A fourth amendment has been filed against Taylor's Bar & Grill, adding to the growing list of problems that have occurred at the popular college bar during the time the Oregon Liquor Control Commission has been evaluating its fate.

Oregon Liquor Control Commission spokesman Matt Van Sickle said Tuesday that it is too soon to know whether Saturday's early morning shooting in a University of Oregon parking lot behind Taylor's will be added to the list of serious incidents that have occurred at the bar or involved its customers. The shooting, which killed 21-year-old Lane Community College student Alex Oyombe Gradin, still is under investigation and no arrests have been made. It is not known if anyone involved in the shooting had been at Taylor's before it happened.

If it is determined to have involved Taylor's, however, the OLCC can add it to the list of 42 serious incidents that have occurred at the establishment in the past 22 months.

According to Eugene police call logs, officers have been called to Taylor's 472 times since Oct. 11, 2008. That's more than five times the amount police have been called in that same time period to Rennie's Landing, just one block away. The 85 calls to Rennie's, and the 472 calls to Taylor's vary to include disorderly conduct, theft, and assault.

"The shooting occurred in the UO faculty parking lot, and we have no details other than the details released by (the Eugene Police Department)," Taylor's owner Ramzy Hattar said. "There was a young man murdered in cold blood. Myself and everyone else want justice."

Taylor’s has been a traditional UO student hangout for years. Dating to 1922, it’s known for drawing crowds of students in the evenings, including after UO football games and other sporting events.

"In my opinion, the Eugene campus should be safe everywhere, there's no gangs here," said Spencer Wilson, a UO student who was at the Alpha Omega fraternity house Saturday when the shooting occurred. The fraternity shares a parking lot with the bar.

"I wouldn't say all of this is Taylor's fault necessarily, they're just trying to let people have a good time, I get that. But there needs to be at least security cameras in that ... parking lot. I don't understand, I have a parking lot at my house and I have a camera. Why can't we have two or three cameras out there? It's huge, dude."

Hattar purchased Taylor's nearly two years ago from Charles Hare and each of the 42 incidents has occurred since Hattar took over. In those 22 months, Hattar said he has made efforts with the help of Eugene, Portland and University of Oregon police departments, as well as the UO's dean of students to try to keep students safe. Those efforts include installing surveillance cameras that cover every corner of the building and charging a $40 cover to anyone without a UO ID.

The bar and restaurant’s liquor license expired June 30, 2018. Hattar applied to renew the license in May 2018, and while the OLCC worked to review his application, Taylor's received a temporary license to operate until OLCC’s process was complete.

But the renewal process led to the OLCC issuing a notice to cancel the bar's liquor license in August of last year, outlining 29 serious incidents that had occurred at the bar or involved its customers. Those incidents included fights, violence, druggings and sexual assaults. Since that time, four amendments to the notice have been filed, adding a total of 13 additional detailed incidents.

Both Eugene police and University of Oregon police declined to comment on how Taylor's impacts their calls for service.

The last documented incident occurred March 9 of this year, according to the latest amendment, which was filed last week. Some of the incidents led to the serious injury of patrons, including a fractured skull, a broken orbital bone and partial blindness and a dislodged front tooth, the OLCC notice states.

"Commission staff recommends that the commission cancel your license," the notice reads.

The bar still is operating on the temporary license while a hearing has been scheduled June 3 to June 7. The hearing is not open to the public. A decision will not be made at that hearing, however, and any outcome from the hearing will be decided at the public monthly commissioners meeting, June 20.

Meanwhile, the former owner of Taylor's, Charles Hare Enterprises, is being sued for $5 million by two women who allege they were sexually assaulted at Taylor's in 2017. The trial is scheduled for May of next year. And in 2016, a bartender was investigated for allegedly drugging six women at the location but no charges were filed.

Newly added incidents

The most recent incident involving Taylor's documented by the OLCC occurred just after 1 a.m. March 9. According to the amendment, Eugene police officers responded to Taylor's after having received a report than a man was inside the bar brandishing a firearm. Police spoke to the bar's security staff, which said a patron reported the same thing to them but the patron couldn't give a description of the armed man and was "mostly unintelligible."

Officers later identified the armed man and told him to leave the bar, the report states. As he left, he walked around the outside of the building and fired a single gunshot, police said. It is illegal to discharge a firearm within the city limits of Eugene. The man was arrested for unlawful possession of a firearm.

Just 90 minutes before that occurred, police were called to the bar for a report that a patron had been antagonizing and making obscene gestures toward black customers, because he didn't like a song that was being played. When security staff of the bar attempted to kick the man out, he became violent and had to be forcefully removed and held down until police arrived.

On Dec. 9, a woman told police she was "blackout drunk" at the bar and left with several other customers to go to an individual's house, where she was raped. The woman told police she woke up still intoxicated at the house of the individual having sex with her.

At 2:31 a.m. June 15, Eugene police were called to the scene of a single-vehicle crash on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in Eugene. The driver, Pedro Chavarin Jr., was taken to the hospital. He allegedly told police that he had no passengers with him. However, former University of Oregon football player Fotu Leiato, who is believed to be Chavarin's passenger, was found dead hours later near the crash scene by a passerby. According to the OLCC report, which does not identify the involved parties by name, Chavarin had a 0.20 percent blood alcohol content when he was tested at the hospital. The OLCC report states Chavarin left Taylor's at 2 a.m. after consuming alcohol, and stopped to pick up Leiato from another bar, prior to the crash. Chavarin is charged with second-degree manslaughter, driving under the influence of intoxicants and reckless driving. His trial is scheduled to begin in September.