West
‘Starry Night Murderer’ allegedly terrorizing people after early prison release, parole violations
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
A former Portland nightclub owner convicted in a notorious 1990 murder is back in jail, this time accused of domestic violence and a parole violation in Clackamas County.
Larry Hurwitz, also known as the “Starry Night Murderer,” was arrested last week in Sandy on allegations of harassment and fourth-degree assault and is being held on a parole violation, according to jail records. He was booked into the Clackamas County Jail, where bail was set at $500,000.
The Oregon Board of Parole confirmed to Fox News Digital that Hurwitz is serving lifetime post-prison supervision for his murder conviction and has no other underlying convictions under Board supervision. Parole officials said a warrant was issued in 2019, served in 2023, and that Hurwitz was extradited from California.
Board records also show Hurwitz previously had his supervision revoked in August 2019 and served a 180-day sanction.
TEXAS CULT IN CROSSHAIRS OF KILLER MOM’S BATHTUB SLAYINGS CASE AS QUESTIONS HANG OVER FAMILY HORROR
Tim Moreau is shown in an undated photo. Moreau, a former employee of the Starry Night Concert Hall, was killed in 1990 in a case that later led to the conviction of nightclub owner Larry Hurwitz. (KPTV)
Hurwitz was sentenced in 2000 to 11 years in prison for the 1990 murder of his 21-year-old employee, Tim Moreau. Hurwitz was the former owner of the Starry Night Concert Hall in northwest Portland.
According to KPTV, the case was first exposed by veteran journalist Jim Redden in a 1990 Willamette Week investigative series titled “Missing and Presumed Dead.” The reporting examined the disappearance of Moreau, who worked as the promotions manager at the Starry Night club.
“He did in fact start this incredibly influential Starry Night club,” Redden told KPTV. “He could have climbed to the top of the entire business here in town. But he had this dark side that undermined everything he did.”
GRANDSON CHARGED WITH MURDERING RETIRED GRANDPARENTS FOUND DEAD IN THEIR SOUTH CAROLINA HOME
Larry Hurwitz enters a courthouse during a court appearance in an archival image. Hurwitz, a former Portland nightclub owner, was convicted in the 1990 murder of employee Tim Moreau. (KPTV)
Redden told the outlet that from the beginning, he believed Hurwitz was responsible for Moreau’s disappearance, describing Hurwitz as an aggressive businessman with a reputation for selling counterfeit concert tickets at his own venue.
Prosecutors later argued Hurwitz killed Moreau alongside another employee, George Castagnola, to prevent the ticket scheme from being exposed. Hurwitz ultimately entered a no-contest plea. Moreau’s body has never been found.
After Hurwitz’s early release from prison in 2008, Redden told KPTV that Hurwitz continued to have run-ins with law enforcement, including a 2019 drug trafficking case in California.
FLORIDA MADMAN STALKED TOURISTS NEAR DISNEY BEFORE ALLEGEDLY KILLING THEM IN RANDOM ATTACK: FAMILY
Family members of Tim Moreau walk together inside a courthouse in an archival image. Moreau was killed in 1990 in a case that later led to the conviction of former Portland nightclub owner Larry Hurwitz. (KPTV)
“He was arrested in California on a drug trafficking charge down in Huntington Beach, California, with four kilos of cocaine and $320,000 in cash and was convicted on that,” Redden said.
Redden told KPTV that while the current arrest appears less severe on its face, it could still have broader implications.
“On the surface, it is a much smaller arrest. It’s domestic violence,” Redden said. “But I don’t think that the full story has come out yet. The investigation is ongoing, and there could be some connections to previous cases.”
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
The Clackamas County District Attorney’s Office told Fox News Digital it cannot comment on the specifics of the case, citing an ongoing investigation. Prosecutors said the parole violation process is separate from the criminal case and is handled outside the DA’s office.
Hurwitz is scheduled to appear in court on Feb. 4. His trial is set for March 19.
Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.
Read the full article from Here
San Francisco, CA
SF crews investigate possible gas leak after person dies in St. Mary’s Park
Fire department units were dispatched to the 3900 block of Mission Street, near College Avenue, to assist PG&E crews in “a possible gas odor or possible gas leak.”
SAN FRANCISCO – San Francisco authorities are investigating a possible gas leak in the St. Mary’s Park neighborhood on Saturday evening after a person died amid reports of a permeating odor.
