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Friday, 10 October 2008
When Anti-Terrorist Officials Are At Their Silliest
Topic: Law & Order

Anti-war nuns branded as ‘terrorists.’

 

Sisters Carol Gilbert and Ardeth Platte have been “secretly branded by Maryland State Police as terrorists and placed on a national watch list” due to their participation in anti-war protest activities. They were added to the list after Maryland state police spied on them.

 

The nuns said they were not involved in the protests that state police say they targeted. “The spying occurred during the administration of Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., a Republican.”

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Friday, 10 October 2008 10:18 AM PDT
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Friday, 29 February 2008
Surviving Incarceration in Washington State: Who are those unfamiliar faces in our midst?
Now Playing: Noemie Maxwell, Contributing Editor, Washblog.com & Nicole Brummitt
Topic: Law & Order

Quite often, in the course of my full time job, I encounter the families of someone incarcerated in the state prison system - the spouse and children.

These are those facing possibly - in a sense - becoming TANF/Welfare wards of the state as part of the overall consequence of crimes committed by the absent parent.

One of my co-editors at Washblog.com, Noemie Maxwell , has been researching and writing extensively about the impact of formal incarceration on families oof the sentenced as well as the community.  Prohibited by law and policy from writing anything about specific persons, nevertheless I am able to declare collaterally that Noemie's pieces are accurate and timely.

We may  understand how in a general way society and the community end up paying for crimes and consequences. But Noemie has gone beyond that, effectively bringing to our attention specifics regarding the collateral damages inflicted on the families of those incarcerated and on ourselves as citizens. After all, we are they who have civically have authorized the means and manner of our state incarceration system.

At the bottom of this piece I have posted links to the results of Noemie's research.  

The New England Journal of Medicine has published a disturbing report about released prisoners in our state. Details in the following piece:

 

Medical News Today

Newly Released Prisoners At High Risk Of Death

Inmates from Washington state prisons in the US are 13 times more likely to die within the first two weeks of their release than other people of similar age, sex and race. The most likely cause of death at this vulnerable period of a former inmate's life is drug overdose, followed by suicide, heart disease, and homicide.

This research is published in the latest edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study was led by Dr. Ingrid Binswanger of the Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado at Denver, and the team included Dr. Marc Stern of the Washington State Department of Corrections, and other scientists from Seattle.

The scientists conducted a retrospective cohort study on 30,237 former inmates who left prison in the period July 1999 to December 2003. They used data from prison records and linked it to the National Death Index. They compared the figures with those on Washington State residents, using data from the large epidemiological databases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The results showed that 443 of the former inmates had died during a mean follow-up period of 1.9 years after release, equivalent to an overall mortality rate of 777 deaths per 100,000 person-years. This yielded an adjusted risk of death of 3.5 times higher than that of state residents of similar age, race and sex. This risk rose to 12.7 times for the first 2 weeks of release, with drug overdose being markedly significant as the main risk of death during this period.

The researchers suggest that the reasons for the high death rates could be linked with an existing mental illness coupled with the stress of adapting to a life in society ("re-entry stress").

Dr. Binswanger says that if these results are replicated in other states, the implications would be "staggering". She suggests this may well point to a need for boosting support for former inmates while they adapt to life outside prison, for example by increasing availability of half-way houses and drug rehabilitation.

The study was prompted by a concern for the large and growing number of former prisoners in the US population and the recognition that the period following release may present them with substantial health risks.

According to the Commission on Safety and Abuse in America's Prisons (CSAAP), on any given day there are 2.2 million people in prison in the US (about 1 in 140 of the population), at an annual cost of 60 billion dollars a year.

"Release from Prison - A High Risk of Death for Former Inmates."
Ingrid A. Binswanger, M.D., Marc F. Stern, M.D., Richard A. Deyo, M.D., Patrick J. Heagerty, Ph.D., Allen Cheadle, Ph.D., Joann G. Elmore, M.D., and Thomas D. Koepsell, M.D.
NEJM Volume 356:157-165, January 11, 2007, Number 2

The author of the article that follows is Nicole Brummitt, who has been very effective in bringing this matter to the attention of the public and the state legislature.

