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Police: Student, 13, falsely accused classmate of making threat In Our View: Cheers & Jeers: Safe Stay rethink tax plan (long term care tax)Ĭhris Spitters, Snohomish County’s chief health officer, to step downĬold-case murder conviction reversed due to juror’s bias In Our View: All I want for Christmas is improved media literacy Washington Ecology slows down on requiring water-rights for livestockĮconomist: High wheat prices unlikely to last Whatcom surpasses 17,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases during pandemic and sees another deathīiometrics help CBP stop woman allegedly attempting to illegally cross border into Whatcom Kreidler asks insurers for more information on credit scoresĪirsoft pistol found in Sehome High School student’s backpack, causing Friday’s lockout
#COLD CASE FILES OFFICER DOWN DRIVERS#
King County woman among first in state to test positive for Omicronīlack drivers disproportionately pulled over by WSP in King, Pierce counties The Franklin County commissioners weighed in last week, unanimously supporting a motion to have Prosecutor Shawn Sant fight the move. They say a combination of political influence, fear of retaliation and publicity will make it questionable whether they will get a fair hearing. Three Tri-Citians looking to change how Franklin County commissioners are elected want to take their case to the state capital. (Free Maddesyn George Goalition)Īttorneys seek to move Latino voting rights case from Pasco to Olympia, fearing bias “We finally felt heard and listened to and understood.” Continue reading at Crosscut. When Maddesyn George of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation stood in court to be sentenced last month, her attorney hoped for two things, but the most important was this: for his client to be heard and believed.“The judge expressed understanding for the plight of Indigenous women,” said Steve Graham, George’s attorney. (Damarius Butts’ family)Ĭolville mother’s conviction raises justice issues facing Native women
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But it has been postponed until the new year. The inquest into the 2017 killing by Seattle police officers of 19-year-old Damarius Butts - the first under a new system upheld this summer by the Washington Supreme Court - was scheduled to begin Dec. The first coroner’s inquest into a deadly shooting by police in King County under a new, greatly expanded process has stalled amid concerns by all involved - the officers, the families of those killed and city officials - over the transparency and integrity of the proceedings. New King County inquest process delayed amid concerns over ‘integrity’, transparency