Found Deceased OR - Melissa Marie Jubane, 32, Beaverton, 4 September 2024 *Arrest*

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As an Oregon nurse can you shed some light on how long it takes after graduation with a BSN before you can be hired as a nurse? Is it immediate or is there a state exam or something to study for and pass before getting a license? I'm asking because it may be relevant to some timelines I am putting together.

Regarding commute time, I googled it for next Wednesday morning leaving Melissa's apartment at 6:30 AM and it said 9-16 minutes. Of course I'd trust you as a local over google but I wanted to see what it said.
To give you an idea, you have to graduate before you can take the NCLEX exam. You can’t sign up for the nurse exam until you’ve graduated from school and the school sends your transcripts and paperwork. People often want to take a month or even more to study for the exam after graduation. For ex, the yr I graduated the month was July and took the test in Sept. But everyone is different in how long they want to study.
Public records state he graduated OHSU in 2022 (June?) Then, board nursing public records show he got license on 9/1/22 and per Oregonian article: “That same month he was hired as a nurse at the Providence Portland Medical Center, where he worked until October 2023.” There are lots of new grad programs and Prov has a nurse residency program that is a yr long (source: Providence Nursing Institute: RN Residency & Fellowship Program).
you can apply, interview and be offered the job but must have the license before you start. so really you can line things up for yourself to start pending you passing your test

Source: me a nurse for 16 yrs
 
I think they knew each other as neighbors, but again I'll bet money he said 'hey, can you come take a look at...' fill in the blank, "a kitten I found," or "help me lift this table" or whatever. She went in willingly, he overtakes her from behind and/or pulls a gun. She didn't have a chance. He had it all set up to take her inside that apartment IMHO.

What we don’t know if he took her to the apartment, or maybe assaulted in the park when she was walking the dog, for example. Seems that he caught her unaware when she was leaving, but I am not sure. Alternatively, she could have run out for a second - if they were normal neighbors, like I once used to have, to borrow milk for coffee or such. Any normal request could have been enough if she caught him in the wrong mindset.
 
On broadcastify.com there are archives of EMS, Fire, and LE radio calls for many areas including Washington County Oregon. On the surface it does not look like there is a feed for the Beaverton PD but there is one for the Washington County Sheriff's Office.

There is a call at 10:18 in the morning on September 4th, the same time as the BPD says they received the missing person call. I have not listened to it because you have to pay to listen to archives. It's only $15 for 6 months of access so I may just pay later and listen. There are other recordings as well that may be interesting to listen to.
I have a Broadcastify subscription and a lot of scanner listening experience.

I may not be able to listen for a day or two, but if you send me a message to remind me and with the date and time and feed you'd like, I'm happy to pull the Broadcastify archive and listen and put anything of note in the scanner thread (it can't be posted here)

ETA just saw @DS2021 beat me to saying it! Ha. Can one of you just message me with the specifics? I have some stuff going on but will do it as soon as I can!
 
I think they knew each other as neighbors, but again I'll bet money he said 'hey, can you come take a look at...' fill in the blank, "a kitten I found," or "help me lift this table" or whatever. She went in willingly, he overtakes her from behind and/or pulls a gun. She didn't have a chance. He had it all set up to take her inside that apartment IMHO.
I'm not sure that something like a kitten, or help to lift a table would work on a morning when she was on her way to work, but I doubt any of my friends who are nurses would hesitate a moment to aid if asked to help someone having a medical emergency.
 
All IMHO
I think it was just a crime of opportunity and that BS didn’t premeditate the crime but impulsively grabbed Melissa and overpowered her and assaulted her.
He didn’t think this through or have a plan.
<modsnip - opinion stated as fact>
 
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To give you an idea, you have to graduate before you can take the NCLEX exam. You can’t sign up for the nurse exam until you’ve graduated from school and the school sends your transcripts and paperwork. People often want to take a month or even more to study for the exam after graduation. For ex, the yr I graduated the month was July and took the test in Sept. But everyone is different in how long they want to study.
Public records state he graduated OHSU in 2022 (June?) Then, board nursing public records show he got license on 9/1/22 and per Oregonian article: “That same month he was hired as a nurse at the Providence Portland Medical Center, where he worked until October 2023.” There are lots of new grad programs and Prov has a nurse residency program that is a yr long (source: Providence Nursing Institute: RN Residency & Fellowship Program).
you can apply, interview and be offered the job but must have the license before you start. so really you can line things up for yourself to start pending you passing your test

Source: me a nurse for 16 yrs
A spokesperson for Providence confirmed to KOIN 6 News that Schubert had been “briefly employed” as a Providence Portland Medical Center nurse from September 2022 to October 2023. It’s unclear what led to his leaving the hospital system in October 2023.


