Police are asking for the public’s help in searching for a missing and endangered man out of Seattle.According to the Seattle Police Department, Yukio was last seen using a walker near Meridian Avenue North and the Burke-Gilman Trail.
Yukio is a 5′8 Asian man, who was last seen wearing a blue US Open hat, a light blue long-sleeve shirt, and dark blue pants.
The Seattle Police Department (SPD) says that during an arrest in the University District, they found Crystal Meth, brass knuckles, knives, cash, and other drugs.
On Monday, officers say they saw a 33-year-old man pulling a bag of “crystallin powder” out of a backpack he was carrying on Brooklyn Avenue near NE 45th Street.
Then, the police say they witnessed a drug deal between the suspect and two other people.
The officers quickly arrested the suspect and found the drugs and weapons.
He was booked in the King County Jail.
Police didn’t give the exact charges he was booked under.
SPD Detectives in the Narcotics Unit are investigating the incident.
Police officers will not be back inside Seattle schools for the start of the school year on Sept. 3rd, but the school board could vote this month to allow a pilot program at Garfield High School.
Despite an effort from the district, city, and the Seattle Police Department that KIRO 7 first broke in May, lifting a 2020 moratorium that bans police inside Seattle Public Schools is still up in the air.
Instead, on September 9th, the Garfield community will have one more chance to weigh in.
Parents, students, and community activists have strong feelings about the proposal.
“The violence that Garfield faces stems from the outside community and bleeds into the school,” Garfield graduate Athena McDermott told the school board at its August 27th meeting. “Kids will not stop getting shot and killed at Garfield because of counselors alone.”
“Students don’t need to be policed, but protected,” Garfield graduate Rilan Springer said. “When letting an SRO back in, we demand they remain around campus, not inside the building… SPD should not be there to punish students, should not able to punish students.”
“I see the introduction of SEOs as oppression of black people at Garfield,” Sonya Herrera, a member of the Seattle Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, said.
“Parents and students have already fought to get cops out of schools once before,” Jonathan Toledo, also a member of the Seattle Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, told the board.
“We don’t want cops at all,” Seattle Student Union President Leo Falit-Baiamonte said.
He told KIRO 7 some students at Garfield shared their discomfort with the idea of a police officer back inside the school. And the group has a lot of questions if the pilot program at Garfield does move forward.
“Where would this money be coming from to hire this cop?” he asked. “How will we make sure that cops do not play a part in discipline? If it’s at Garfield, what stops it from going to other schools?”
The student union’s fight began this spring.
“Yeah, so after we saw on KIRO News that Police Chief Barnes intended to bring cops back into school, that was a shock for many organizers in the Seattle area,” he said.
That was when KIRO 7 reporter Linzi Sheldon sat down exclusively with Deputy Mayor Tiffany Washington and Chief Barnes.
“When I talk to people, they want us to return to the schools in some capacity,” Barnes said then.
SPS Executive Director of Safety and Security Jose Curiel Morelos told Sheldon that a memorandum of understanding to lift the current moratorium was ready for the school board to consider.
That was back in May.
“We believe that it is enough time, at least for Garfield, to have somebody in place by the start of the school year,” Morelos said.
So why is it September and no decision?
“Why are we continuing to spin our wheels?” Garfield PTSA board member Alicia Spanswick asked. She’s been waiting for an officer since last year. Her daughter is a senior at Garfield this fall.
“We can’t be lulled into thinking that crisis is over, and we can just go back to whatever we were doing before,” she said, “because I do think that it will spill back onto campus.”
“Some people might look at this and say, why is it taking so long?” Sheldon asked SPS Interim Superintendent Fred Podesta.
“So, we did bring it to the board in June, introduced it,” Podesta said. He said based on the testimony they heard at that meeting and feedback at the board, they needed to do more engagement.
SPS held a meeting with the Garfield community in July and will hold another session on September 9th.
SPS Accountability Officer Ted Howard, a former principal at Garfield, tried to assure board members about the role of an office there.
“Who picks the officer? Well, that happens jointly between SPS and SPD,” he said. “Are they directly involved in discipline? They’re not. Not at all.”
