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SPIRE Program Six-Month Results in Washington County

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Published April 2nd, 2026
Detected April 3rd, 2026
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Summary

The Oregon Department of Justice released a six-month progress report on the SPIRE (Special Projects: Investigate, Respond, Enforce) program, which embeds ODOJ investigators with Washington County law enforcement to target complex criminal activity. The program has served warrants on three illicit massage businesses, resulting in charges for soliciting prostitution and seizure of $18,000 in cash. Three individuals were referred to victim assistance services.

What changed

The Oregon Department of Justice announced early results from its SPIRE program, a pilot initiative launched in October 2025 that embeds ODOJ investigators with Washington County law enforcement agencies. The program targets human trafficking, drug trafficking, organized retail theft, and other serious organized criminal operations. Through enforcement actions, SPIRE has served warrants on three illicit massage businesses, resulting in pending charges for soliciting prostitution, referrals to victim assistance services for three individuals, and seizure of $18,000 in cash from suspect businesses. Additional investigations into criminal enterprises are ongoing.

This announcement is informational and does not impose new compliance requirements on regulated entities. It serves as a progress update on a law enforcement partnership model designed to be replicated statewide. No new legal obligations, reporting requirements, or penalties for non-compliance are contained in this release. Criminal defendants and businesses operating illicit enterprises are the subjects of these investigations, not the audience for compliance action.

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Oregon Department of Justice’s SPIRE Program Marks Six Months Targeting Complex Criminal Investigations in Washington County

April 2, 2026 • Posted in Homepage, Media Release
The Oregon Department of Justice is reporting early progress in its efforts to assist local law enforcement agencies with complex criminal investigations. Launched in October of 2025, SPIRE — Special Projects: Investigate, Respond, Enforce — embeds ODOJ investigators directly with Washington County law enforcement agencies to take on multi-jurisdictional criminal activity. The program focuses on human trafficking, drug trafficking, organized retail theft, and other serious organized criminal operations that require a large number of resources to investigate.

“Disrupting organized crime protects our most vulnerable and makes communities safer for everyone,” said Attorney General Dan Rayfield. “Through the SPIRE partnership, Oregon DOJ takes on the complex, resource-intensive work of dismantling criminal operations – so the impact is felt where people live and work. We’re proud to see the program delivering results in Washington County and look forward to watching it grow in other parts of the state.”

“Ensuring Washington County is a safe place to live, work and raise a family is a priority,” said Washington County District Attorney Kevin Barton. “Our partnership with the Oregon Department of Justice provides investigators and prosecutors with more tools and resources to combat organized crime.”

“The work being done through SPIRE is about more than investigations, it’s about bringing a collaborative approach to safeguarding our community and supporting victims,” said Washington County Sheriff Caprice Massey. “By combining local expertise with state level resources, we are better equipped to disrupt organized crime and improve the safety and well-being of those who live and work in Washington County.”

“It’s important to acknowledge that organized criminal activity doesn’t recognize jurisdictions or stop at city limits, and neither can our response,” said Beaverton Police Department Public Information Officer Matt Henderson. “Through SPIRE, we’re seeing the impact of real collaboration, bringing together the resources, expertise, and time needed to disrupt these criminal networks. This work is about more than enforcement; it’s about protecting vulnerable individuals while holding offenders accountable wherever they choose to do business.”

First Enforcement Actions As SPIRE’s investigations have matured, the program has begun taking enforcement action. To date, SPIRE has served warrants on three illicit massage businesses in Washington County. Those operations resulted in charges pending for soliciting prostitution, referrals to victim assistance services for three individuals, and seizure of $18,000 in cash from the suspect businesses.

SPIRE has also identified additional criminal enterprises operating across Washington County. Those investigations are in early stages. By their nature, organized crime investigations are time-intensive — requiring patient, methodical work to fully identify, disrupt, and dismantle criminal networks.

The SPIRE pilot was designed not just to address crime in Washington County, but to demonstrate a model that can be replicated statewide. Local law enforcement leaders have repeatedly underscored that they need ODOJ as a true partner for cases that require long-term surveillance, digital forensics, wire interceptions, complex data analysis, and coordination across jurisdictions.

Right now, the Washington County DA’s Office, Washington County Sheriff’s Office, Beaverton Police Department », and many other police departments in Washington County are partnering with the Oregon Department of Justice to participate in the SPIRE pilot program.

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Oregon DOJ
Published
April 2nd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Law enforcement Criminal defendants
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Organized Crime Investigations Human Trafficking Enforcement Drug Trafficking Enforcement
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Law Enforcement Organized Crime

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