HB 2688: Everywhere you look you see us: families of men and women in prison 

By Nicole Brummitt 

Everywhere you look you see us, you just don't know it. We are the families of a man or woman who is in prison. Our children are the ones we are fighting to protect with House Bill 2688, which would prevent the transfers of incarcerated parents of young children to out-of-state prisons (see recent Washblog story).

We go into a prison every weekend to see Dad and to start the healing process for our hurting family. Many people look at a prison as an awful place to go, but we look at it as the only place where we can be a complete family. These children are learning while they are visiting with their Dad that they cannot make the wrong decisions without having to pay for them, that they will be loved no matter what, and that family is more important than anything. Then, with little or no warning Dad gets transferred to a private prison that is in a different state.

The primary care givers of these children are basically single mothers, grandparents, aunts and uncles, or other family members that take these children to see their Dad. These are families who are struggling to put food on the table and clothes on the backs of these children, and fighting the statistics that say these children are five (5) to seven (7) times more likely to go to prison than children who do not have a parent who has been involved in the criminal justice system. (1)  It is estimated that up to half of all male children of incarcerated parents will go on to commit crimes themselves. (2)

Imaging waking up everyday knowing that you are having to fight that battle to keep your child from being on the losing side of that battle.  Contact with the parent who is in prison helps to lower these statistics; it also helps to lower the risk that these individuals will be released just to commit a new crime. Currently, from the statistics the Department of Corrections cites, there are around 18,000 men and women in prison in Washington state; 82 % of them have 1.92 children. If we continue to disrupt families imagine the implications for our future. The crime rate will be drastically increased, resulting in a bigger prison population, more taxpayer money spent, and more hurting families.

 

The original version of House Bill 2688, was a glimmer of hope for families that have to wonder every day when and if Dad will be transferred and for those of us that have already had Dad transferred that the Legislature was really hearing us and seeing that we are in need of their help.  The substitute bill that has been passed through the House Human Services Committee is continuing to give the power to the Department of Corrections, an entity that has proven over and over again that they will not think twice about tearing families apart and hurting our children.

 

As the Mother in a family that was separated by the transfers of men to out-of-state prisons I am outraged by the lack of concern for the children that are in need of guidance and love from their Dads. I have heard nothing but excuses since April for why it was necessary for my children's Dad to be sent to Arizona. What I haven't heard is that anyone is willing to pay for or take responsibility for the trauma this is causing my children. Their Dad is paying for his decisions. Why are we holding him accountable but not holding the DOC accountable for the decisions they are making?

 


NOTES

  1. Bilchik, S., Seymour, C., & Kreisher, K. (2001). Parents in Prison. Corrections Today,  63, 7, 108-112.  Cited in Children of Incarcerated Parents, Council on Crime and Justice, 1/2006
  2. LEFT BEHIND: Tens of thousands of children have a parent behind bars. What are the social costs of their loss?, Nell Bernstein, Mother Jones, July 10, 2001

On June 8 2006, after a year-long inquiry, the Commission on Safety and Abuse in America's Prisons released Confronting Confinement, a report of the Commission's findings and recommendations.
Read about and download the report.

 

Noemie Maxwell writings on this topic:

The Pew Center says in a report released today that the 50 states spent more than $49 billion on corrections last year, up from less than $11 billion 20 years earlier. The rate of increase for prison costs was six times greater than for higher education spending.  Here's the link:  Record High Ratio of Americans in Prison. And here are some stories from Washington State:

