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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

John Craig

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

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News >  Spokane

State Says Plea Bargain Too Lenient For Five-Time Felon Man Charged With Attacking Colville Woman In Her Home

The state Corrections Department says a fivetime felon with a history of stalking and harassing women would get off too easily under a plea bargain proposed by Stevens County Prosecutor Jerry Wetle. A Corrections Department presentence investigation says David R. Rickard, 34, should get roughly double the proposed 9-year sentence for an attack on a 34-year-old Colville substitute teacher.
News >  Spokane

Woman Accused Of Slapping Official’s Son Faces Assault Charge; Claims Councilman’s Son Was Vulgar

Wanda Wilson didn't wait for the Newport City Council to get control of the rowdy juveniles business people claim have taken over Main Street, authorities say. The 46-year-old Newport-area woman took the law into her own hands when she thought she heard City Councilman Jim Kolthoff's 14-year-old son call her a sexually vulgar name, according to Police Chief Gary Markwardt.
News >  Spokane

Tavern At Center Of Bizarre Incidents One Man Killed; Police Officers Cornered By Angry Mob Of Patrons

A tavern may lose its license and two customers may lose their freedom because of incidents last fall that left a man dead and caused police officers to fear for their safety. The state Liquor Board wants to revoke the Twin Lakes Tavern's license for a Sept. 24 incident in which an angry mob of tavern patrons cornered a pair of tribal police officers in the parking lot.
News >  Spokane

Suspect In Drunken Crime Spree Has To Be Set Free Victim Of Store Robbery Calls Release `Real Slap In The Face’

Springdale Marshal Jerry Taylor had smoke coming from his ears Wednesday after having to release a suspect in a drunken crime spree because the man was caught a few hours before his 18th birthday. Dawa Ortiz was about five hours away from his birthday by the time Taylor arrested Ortiz and another man on charges that they stole three cars, smashed two of them and broke into a grocery store to steal liquor.
News >  Spokane

Newport Retreats On Court Costs

Newport Mayor Kevin Murphy agreed Monday to back off temporarily on a plan he implemented last week to force Pend Oreille County to pay a large portion of the city's law-enforcement costs. After fencing with county commissioners for more than an hour, Murphy accepted Commission Chairman Karl McKenzie's offer to form a committee to discuss the city's request for a contract to transfer almost all of the city's law enforcement to the county.
News >  Spokane

Juvenile Jail Design Draws Attention

Public officials from Asotin County to Olympia to Washington, D.C., are looking to Pend Oreille County for a way to put teeth into juvenile justice without taking a big bite out of taxpayers' wallets. U.S. Rep. George Nethercutt, R-Spokane, and the entire 7th District state legislative delegation are to tour the Pend Oreille County's innovative new juvenile jail today. On Friday, the visitors were two Asotin County commissioners and that county's Juvenile Department director and undersheriff.
News >  Spokane

Newport Gives County Its Criminal Cases But County Says It Can’t Absorb Costs, Even With Revenue From Fines; Officials Plan To Fight

Pend Oreille County officials were seething Thursday after the city of Newport announced a plan to force the county to pay for prosecuting most misdemeanor criminal cases in the city. In a letter delivered to county officials Wednesday, Mayor Kevin Murphy said the city would no longer pay any of the costs of prosecuting people charged with crimes such as fourth-degree assault and drunken driving.
News >  Spokane

Trouble Is, Teens Have Little To Do In Newport With Business Owners And Young People At Odds, A New Group Tries To Create Opportunities For Work

There's nothing to do in Newport, several young people protested Tuesday night when business owners demanded a curfew and other measures to reclaim downtown streets they say have been taken over by juvenile delinquents. "Why don't you give us a place to go like a youth center or something - or maybe some jobs?" 18-year-old Wayne Feltwell asked.
News >  Spokane

Judge May Rule In March On L-Bar Bankruptcy 56 Employees Have Waited Years To Receive Their Last Paycheck

Fifty-six employees who were stiffed of their last paycheck when a Chewelah, Wash., company closed in December 1991 may find out March 21 whether they'll ever get paid. After three years of legal gridlock, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Klobucher may choose then between two plans for the bankrupt L-Bar Products magnesium-waste recycling plant. Klobucher seems to be leaning toward a plan that promises to repay the employees at the expense of other creditors. But some of the employees doubt they'll ever get paid.
News >  Spokane

Petitioners Want Murder Suspect Tried As Adult Defense Argues 17-Year-Old Accused Of Killing Homeowner During Burglary Should Be Treated As Juvenile

Defense attorney Al Schwenker argued Thursday that murder suspect Tobias Stackhouse should be treated as a juvenile delinquent. But a citizens group said what Stackhouse really needs is a chance to hang. Schwenker said Stackhouse, who will be 18 on Feb. 2, is being denied his constitutional rights every day he remains locked up in Pend Oreille County's adult jail. Stackhouse and 21-year-old Jason Kukrall, both Elk-area residents, are charged with first-degree murder in the Jan. 11 shooting death of Elk-area homeowner Steve Roscoe.
News >  Spokane

Medical Lake Center Faces Setback Backers Optimistic Despite Official Criticisms

Regional leaders remained optimistic about the prospects for establishing a juvenile detention center at Medical Lake despite a cold sprinkle Tuesday. Davenport Mayor Carr Killin said he doesn't think the federal Americans with Disabilities Act or other requirements can derail a plan to put a regional detention center in an unused residential building on the Eastern State Hospital campus. Killin is chairman of a task force of Eastern Washington city and county officials who think the mental hospital's vacant Martin Hall may be the answer to a critical shortage of juvenile detention space throughout the region.
News >  Nation/World

Teenage Suspect Admits Two Murders 17-Year-Old Confesses To Killing Elk Homeowner And December Death Of Prostitute

One of two suspects in the Jan. 11 murder of an Elk-area homeowner has confessed to that killing, as well as the Dec. 1 fatal stabbing of a prostitute in Spokane. Jason V. Kukrall, 21, and Tobias R. Stackhouse, 17, also have been questioned in the stabbing death of another prostitute in Kootenai County and an elderly man in Pend Oreille County.
News >  Spokane

Court Upholds Decision To Reinstate Fired Deputy

Lincoln County Sheriff Dan Berry and Deputy Richard Morrison are stuck with each other. A ruling Friday by Adams County Superior Court Judge Richard Miller is similar to the verdict of voters last September.