I assume this is the residency you described, thank you for this information. Is it typical after completion for nurses to move on to a permanent position, or do they hire on at PPMC?

Sort of odd that no other employment has been mentioned. But I guess you wouldn’t want that kind of publicity. Alternatively maybe he hadn’t worked since October?
 
A spokesperson for Providence confirmed to KOIN 6 News that Schubert had been “briefly employed” as a Providence Portland Medical Center nurse from September 2022 to October 2023. It’s unclear what led to his leaving the hospital system in October 2023.


I assume this is the residency you described, thank you for this information. Is it typical after completion for nurses to move on to a permanent position, or do they hire on at PPMC?

Sort of odd that no other employment has been mentioned. But I guess you wouldn’t want that kind of publicity. Alternatively maybe he hadn’t worked since October?
I have a hunch that he might have had some disciplinary reports in his employment file. JMO
 
I've wondered from the start if he was terminated as opposed to quitting on his own decision.
Monday will be an interesting hearing and hopefully they let the general public attend. Anyone can message me if they want to meet up at the courthouse to attend. It's at 4pm. I'm going to call Monday morning to see if if the public can go. JMO
 
That's a shame because the other side of the coin is, Bryce would have been caught on camera and probably wouldn't have done this (at least to Melissa) if he knew he was on camera. As I said in another post, all us homeowners have Ring cameras, and yes of course we probably have creeps watching everyone, but we also have a deterrent to crimes.
The issue with the indoor cameras facing into neighbors open door is a privacy issue and valid in my opinion. Sort of like placing one in a bathroom. Recording into someones home with the possibility of it being posted on the internet is a concern. Filming and recording in a common area is one thing but when they are focused inside a private home makes most people uncomfortable.

Just to add our building is secured and have to buzz in so not a lot of strangers unless door dash or UPS and there are records of that.
 
Looks like his license is still active and set to expire early next year.

View attachment 531016

They'll suspend permanently soon after the trial when he's found guilty. Even though the trial might not happen before the expiration date, they'll change the record to reflect permanent suspension and not expired after any guilty verdict so he'll never get the chance to be a nurse again. JMO
 
A spokesperson for Providence confirmed to KOIN 6 News that Schubert had been “briefly employed” as a Providence Portland Medical Center nurse from September 2022 to October 2023. It’s unclear what led to his leaving the hospital system in October 2023.


I assume this is the residency you described, thank you for this information. Is it typical after completion for nurses to move on to a permanent position, or do they hire on at PPMC?

Sort of odd that no other employment has been mentioned. But I guess you wouldn’t want that kind of publicity. Alternatively maybe he hadn’t worked since October?
Preface to say, I don’t know if he did a residency or new grad program for sure. <modsnip: rumor>
I would say that if what he did was the new grad program or nurse residency program at Prov Portland, the goal for some people could be to find a job within the same hospital system but it’s also not unheard of to leave—especially if something more in line with what you want to do in the nursing field presents itself. There are several big hospital/healthcare systems in the area and if he left to work at one of those once that experience was under his belt, it would not be out of the ordinary.
From a financial perspective, does the hospital system want to retain someone they just put lots of money in to train as a new grad? 100%. Healthcare systems put a lot of money into nursing professional development but we don’t know what his career interests are or if they had vacancies for the specialty or area he was most interested in.
 
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Looks like his license is still active and set to expire early next year.

View attachment 531016

Ok so something about OR nursing licenses…I will post Per the Oregon Nursing board website:
“Oregon nursing licenses last two years before you must apply for renewal. RNs must renew their licenses by midnight the day before your birthday in even-numbered years for those of you born in even-numbered years, and in odd-numbered years for nurses born in odd-numbered years.”
 