  1. 3-Strikes Action
  2. What's Wrong with Washington's Gang Bill?, 2/26/08
  3. $3.3 billion company profits from the pain of incarcerated Washingtonians and their families, by Nicole Brummitt, 2/25/08
  4. Everywhere you look you see us: Families of men and women in prison, by Nicole Brummitt, 2/3/08
  5. We cannot build prisons fast enough: WA Dept of Corrections on prison transfers, NM, 1/30/08
  6. Imprisoned for life in WA for an attempted wallet grab, by Al-Kareem Shadeed, 1/15/08
  7. An effort to get politicians focused on needed sentencing reforms, Douglas A. Berman, Sentencing Law and Policy, 1/13/08
  8. To Those Who Have Shown Notice to Cruel and Unconstitutional Laws in Washington State, by Joseph Scott Wharton, 1/1/08
  9. Guest post from WA State Reformatory: These crimes do not merit life imprisonment, by Stevan Dozier, 12/30/07
  10. INTRODUCE THIS! Submitting Resolutions at WA's Presidential Caucuses (3-Strikes Reform), NM, 12/30/07
  11. Life in prison without parole for low-violence crimes: can Washington find redemption?, NM, 12/11/07
  12. SJR 8212 and the Prison Slave Plantation: Dismantling the Profit Motive for Incarceration, by Lea Zengage, 10/20/07
  13. The time is now to end the war on drugs, NM, 5/28/07

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Willapa Magazine  has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:57 AM PST
Updated: Friday, 29 February 2008 11:36 AM PST
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Monday, 21 January 2008
The Northwest Justic Project
Now Playing: legal aid programs and self-help materials
Topic: Law & Order

NJP has opened an office in Aberdeen and includes Pac County in their catchment area.  Their senior attorney comes to the Pacific County partner meetings held monthly in Raymond. 

And I'm excited that they are more available locally. Click here to read what I learned from NJP this month: FEMA: Friend or Foe?

 

The Northwest Justice Project (NJP) is a not-for-profit statewide organization that provides free civil legal services to low-income people from thirteen offices and two satellite locations throughout the state of Washington. Each year, NJP assists more than 18,000 people in need of critical legal assistance. Clients in need of interpreter services in order to access legal services through NJP are entitled to those services.

As the Legal Services Corporation funded program in the Washington State Alliance for Equal Justice, NJP's mission is to provide high quality free legal services on priority problems to eligible low-income clients, either directly or through efficient and effective referrals. Read NJP's Guiding Principles to learn more about our organization's philosophy. NJP is principally funded by Congress through the national Legal Services Corporation (LSC). NJP works in partnership with the Washington State Alliance for Equal Justice to serve its diverse client community. Clients in need of interpreter services in order to access legal services through NJP are entitled to those services.

In addition to providing direct legal services to clients, NJP has become a pioneer in integrating new technologies into the delivery of legal services. NJP operates a toll free intake and referral system called CLEAR (Coordinated Legal Education Advice and Referral), which serves as a critical point of access for clients throughout the state to obtain free legal help, including advice, brief legal service, and, where available, a referral for further representation. In addition, CLEAR maintains an extensive library of legal resources and self-help materials which are provided to callers as appropriate.

NJP has a proven track record in working to provide access to our civil justice system. Seventy-five percent of all the work completed by NJP involves cases that threaten family safety and security, including domestic violence, child custody rights and child support, and cases relating to housing issues such as foreclosures and unlawful evictions.

NJP is committed to a policy of equal opportunity. It strives to foster an environment free of barriers and discriminatory practices for its clients, Board and staff. NJP actively promotes mutual respect, acceptance, teamwork and productivity. An organization whose staff, Board and clients are diverse in background, experience, race, color, national origin, gender, age, religious preference, marital status, sexual orientation, sensory, mental or physical abilities, veteran status, and other qualities strengthens the program while reinforcing its commitment to basic fairness.

Keeping the Promise of Justice

Those who are interested in meeting some NJP staffers and learning more about their work - including the operation of the statewide, toll-free telephone service component (C.L.E.A.R.) - are invited to view our 12-minute video presentation: Keeping The Promise Of Justice.

