Looking back, what was my most exciting reporting adventure? A showgirls’ strike? One of John Kennedy’s last speeches? Something to do with Watergate? No, it was a prison riot in Oregon. It’s a wonder I wasn’t taken hostage.
Just before I was transferred to Las Vegas in March, 1968, I got a call from the Associated Press bureau chief in Portland. “The prisoners have taken over the Oregon State Penitentiary. The Salem reporter needs a break. I need you to spend the night there.” (Better than a six-month prison term, I guess.)
So I drove the 50 miles to the large prison, which was in complete chaos.
The 700 prisoners had taken over the facility and one section was on fire. Forty guards and other employees were taken hostage. Inexplicably, the management recruited reporters to take a tour of the prison, I guess to make us think things were under control.
We went through smoke-filled halls with prisoners running loose. The pharmacy was raided. The inmates were swallowing handfuls of pills. Too bad they didn’t get to the Valium.
Somehow we got back to a safe area. A truce was reached. The warden called a press conference, where prisoners’ leaders were allowed to speak.
As I sat down, I noticed that the floors were an inch deep in water from the fire fighting. A TV crew tried to drape wires to their cameras over my lap. “No, no!” I shouted.
Finally, just before sunrise, prison officials tried to talk holdouts who had taken over a wing of the prison into giving up. They called on Ann Sullivan, a reporter from the Oregonian newspaper, to talk to them. She had written articles seeking prison reform and was respected by the inmates
Just like a scene from the movies, she was given a megaphone and appealed to them to give up. They yielded and the strike was over.
I was one of only two pool reporters there. I had a scoop and ran to a nearby house to call in my story at 7 a.m. It was Sunday and no newspaper in the country was publishing at that time. I’m surprised the people let me in. I guess I didn’t look like an escapee.
My next duty was to call my Army Reserve unit to explain why I was going to miss the day’s meeting. If you missed five or more, you were supposedly sent to. Vietnam.
I had to bargain pretty hard. I guess they wouldn’t have given me such a rough time if I had been taken hostage!