Emergency crews called:
Fire department units were sent about 6:15 p.m. to the 3900 block of Mission Street, near College Avenue, to assist PG&E crews in investigating “a possible gas odor or possible gas leak,” the San Francisco Fire Department told KTVU.
“Upon entering the building, a civilian was discovered receiving medical attention but passed away on scene,” the fire department said.
The person’s identity was not released, but the San Francisco Police Department told KTVU that foul play was not suspected in their death.
However, the exact manner of their death was not immediately known.
What’s next:
The SFFD said it was investigating the scene, along with PG&E and the SFPD.
PG&E told KTVU that there were no gas leaks or “impacts from PG&E” located in the area, and that reports of a leak and odor came from outside the building where the victim died.
Denver, CO
Colorado is proposing major changes to autism therapy — and families are worried
Sabrina Ortengren had almost no hope when she and her husband Jay sat down with an autism therapy provider in Evergreen in 2022.
All of the specialized schools in their home state of Virginia had deemed their son Ethan’s needs too severe to manage. The family had made the three-day journey west based on reports that autism services in Colorado would be better, but in the upheaval of a move, Ethan had gotten worse and thrown his father into a wall.
After a week in Children’s Hospital Colorado, he was doing better, but she couldn’t imagine anyone would want to work with a 14-year-old with the build of a lineman and a history of aggression.
“We were telling them every awful thing we could think of, so they’d know upfront,” she said.
Rebecca Urbano Powell, who owns Seven Dimensions Behavioral Health, could tell Ethan was going to be a challenging student, but she was confident he could make progress with applied behavior analysis, a therapy focused on breaking down tasks and using repetition to help people with autism learn to function more independently. The technicians working with him had to wear pads at times during the first year to limit injuries when he lashed out, but then, something began to shift.
Ethan began learning to express himself through a combination of short spoken phrases and pointing to icons on a tablet. He developed enough self-regulation that his parents felt safe taking him to restaurants and stores, confident that he wouldn’t bolt into traffic or hurt someone. He started to develop passions, such as building with Legos, riding over “bumpity bump” mountain passes and listening to 1980s hair bands, Jay Ortengren said.
His therapy “changed how our family is able to live,” Sabrina Ortengren said. “It gave him a life, and us with him.”
But the Ortengrens worry that Ethan and others like him in Colorado may not be able to get applied behavior analysis — known as ABA therapy — as easily in the future. The state agency that funds Medicaid is asking lawmakers to lower the rate paid to providers to help balance the budget and to allow more chances to review payments. The department is also seeking a new requirement that behavioral technicians doing most of the front-line therapy get certified, following a federal audit that flagged most bills for the service as questionable.
Kim Bimestefer, executive director of the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing, said the state has to make changes if Medicaid is going to continue paying for ABA therapy. Colorado’s payments to providers quintupled in six years, reaching $287 million in the fiscal year that ended in June.
Practices owned by private-equity firms that were “exploiting” the lack of standards for autism care accounted for a significant share of that increase, she said.
“Ultimately, evidence-based guidelines and best-practices assessments — which exist in most every other area of care — would enable Medicaid programs and commercial carriers to drive the right care, at the right price, in the right setting, for the right patient outcome for autistic children, thereby curbing the current outrageous, profit-driven provider behaviors,” Bimestefer said in a statement.
Colorado is facing a budget deficit as high as $1.5 billion, making Medicaid cuts almost inevitable, because the program accounts for about one-third of the state’s spending. In the current year, the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing’s budget, the vast majority of which goes to Medicaid, reached $18 billion, including about $10 billion in federal funds.
In addition, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the Inspector General found Colorado may have overpaid ABA providers by about $78 million in 2022 and 2023, based on a sample of claims it reviewed. The OIG report recommended the state repay almost $43 million to the federal government, though Colorado is contesting the way it calculated that number.

Two sides pointing fingers
The Department of Health Care Policy and Financing and therapy providers have dramatically different takes on the OIG’s findings.
Colorado officials say autism therapy providers, especially those owned by private-equity investors, saw an opportunity to make money in a new field without much federal guidance. Providers say the state failed to provide clear guidance about how they should document their work and is punishing them for its mistakes.
The OIG focuses on whether payments followed Medicaid’s rules and can’t determine if anyone attempted to defraud the program, said assistant regional inspector general Kim Kennedy.