 

 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 4:35 PM PST
Updated: Monday, 21 January 2008 4:39 PM PST
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Wednesday, 20 June 2007
Barney Fife "law-and-orders" the biker.
Topic: Law & Order
These bicycle-riding domestic terrorists wouldn't get any mercy in Bay Center. Why, we'd bundle them up but wouldn't need no dang taser. Just tie em down and toss em into a bed of man-eating oysters. That's how we rid ourselves of external threats to our homeland security.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Photo viawww.sitcomsonline.com  

Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:22 AM PDT
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Sunday, 17 June 2007
Crime Wave ... the one closest to h ome.
Now Playing: Russell Mokhiber, editor of Corporate Crime Reporter
Topic: Law & Order

The corporation which is defined as a non-human but nevertheless identifiable entity allowed to conduct business in this country is allowed to be consciousless - in fact sociopathically consciousless.  Like all entities, the coporation has a gratification that serves as its reason for being. In this case the reason for being is the bottom line - which must generate a profit regardless of how and the impact on the environment.

A corporation without a bottom-line profit is seriously and perennially in danger of exctinction when business rules the country and the marketplace is where the citizenship worships. It will not go without a fight that brooks no taking of prisoners ... a no-quarter fight. 

 

[Excerpts only] from the  Mokhiber article at Alternet  Click on the link to read the entire speech online.

The following is text from a speech delivered by Russell Mokhiber, editor of Corporate Crime Reporter to the Taming the Giant Corporation conference in Washington, D.C., June 9, 2007.

20. Corporate crime inflicts far more damage on society than all street crime combined.

Whether in bodies or injuries or dollars lost, corporate crime and violence wins by a landslide.

The FBI estimates, for example, that burglary and robbery -- street crimes -- costs the nation $3.8 billion a year.

The losses from a handful of major corporate frauds -- Tyco, Adelphia, Worldcom, Enron -- swamp the losses from all street robberies and burglaries combined.

Health care fraud alone costs Americans $100 billion to $400 billion a year.

19. Corporate crime is often violent crime.

...  but you can’t compare street crime and corporate crime -- corporate crime is not violent crime.

Not true.

Corporate crime is often violent crime.

The FBI estimates that, 16,000 Americans are murdered every year.

Compare this to the 56,000 Americans who die every year on the job or from occupational diseases such as black lung and asbestosis and the tens of thousands of other Americans who fall victim to the silent violence of pollution, contaminated foods, hazardous consumer products, and hospital malpractice.

These deaths are often the result of criminal recklessness. Yet, they are rarely prosecuted as homicides or as criminal violations of federal laws.

18. Corporate criminals are the only criminal class in the United States that have the power to define the laws under which they live.

The mafia, no.

The gangstas, no.

The street thugs, no.

... Exhibit A -- the automobile industry.

Over the past 30 years, the industry has worked its will on Congress to block legislation that would impose criminal sanctions on knowing and willful violations of the federal auto safety laws. Today, with very narrow exceptions, if an auto company is caught violating the law, only a civil fine is imposed.

17. Corporate crime is underprosecuted by a factor of say -- 100. And the flip side of that -- corporate crime prosecutors are underfunded by a factor of say -- 100.

Big companies that are criminally prosecuted represent only the tip of a very large iceberg of corporate wrongdoing.

... white collar crime defense attorneys regularly admit that if more prosecutors had more resources, the number of corporate crime prosecutions would increase dramatically. A large number of serious corporate and white collar crime cases are now left on the table for lack of resources.


16. Beware of consumer groups or other public interest groups who make nice with corporations.

There are now probably more fake public interest groups than actual ones in America today.

11. In health fraud cases, find an empty closet or defunct entity to plead guilty.

The government has a mandatory exclusion rule for health care corporations that are convicted of ripping off Medicare.

Such an exclusion is the equivalent of the death penalty. If a major drug company can’t do business with Medicare, it loses a big chunk of its business. There have been many criminal prosecutions of major health care corporations for ripping off Medicare. And many of these companies have pled guilty. But not one major health care company has been excluded from Medicare.

Why not?

Because when you read in the newspaper that a major health care company pled guilty, it’s not the parent company that pleads guilty. The prosecutor will allow a unit of the corporation that has no assets -- or even a defunct entity -- to plead guilty.

