After allegations came out that Bethany Sherman of OG Analytical is involved with white supremacist groups, Sherman told several news outlets that she was stepping down from her CEO position at the company and said she would sell the business. But sources inside the company say she instead fired all the employees and may not be resigning at all.
An ex-employee of OG Analytical who wishes to remain anonymous for her own safety says she and the entire staff were fired on Wednesday, Dec. 6 after a confrontation at the office. “We all met,” the source says. “It sounded like she was going to step down, she sent out a text that she was going to resign.”
But when Sherman arrived at the office to sign over operations to another employee, the ex-employee says “She was screaming emotionally out of control, I was talking firmly that she had put us all in danger and buried herself with what she sent to The Oregonian.” This account was corroborated in an Oregonian interview with Rodger Voelker of OG Analytical.
That recent Oregonian article quoted Sherman saying, “I admit, I am proud that I am white, and I’m not ashamed of my heritage,” though she says she’s not a part of any neo-Nazi organization. Her beliefs were made public after a Eugene Antifa and Rose City Antifa article was published tying Sherman and her partner to messages in a Discord chat group and to two Twitter accounts that espouse white nationalist beliefs.
Before these allegations came out, Sherman was seen by many in the cannabis community as a woman leader, but her personal beliefs did not match the façade, according to the ex-employee. “I mean she was showcasing as a feminist, but she’s not, she’s mad about the feminist movement.”
The ex-employee at OG Analytical says she was surprised by Sherman’s white supremacist views coming out, but now says she looks back and sees some signs. She says she is considering filing complaints about some of Sherman’s work practices with Oregon’s Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI).
The source says she’s afraid for her life after the confrontation on Wednesday. “They’re radicals, you can’t put anything past these guys,” she says. “I’m literally looking for an AR [-15] pointed at my head when I’m walking around.”
“I’m sure there’s more of her in our community than we’re aware of,” the ex-employee says. ““I’m just not feeling like I can trust anybody.”
Sherman did not respond to a request for comment by press time.
In response to the Sherman debacle, Christina Ketchum of GreenSea Distribution has pulled together a statement of nondiscrimination by Eugene and Portland area cannabis businesses to “ address the recent news our local cannabis industry has been presented with.”
A Note From the Publisher

Dear Readers,
The last two years have been some of the hardest in Eugene Weekly’s 43 years. There were moments when keeping the paper alive felt uncertain. And yet, here we are — still publishing, still investigating, still showing up every week.
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Listening to readers has always been at the heart of Eugene Weekly. This year, that meant launching our popular weekly Activist Alert column, after many of you told us there was no single, reliable place to find information about rallies, meetings and ways to get involved. You asked. We responded.
We’ve also continued to deepen the coverage that sets Eugene Weekly apart, including our in-depth reporting on local real estate development through Bricks & Mortar — digging into what’s being built, who’s behind it and how those decisions shape our community.
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None of this happens by accident. It happens because readers step up and say: this matters.
As we head into a new year, please consider supporting Eugene Weekly if you’re able. Every dollar helps keep us digging, questioning, celebrating — and yes, occasionally annoying exactly the right people. We consider that a public service.
Thank you for standing with us!

Publisher
Eugene Weekly
P.S. If you’d like to talk about supporting EW, I’d love to hear from you!
jody@eugeneweekly.com
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