In about one-third of the sample of bills the OIG examined, enough evidence existed to conclude the state shouldn’t have paid because the bills didn’t have the right documentation, the provider didn’t have the necessary credentials, or the child didn’t have a relevant diagnosis recorded. In the remainder, the documentation was too poor to say one way or the other.
Without sufficient records, states have no way of knowing whether providers just didn’t document the high-quality sessions they offered, or if Medicaid has paid for little more than babysitting, Kennedy said.
“You could not tell what’s a good provider, a bad provider or a fraudulent provider from the documentation,” she said. “It’s not just a payment issue. It’s a quality of care issue.”
The OIG found similar problems in Maine, Wisconsin and Indiana, and is working on audits of three additional states, which haven’t been publicly identified. Medicaid has only consistently covered ABA therapy since about 2015, and states may still be learning how to make sure providers are following rules and giving necessary care, Kennedy said.
Urbano Powell, who is president of the Colorado Association for Behavior Analysis, said the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing has itself to blame for the findings, because it didn’t provide clear information about how to document sessions with clients, told providers to use the wrong billing codes for services, and continued to pay claims now flagged as problematic.
The state is sending a message with the cuts that it doesn’t value people with developmental disabilities, she said.
“Budgets are important, but I think humans are more important,” Urbano Powell said.
Bimestefer countered that some providers have pushed families toward more hours than necessary to maximize their payments. Those providers also billed for time that clearly wasn’t eligible, such as when children took play breaks or naps, she said.

All medical specialties have rules for filling out their notes, and ABA providers shouldn’t need the state to tell them that copying and pasting the same summary for each session, as the inspectors found in some cases, wasn’t good enough, Bimestefer said.
“The industry has to evolve,” she said. “In the meantime, we have to hold bad actors accountable.”
Nationwide, Medicaid payments for autism behavioral therapies increased from about $660 million in 2019 to $2.2 billion in 2023, and the number of companies offering the services roughly doubled.
In some cases, states reimbursed providers hundreds of dollars for an hour of therapy, even though the workers providing it had little education beyond high school, according to The Wall Street Journal. The average rate was $61. Indiana was particularly prone to high spending because it reimbursed providers 40% of whatever they billed, rather than setting an hourly rate for therapy.
Certification and reviewing payments
Two of Colorado’s proposals, increasing payment reviews and requiring behavior technicians to get certified, appear targeted at problems the OIG report found. The state pays board-certified behavior analysts to assess children, develop care plans and supervise the technicians doing much of the hands-on work with clients.
Currently, Colorado doesn’t require specific credentials for behavior technicians.
In December, the department asked the state Medical Services Board to pass an emergency rule requiring the roughly 2,000 technicians without credentials to complete a certification. About 6,600 technicians had already completed the process, which includes about 40 hours of coursework, on-the-job training and a test. The board ultimately didn’t pass the rule, but the department plans to try again this year.
The credentialing is one part of a rule to create regulations specific to ABA, said Adela Flores-Brennan, Medicaid director at the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing. Right now, providers operate under the rules for services to screen and treat young children, she said.
“It’s mostly about who can provide the services, what services can be billed,” she said of the proposed regulations.
Most providers support requiring technicians to get certified, but they need a grace period so that new hires can complete their training while they work, said Will Martin, a board-certified behavior analyst at Soar Autism Services, which has 15 locations in the Denver area and one in Colorado Springs.
The certification requirement would have little impact on the state’s budget. Legislative staff estimated that increasing reviews before and after payments to ABA providers go out could save about $10 million in the coming fiscal year, though.
Unlike prior authorization, which happens before the patient gets a service, pre-payment review occurs after the service but before reimbursement, while post-payment review could force providers to pay Medicaid back. Pre-payment reviews would likely be the bigger problem, because they could mean providers wait as long as six months for reimbursement on services they already provided, Martin said.
Medicaid currently does pre-reviews of payments for non-emergency medical transportation because of fraud in that field, and the pauses for review are typically less than three months, Flores-Brennan said. Post-payment review takes longer because the state has to dive into medical records, she said.
Legislative staff also said the state general fund could save about $2.7 million in the coming year by lowering Medicaid’s rate from 100% of the average paid by comparable states to 95%. The state would pay about 47 cents less for time spent assessing a child and $8.49 less for ABA therapy delivered in a group.
Colorado had raised that rate in 2023 because nine providers had left the state, and lawmakers were worried about access, Martin said. Lowering it risks creating the same problem again, he said.