9. Corporate criminals don’t like to be charged with homicide.

Street murders occur every day in America. And they are prosecuted every day in America. Corporate homicides occur every day in America. But they are rarely prosecuted.

The last homicide prosecution brought against a major American corporation was in 1980, when a Republican Indiana prosecutor charged Ford Motor Co. with homicide for the deaths of three teenaged girls who died when their Ford Pinto caught on fire after being rear-ended in northern Indiana.

The prosecutor alleged that Ford knew that it was marketing a defective product, with a gas tank that crushed when rear ended, spilling fuel.

In the Indiana case, the girls were incinerated to death.

But Ford brought in a hot shot criminal defense lawyer who in turn hired the best friend of the judge as local counsel, and who, as a result, secured a not guilty verdict after persuading the judge to keep key evidence out of the jury room.

It’s time to crank up the corporate homicide prosecutions.

5. The market doesn’t take most modern corporate criminal prosecutions seriously.

Almost universally, when a corporate crime case is settled, the stock of the company involved goes up.

Why? Because a cloud has been cleared and there is no serious consequence to the company. No structural changes in how the company does business. No monitor. No probation. Preserving corporate reputation is the name of the game.

3. We must start asking -- which side are you on -- with the corporate criminals or against?

Most professionals in Washington work for, are paid by, or are under the control of the corporate crime lobby. Young lawyers come to town, fresh out of law school, 25 years old, and their starting salary is $160,000 a year. And they’re working for the corporate criminals.

Young lawyers graduating from the top law schools have all kinds of excuses for working for the corporate criminals -- huge debt, just going to stay a couple of years for the experience.

But the reality is, they are working for the corporate criminals.

What kind of respect should we give them? Especially since they have many options other than working for the corporate criminals.

2. We need a 911 number for the American people to dial to report corporate crime and violence.


If you want to report street crime and violence, call 911.

But what number do you call if you want to report corporate crime and violence?

We propose 611.

Call 611 to report corporate crime and violence.

We need a national number where people can pick up the phone and report the corporate criminals in our midst.

What triggered this thought?

We attended the press conference at the Justice Department the other day announcing the indictment of Congressman William Jefferson (D-Louisiana).

Jefferson was the first U.S. official charged with violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Federal officials alleged that Jefferson was both on the giving and receiving ends of bribe payments.

On the receiving end, he took $100,000 in cash -- $90,000 of it was stuffed into his freezer in Washington, D.C.

The $90,000 was separated in $10,000 increments, wrapped in aluminum foil, and concealed inside various frozen food containers.

At the press conference announcing the indictment, after various federal officials made their case before the cameras, up to the mike came Joe Persichini, assistant director of the Washington field office of the FBI.

"To the American people, I ask you, take time," Persichini said. "Read this charging document line by line, scheme by scheme, count by count. This case is about greed, power and arrogance."

"Everyone is entitled to honest and ethical public service," Persichini continued. "We as leaders standing here today cannot do it alone. We need the public’s help. The amount of corruption is dependent on what the public with allow.

Again, the amount of corruption is dependent on what the public will allow."

“"f you have knowledge of, if you’ve been confronted with or you are participating, I ask that you contact your local FBI office or you call the Washington Field Office of the FBI at 202.278.2000. Thank you very much."

Shorten the number -- make it 611.

1. And the number one thing you should know about corporate crime?

Everyone is deserving of justice. So, question, debate, strategize, yes.

But if God-forbid you too are victimized by a corporate criminal, you too will demand justice.

We need a more beefed up, more effective justice system to deal with the corporate criminals in our midst.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:46 AM PDT
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Monday, 21 May 2007
Until recently, just about anybody could operate a loan office in Washington.
Now Playing: Loan Officer State Licensing
Topic: Law & Order

What would be interesting would be to see whether all the payday loan outfits have loan officers and what their licensing stats look like.

Excerpt: 

Read entire article online at the P-I 

Licensing process thins loan officer ranks as past crimes come to light

 

By PHUONG CAT LE
P-I REPORTER

One loan officer had a conviction for possessing stolen property.

