
That's the provocative headline on a blog post in Great Britain's The Guardian newspaper about Bend's own Kent Couch, the gas station proprietor who flew a lawn chair attached to 150 giant helium balloons from Bend to Idaho on Saturday.
Things Are Stranger Here?
Is Bend, Oregon on its way to becoming known as the national capital of weirdness?
Wrong Address, But Right Neighborhood
Blogger Jeff Mapes at The Oregonian discloses that the Jeff Merkley campaign made a boo-boo in its latest attack video against Gordon Smith: The posh home on Country Club Drive in Bethesda, MD that the video identifies as Smith's actually isn't.
Battered Bend Builders Beg Bend for a Band-Aid
Builders in Bend want the city to kick-start their stalled industry by giving them a break on Systems Development Charges.