‘Fearful for what’s going ot happen’
Urbano Powell said she already had to stop taking new clients covered by Medicaid because the $80 per hour rate doesn’t cover her costs, especially since she can’t bill for time supervising technicians or working with parents, which takes up about half of her day.
School districts pay for the therapy that full-time clients such as Ethan receive during classroom hours, but Medicaid or private insurance pays for any services outside that time, she said.
“I can barely support myself and my husband at this point,” she said. “I really am fearful for what’s going to happen to our Medicaid families in Colorado.”
When Colorado raised its rates in 2023, the group of comparable states included Nebraska, despite the department’s request to exclude it as an outlier, Bimestefer said. Nebraska has since lowered its rates, and states are adjusting after overpaying for a time, she said.
The number of providers increased steadily from 88 in fiscal year 2017 to 373 in fiscal year 2024, and pushing providers to stop prescribing more hours than necessary will free up sessions for additional children, Bimestefer said.
“We’ll be fine,” she said.
While a few providers probably are overprescribing therapy or providing less care than they bill for, the majority are trying to help kids reach their potential based on their best clinical judgment, Martin said. The state should focus on auditing outlier providers, such as those giving every client 40 hours of therapy each week, rather than reviewing payments for everyone or cutting rates, he said.
“A rate cut is something that is like a sledgehammer,” he said.
The state also needs to weigh cutting costs now against saving money in the future by allowing children to function more independently when they grow up, Martin said. More-intensive therapy before children turn 5 increases the odds they won’t need as much support as adults, though obviously not everyone will be able to hold a job and live on their own, he said.
“Their investment in children early in their developmental window would literally pay dividends over time,” he said.
While Ethan, who is now 18, probably will need some support throughout his life, he has far exceeded their initial goals of learning to pay attention for five minutes and not harming himself or others, Sabrina Ortengren said.
Jeffco Public Schools will continue to pay for his therapy until he turns 21, and Urbano Powell has started talking to his parents about gradually introducing skills he could use in a supported work environment.
That seemed impossible four years ago, when they moved to Colorado in a last-ditch effort to keep him out of an institution, she said.
“We’re, probably for the first time, excited to see where his future goes,” she said.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter to get health news sent straight to your inbox.
Seattle, WA
Seattle Weather: Sunny & Dry Spring Weekend
Seattle – March has been off to a very wet start. We have already surpassed the normal monthly rainfall total by an inch with more on the way next week. The atmospheric river event we were tracking wrapped up yesterday and our area rivers have crested and continue to recede. The rain also triggered a landslide on I-5 near Bellingham. Fortunately, the risk of additional landslides is also decreasing.
It’s been a wet start to the month with more than 5″ of rain already recorded so far.
We’ve enjoyed a pleasant, dry first weekend of Spring. Much of Sunday is also expected to be dry. A weak system is forecast to brush by which may bring a few sprinkles with it to a few spots. A few stray flurries are also possible in the mountains.
The much-needed break in rain will continue. Only a stray shower is possible on Sunday.
The cold front which swept through yesterday, ending the days-long rain, also brought some cooler air with it. Afternoon highs will remain slightly below normal on Sunday.
Highs near normal on Sunday with some afternoon sunbreaks.
While Sunday and Monday remain mostly dry, a more significant weather system is expected to move into the region on Tuesday, bringing widespread rain to the lowlands and snow to the mountain passes along with breezy winds.
Increasing clouds Monday with rain returning by Tuesday. Snow in the mountains.
-
Detroit, MI4 days agoDrummer Brian Pastoria, longtime Detroit music advocate, dies at 68
-
Oklahoma1 week agoFamily rallies around Oklahoma father after head-on crash
-
Nebraska1 week agoWildfire forces immediate evacuation order for Farnam residents
-
Georgia6 days agoHow ICE plans for a detention warehouse pushed a Georgia town to fight back | CNN Politics
-
Alaska1 week agoPolice looking for man considered ‘armed and dangerous’
-
Science1 week agoFederal EPA moves to roll back recent limits on ethylene oxide, a carcinogen
-
Science1 week agoH5N1 bird flu spreads to sea otters and sea lions along San Mateo coast, wildlife experts say
-
Movie Reviews3 days ago‘Youth’ Twitter review: Ken Karunaas impresses audiences; Suraj Venjaramoodu adds charm; music wins praise | – The Times of India