Another had his securities license revoked for unethical practices that resulted in two elderly women losing about $374,000.

Yet another loan officer had been convicted of extortion.

Until recently, just about anybody could operate a loan office in Washington.

But after the state required loan officers to become licensed this year, its growing rejection list has come to resemble a criminal court docket.

The state has barred three dozen loan officers from doing business here, mostly because they didn't pass a state and federal criminal background check. Another 78 applicants likely will be denied, but administrative orders hadn't been issued in those cases.

Loan officers who have been convicted of a felony or a gross misdemeanor involving dishonesty within the past seven years can't practice in the state. Neither can those who have more than $100,000 in liens or too many complaints against them.

The number of rejections is a fraction of the 13,000 or so loan officers who have applied to be licensed, but regulators and backers of the law say the new requirements will help weed out the industry's few bad actors and reduce mortgage fraud and predatory lending practices.

"The law is giving us the ability to get people out of the business who didn't deserve to be there in the first place," said Deb Bortner, director of the consumer services division of the state Department of Financial Institutions. "It's one more tool to weed out the bad guys in the mortgage industry."

ONLINE

To find out if a business or individual has been licensed by the Washington State Department of Financial Institutions, visit https://fortress.wa.gov/dfi/licquery/dfi/licquery/default.aspx.

P-I reporter Phuong Cat Le can be reached at 206-448-8390 or phuongle@seattlepi.com.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:39 AM PDT
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Sunday, 20 May 2007
"He was just shooting at anybody he could,"
Topic: Law & Order

Officer Dies After Idaho Shootings

Via Huffingtonpost.com 

 

MOSCOW, Idaho — A sniper sprayed dozens of bullets on a courthouse in an attack that left one dead and two wounded, then hid in a nearby church for several hours before police stormed in Sunday and found his body and another man's inside, police said.

The shooting began late Saturday, fatally wounding one officer and injuring another and a civilian, said David Duke, Moscow's assistant police chief. Duke said the attack was apparently an ambush, with the gunman firing into the Latah County Courthouse to lure people into his line of fire.

Around 6 a.m., three SWAT teams entered the First Presbyterian Church and found the two bodies on the main floor but not in the same room, Duke said. An automatic assault rifle, ammunition and spent shells were found with one of the men, he said.

The shooter died of what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, Duke said. His body was found in the church sanctuary, and the body of another man was found in the church office. Authorities did not release either man's name.

 

Duke identified the slain officer as Lee Newbill, who had served with the Moscow Police Department since March 2001 and was the first city officer ever killed in the line of duty. He had died by the time he arrived at a local hospital, Duke said.

The wounded officer, Latah County Sheriff's Deputy Brannon Jordon, was in serious condition with multiple gunshot wounds, Duke said.

Authorities did not release the name of the injured civilian, but said he lived in the neighborhood and had gone outside after hearing the gunshots. The man was undergoing surgery and was in stable condition.

Police had no information about the gunman's motive, Duke said.

 

Police cars from the regional SWAT team are parked on Main Street in Moscow, Idaho, about a block from the town's police station on Sunday, May 20, 2007.

Photograph by : GEOFF CRIMMINS/AP

 

Police said the gunman started shooting from a parking lot across from the Latah County Courthouse shortly after 11 p.m. Saturday. A hail of more than 30 bullets ripped through the county's emergency dispatch center, Duke said. Dispatchers were moved to a room in the jail area of the courthouse. Officers rushed out of the building.

"Whoever the shooter is wanted to draw people to the courthouse," Duke said. "When officers responded, he did open fire on them."

None of the officers who responded returned fire, Duke said.

Newbill was the first officer at the scene of the shooting and was hit around 11:35 p.m. Saturday. Jordon, a 17-year veteran, was shot shortly after midnight as he tried to seek cover behind a tree after pulling Newbill out of the line of fire, Duke said.

The civilian was shot later, Duke said.

