Camas teacher linked to shooting death of bear grass picker

Summary

Authorities said Craig A. Sjoberg, a 55-year-old Evergreen School District teacher, was hunting on national forest land in southwest Washington earlier this month when a Tacoma man was fatally shot. Sjoberg was arrested Monday on suspicion of manslaughter.

Story Published: Nov 18, 2008 at 11:58 PM PST

Story Updated: Nov 21, 2008 at 4:57 AM PST

Camas teacher linked to shooting death of bear grass picker

SKAMANIA COUNTY, Wash. -- Authorities have arrested a Camas, Wash., school teacher in connection with the fatal shooting of a commercial bear grass picker in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest earlier this month.

Craig A. Sjoberg, a 55-year-old Evergreen School District teacher, was arrested at his home Monday on suspicion of first-degree manslaughter in the death of 30-year-old Juan Rojas Cortez of Tacoma, Wash., according to Skamania County Undersheriff David Cox.

He was being held at the Skamania County jail pending arraignment.

Cortez was mysteriously shot in the mid-section while out picking bear grass alone on Nov. 1 in the Skookum Meadows area off of Forest Service 32 Road about 2.5 miles northwest of Lone Butte in central Skamania County. Two co-workers in the area found his body after he did not return at quitting time, the sheriff's office said.

It was the opening day of elk hunting season in the area, and hunters reported hearing a shot between noon and 3 p.m. that day that they linked to a man driving a white SUV who answered to a name similar to "Craig."

Cox did not say how investigators linked the death to Sjoberg, but he did confirm that Sjoberg was hunting in the area at the time of the death.

Viewer Poll

Facing a $2.6 billion deficit, some lawmakers want to roll back I-960 to make it easier to raise taxes. Should lawmakers:

  • Override I-960 and allow a simple majority to raise taxes
  • Keep I-960 and require a 2/3’s vote for tax increases