Preface to say, I don’t know if he did a residency or new grad program for sure. <modsnip: rumor>
I would say that if what he did was the new grad program or nurse residency program at Prov Portland, the goal for some people could be to find a job within the same hospital system but it’s also not unheard of to leave—especially if something more in line with what you want to do in the nursing field presents itself. There are several big hospital/healthcare systems in the area and if he left to work at one of those once that experience was under his belt, it would not be out of the ordinary.
From a financial perspective, does the hospital system want to retain someone they just put lots of money in to train as a new grad? 100%. Healthcare systems put a lot of money into nursing professional development but we don’t know what his career interests are or if they had vacancies for the specialty or area he was most interested in.
The Portland area has an abundance of health care systems and hospitals for employment and patient care, thank goodness for that
 
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What we don’t know if he took her to the apartment, or maybe assaulted in the park when she was walking the dog, for example. Seems that he caught her unaware when she was leaving, but I am not sure. Alternatively, she could have run out for a second - if they were normal neighbors, like I once used to have, to borrow milk for coffee or such. Any normal request could have been enough if she caught him in the wrong mindset.

she has a dog??
 
she has a dog??
Yes, it has been reported she does.

“It’s definitely not like her. And she has her, her dog. So I know that she wouldn’t want to leave her dog for so long. So that was like her little baby,” Oregon said. “It’s been very difficult for everyone that knew her and how great of person she is,”
Link to KOIN 6 article that mentions her dog.
 

Police warn of ‘nefarious’ fundraising against Melissa Jubane’s family​

Beaverton police are alerting the public after fraudulent fundraising accounts claiming to support the family of Melissa Jubane were discovered on Thursday.

“The Beaverton Police Department is being made aware of fraudulent/nefarious fundraising accounts for Melissa Jubane’s Family,” a Beaverton police spokesperson said in a statement.

https://www.koin.com/local/washington-county/beaverton-police-melissa-jubane-family--fundraising/


How disgusting…
 
Preface to say, I don’t know if he did a residency or new grad program for sure. <modsnip: rumor>
I would say that if what he did was the new grad program or nurse residency program at Prov Portland, the goal for some people could be to find a job within the same hospital system but it’s also not unheard of to leave—especially if something more in line with what you want to do in the nursing field presents itself. There are several big hospital/healthcare systems in the area and if he left to work at one of those once that experience was under his belt, it would not be out of the ordinary.
From a financial perspective, does the hospital system want to retain someone they just put lots of money in to train as a new grad? 100%. Healthcare systems put a lot of money into nursing professional development but we don’t know what his career interests are or if they had vacancies for the specialty or area he was most interested in.
Thank you for answering my questions. I'm so very curious to know if he was/was not offered a job and also if/where he worked between November 2023 and now.
 
To give you an idea, you have to graduate before you can take the NCLEX exam. You can’t sign up for the nurse exam until you’ve graduated from school and the school sends your transcripts and paperwork. People often want to take a month or even more to study for the exam after graduation. For ex, the yr I graduated the month was July and took the test in Sept. But everyone is different in how long they want to study.
Public records state he graduated OHSU in 2022 (June?) Then, board nursing public records show he got license on 9/1/22 and per Oregonian article: “That same month he was hired as a nurse at the Providence Portland Medical Center, where he worked until October 2023.” There are lots of new grad programs and Prov has a nurse residency program that is a yr long (source: Providence Nursing Institute: RN Residency & Fellowship Program).
you can apply, interview and be offered the job but must have the license before you start. so really you can line things up for yourself to start pending you passing your test

Source: me a nurse for 16 yrs
Thank you so much for the information.

I now have another question. Oregon nursing license numbers seem to start with the first year they were issued. For example, BS has the license number 2022xxxxxRN and MJ's license is 2018xxxxxRN. I've redacted the middle numbers but they are trivially found online in public records.

Would there be any significance if a person's license had the format 1001xxx0? Note that it does not begin with the year issued and does not end in RN. Could it potentially be a temporary license or something? The state record indicates this person is an RN and was originally licensed in 2023.

Edit: I think I found the answer. It appears the state changed the numbering system in 2023 and all new licenses follow the 100xxxx0 format.
 
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