"He was just shooting at anybody he could," Duke said.

Four empty magazines were found outside the church. Duke initially estimated that 75 shots were fired, but later said it was not clear exactly how many shots the gunman fired.

Officers surrounded the church, which is across the street from the courthouse and nestled in a residential neighborhood near downtown and Moscow High School. A final shot was heard from inside the church about 1 a.m. Sunday, Duke said.

Streets in the area had been barricaded and residents had been told to stay inside their homes. Many residents told news media that they heard the spray of bullets, and some said they witnessed the shooting of the officers.

Moscow, a community of about 20,000 people that is home to the University of Idaho, is located 80 miles south of Spokane, Wash.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:58 PM PDT
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Saturday, 28 April 2007
Pacific County charges teacher
Now Playing: Destroying trust in our teachers
Topic: Law & Order

Pacific County charges teacher

Published April 24, 2007
Jeremy Pawloski

[Excerpt] To read the complete article click here-> The Olympian

The Pacific County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office has filed a charge of second-degree sexual misconduct with a minor against Tenino High School teacher Dawn Marie Welter for allegedly spending the night with a 16-year-old female student at a hotel in South Bend.


Welter, who is on paid leave from Tenino High, also faces felony criminal charges in Lewis County for allegedly sending e-mails, including a sexually explicit message, to the girl. Welter, 38, faces three felony charges of communicating with a minor for immoral purposes for three e-mails she sent the student, including one reportedly sexually explicit e-mail describing a night the two spent together in Pacific County.

Legal age

A 16-year-old is at the legal age of consent in Washington. However, Welter’s charge of second-degree sexual misconduct with a minor applies to a school employee who is accused of sexual contact with a student at the same school who is at least five years younger than the school employee.

The count of second-degree sexual misconduct with a minor is a gross misdemeanor carrying a maximum potential penalty of one year in jail and a $5,000 fine.



Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:04 PM PDT
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Sunday, 8 April 2007
Law & Order, South Bend, Mexico, Patience and Extradition
Now Playing: I remember when that happened!
Topic: Law & Order
Published in PI Friday: Fugitive's capture turned into mission. For 13 years, accused drug kingpin eluded the law -- until last week

I printed the article and passed out 5-6 copies around our small office which houses DSHS, CPS and Work Source (Employment Security). I'll post article excerpts and what locals had to say about this local moment of excitement 13 years ago.

I took this picture last year from out the back door at my DSHS office in South Bend.

About 50 yards from that door the Willapa River flows from my right westward to Willapa Bay, less than 3 miles away.

Almost in the center of the photo on the river's left bank you can see the large bright roof of what is now South Bend Packers, a seafood processor.

That's the "fishhouse with no ice" mendtioned in the story.

[Excerpts] and my comments.

Friday, April 6, 2007
By COLIN McDONALD
P-I REPORTER

He was the most prolific hashish smuggler the Northwest has ever seen, say U.S. marshals and federal investigators.

For years, they say, Jeffery Jay Warren orchestrated the rapid movement of the drug from Southeast Asia by ocean freighters, a fleet of Willapa Bay "fishing" boats and trucks. Tons of the illicit cargo were hauled through Washington en route to East Coast and Canadian markets.

... A coast-to-coast bust in 1994 nailed most of Warren's operatives -- but he managed to elude capture. Since then, a copy of Warren's wanted poster slowly yellowed on the bulletin board in the Marshals Service's Seattle office.

... His pursuers chased down tantalizing rumors of the kingpin's whereabouts: his favorite haunts, the luxury resort towns in coastal Mexico where he was reputed to be taking residence. The trail led investigators across the globe. There was evidence that Warren had been traveling extensively in South America and Europe. He apparently liked being near the ocean and in warm climates.

... He's now sitting in a jail cell in Mexico City facing extradition to the U.S. -- and a possible life sentence.

... When the indictment was handed down in 1994, 16 people -- including Warren -- were charged in connection with the drug-smuggling ring.