The city of Seattle said if the pilot program does move forward, funding would come from SPD’s budget.
But some board members appeared unconvinced about lifting the moratorium and leaning toward an exception for Garfield alone.
“Would that mean then that the moratorium would stay in place and there would be a narrow agreement just for Garfield?” Sheldon asked Podesta.
“I mean, we haven’t worked through the mechanics yet,” he said, “but I think there’ll be a space in that moratorium to allow for a pilot at Garfield and I expect that the board will then want us to explain, well, how did that work out before we consider other campuses.”
The school board is expected to discuss the school engagement officer proposal at its next regular meeting on September 17th. It could vote on the pilot program then.
The city of Seattle has agreed to pay $10 million to settle a lawsuit brought by Black Lives Matter protesters who claimed that they were victims of excessive force during the 2020 demonstrations.
The settlement comes after years of legal battles and negotiations between the city and the protesters.
A group of 50 BLM protesters filed the lawsuit claiming that the Seattle Police Department was a bit heavy-handed during the demonstrations following the death of George Floyd.
Floyd died in 2020 during an arrest involving excessive force by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, sparking nationwide protests and unjustified race riots.
Doing the math, the settlement amounts to a $200,000 payment to each protester involved in the suit.
NEW: The city of Seattle has agreed to pay $10 million to settle a lawsuit from a group of demonstrators injured by police during the 2020 uprising in protest of George Floyd’s murder. https://t.co/8wty3nfN7n
Black Lives Matter Gets A Hefty Payday For Rioting
A statement from the City Attorney in Seattle seems to indicate that the $10 million payday was simply a means to settle the matter and move forward.
“This decision was the best financial decision for the City considering risk, cost, and insurance,” he said. “The case has been a significant drain on the time and resources of the City and would have continued to be so through an estimated three-month trial that was scheduled to begin in May.”
It’s never really a good strategy to give in to extortionists, especially those who burned and looted your city for months on end.
You don’t reward a child who steals a cookie by giving them $10 to buy more cookies.
Attorneys for the Black Lives Matter protesters claimed that their clients suffered a whole host of injuries ranging from hearing loss and broken bones to “emotional damage.”
Will BLM use some of that money to pay for the emotional damage they caused local businesses?
Journalist Andy Ngo, who documented much of the rioting, explains that such payouts “encourage future rioting.”
Like many other Democrat-run cities, Seattle has agreed to pay $10m to settle a lawsuit from 2020 BLM-Antifa militants who said police used “excessive force” to try to stop the riots and occupations. Such huge settlements encourage future rioting. Read: https://t.co/af7GaanaLR
According to various reports, the riots in Seattle caused millions of dollars in damages to businesses, public buildings, and infrastructure.
The Seattle Police Department reported that over 100 officers were injured during the protests, and many businesses were looted, vandalized, and set on fire.
The Seattle City Attorney’s Office estimated that the total cost of property damage and other expenses related to the riots was around $200 million.
This figure includes damages to private businesses, public buildings, and the cost of deploying law enforcement and other emergency services during the unrest.
Damages that occurred from today’s Seattle Riots (continued):
— Dozens of businesses broken into and looted
— Multiple Amazon’s were vandalized & broken into
— Multiple Starbucks’ were vandalized, broken into, & one set on fire
— Katie Daviscourt 🇺🇸 (@KatieDaviscourt) July 20, 2020
Those businesses got a lot less than $10 million. In fact, business owners received $3,650,000 for damages caused by the Black Lives Matter protests according to court filings.
As for something you can’t put a price tag on, there were reports of two deaths that occurred during the Black Lives Matter protests in Seattle.
One of these incidents involved a 19-year-old man who was shot and killed in the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP) zone, and another involved a 32-year-old woman who was hit by a car while protesting on a closed section of Interstate 5.
Multiple other shootings took place in that seven-block area that police were forced to abandon during the “Summer of Love.”
What do you think about this? Let us know in the comments section.
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Rusty Weiss has been covering politics for over 15 years. His writings have appeared in the Daily Caller, Fox… More about Rusty Weiss
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