Two years earlier, federal agents had estimated the ring had moved 40 tons of hashish through the fishing port of South Bend in southwest Washington. The estimated wholesale value: $120 million.

... "These guys had been dumping big loads for at least four years," Lanier said.

He called them "old hippies," now in their mid- to late-50s, who had been smuggling marijuana and hashish into the country since the 1970s.

But the smugglers had their act together. Using fishing boats and an old fishing dock and warehouse at the head of Willapa Bay as a false front, Warren's team of ship captains, deckhands, truck drivers and radio operators moved the drugs from ocean freighters sitting hundreds of miles off the coast to waiting semis. Within a week, the drugs would be in New York.

Everyone I spoke to who lived in the area at that time remembers this big drug bust. Several chuckled when they said that the local police had no clue what was going on because the tight-lipped Feds weren't telling nobody nothing.

Others however thought that locally there was some other problem where the county knew what was up but didn't tell the city of South Bend or something like that. Either way, it doesn't seem to have been much the local's show.

 

Locals thought the fishhouse with no ice was odd but didn't ask many questions. The strangers paid for the equipment and service with crisp $100 bills.

That fishhouse is not much more than 1/4 mile from my office and I've been walking to it as part of the exercise regimen I use during my breaks now for a couple of months.

A co-worker said that as a teenage she went walking in the evening with her mother and sister past that ice-less fishhouse every night and they thought it was not only strange with no ice, but also strangely mysterious in that lighting was either absence or seriously restricted for a warehouse doing late-night and early-morning fishing operations.

She also remembered learning that there was a house up on the hill above the riverbank that was always dark but from which the crooks had been keeping lookout with with binoculars  while watching for Coast Guard vessels and law enforcement.

 

"The (fishing) market was bad and anyone who came in and wanted to make a go of it got treated real good," said Jerry Benning, retired Pacific County sheriff. In 1994, Benning was the local law enforcement contact for the federal agents who raided the warehouse.

"By the time we got there, there was nothing but empty sacks," Benning recalled.

Which makes more sense than a city police department totally kept in the dark about something like this. My own impression is that the locals had the more difficult local job in keeping a lid on the whole activity long enough for the Feds to make their move.

 

...Cash-filled suitcases

Speed and deception was at the core of Warren's operation.

His group could unload 45 tons of drugs in an evening and have it in and out of Washington in less then 12 hours, authorities say.

U.S. Highway 101 runs right through South Bend North-to-South. As it has always been, day or night, it is not surprising to see semi-trucks backing refrigerated trailers into one of several fishhouse docks or pulling out with them and heading off up the road.

 

The group would send out decoy fishing boats so the Coast Guard wouldn't know which boat to track, said Fran Dyer, a retired agent from the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, who started working on the Warren case in the early 1990s.

"They were very good fishermen, but there is a hell of a lot more money to be made in moving 50,000 pounds of hashish in one night than fishing," Dyer said.

There wasn't anything in the article that indicated how many, if any, of those originally arrested in the raid were locals to Pacific County. But as an alternative to the shrinking seafood markets that have continually gotten smaller and smaller, I can see a few easy recruits responding to another more lucrative way to put food on the table, keep the roof overhead and include perhaps some genuine excitement.

40 tons of hashish?

May it would have been like Pacific County's West Coast version of moonshine.

Maybe the feds should have used this to help out:


Grampus or Pike on the Willapa River, at Raymond, Washington, circa 1912.
The A class subs were fitted with a bow fairing to improve sea keeping, this can be seen by the dark shadow area forward of the conning tower.
Both submarines were placed in reserve in 1912 at Bremerton. This photo was probably taken on the trip up the coast to Bremerton. The stern of the USS Chattanooga can be seen in front of the sub.

Photo provided by Steve Hubbard of the Pacific County Historical Society , Washington State

From Through the looking glass: a photo essay of submarines 1900-1940


Posted SwanDeer Project at 1:33 PM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 8 April 2007 1:35 PM PDT
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Arthur and Lietta Ruger, Bay Center, Willapa Bay in Pacific County Washington

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