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

John Craig

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

All Stories

News >  Spokane

Wilbur Teenager Faces 11 Charges Boy Allegedly Exposed Himself, Made Secret Videos Of 8 Girls

A 16-year-old Wilbur, Wash., boy has been charged with making secret videotapes of eight teenage girls while they were nude and with indecently exposing himself five times last summer. He faces arraignment April 2 in Lincoln County Juvenile Court on five counts of dealing in sexually explicit depictions of minors, five counts of indecent exposure and one count of illegally recording a conversation.
News >  Spokane

Judge Splits Difference In Tax Dispute

Pend Oreille County can begin collecting millions of dollars in disputed property taxes from Ponderay Newsprint, but not as much as county officials would have liked. Pend Oreille County Superior Court Judge Larry Kristianson ruled this week that the Usk paper mill's assessed value is $254 million for 1995-98 taxes.
News >  Spokane

Judge Stewart Won’t Run Again

Superior Court Judge Fred Stewart will retire when his term expires at the end of the year. The 61-year-old jurist - who serves Stevens, Pend Oreille and Ferry counties - said he made the announcement this week so potential candidates for his job have plenty of time to "give it some careful thought."
News >  Spokane

Fringed Flag Returns To Courtroom Under Pact, Commissioners To Sue If They Want Flag Out

A gold-fringed flag, removed from the Ferry County courtroom to please constitutionalists, has been restored under a face-saving agreement between judges and county commissioners. County Commissioner Jim Hall removed the fringed flag last September after being pressured for months by anti-government constitutionalists. They claimed the flag eliminated constitutional rights by imposing "admiralty law" in the courtroom. When months of quiet negotiations between the judges and commissioners failed to get the fringed flag back, presiding Superior Court Judge Larry Kristianson threatened legal action against Hall. Kristianson could have ordered the return of the flag and jailed Hall if he refused.
News >  Spokane

Murder Suspect Says He Doesn’t Recall Killings Taped Testimony Played For Jury In Trial Over Deaths Of Two Orchard Workers

Jurors heard a tape-recorded statement Thursday in which Tony Sammons told police he can't remember the Sept. 27 double murder he and Scott Pierce are accused of committing. In the statement, Sammons, 25, said he remembered punching one of the two murdered orchard workers twice in the stomach at Pierce's house in Omak the night of the killings.
News >  Spokane

Victims, Suspects Partied Together Before Murders

Opening testimony in the Anthony Sammons double-murder trial Monday dampened speculation that the Omak killings were racially motivated. Orchardist Paul Mannino said Sammons, 25, and co-defendant Scott Pierce, 20, were on good terms with victims Alejandro Torres Sanchez, 24, and Guillermo Herrera Roman, 21, when he saw them together the afternoon of the murder.
News >  Spokane

Stackhouse To Testify In Murder Trial Today

Toby Stackhouse is expected to take the witness stand today to try to explain away the tape-recorded confession the jury heard Wednesday in his first-degree murder trial. The Spokane County Superior Court jury heard him state clearly and dispassionately how he stabbed 21-year-old prostitute Linda Guillen to death on Dec. 1, 1994. In his confession, Stackhouse, now 18, told police he killed Guillen as part of a plan to rob her.
News >  Spokane

Arson Suspect’s Lawyer Disqualifies Judge In Case

Courthouse arson suspect Will Hill, 17, will be tried as an adult if the Lincoln County prosecutor's office gets its way. But that's a decision the county's Superior Court judge won't make. Hill's court-appointed attorney, Kelly Dougan, blackballed Judge Philip Borst on Tuesday on grounds that the judge is prejudiced against the young defendant.
News >  Spokane

Three Strikes Not Always An Out

Bam, bam, bam: A woman murdered on Dec. 1, another woman's house burglarized on Jan. 7 and a man murdered on Jan. 11. Already convicted in the Jan. 11 murder of Elk-area resident Steve Roscoe and facing trial for the other two crimes, Toby Stackhouse may seem like a perfect candidate for a mandatory life sentence without parole under Washington's new 'three strikes' law. But he isn't.
News >  Spokane

Clerks Say Boss Bitter, Making Their Jobs Hard Pair Testified Against Court Clerk, Seek $1 Million Each

Two deputies in Pend Oreille County Superior Court Clerk Winnie Sundseth's office say Sundseth is punishing them for providing evidence against her in a criminal case. Deputy clerks Joan Green Clark and Leitia Evans each seek $1 million in a claim that could lead to a lawsuit against the county. They claim Sundseth illegally changed their working conditions and violated their civil rights by harassing them.
News >  Spokane

Six Districts Seek Levies In Election

Six school districts and a hospital district in rural northeastern Washington have routine operating levies on the Feb. 6 election ballot. In Stevens County, the Kettle Falls School District is seeking a $390,000 levy for two years. The levy would cost property owners an estimated $1.67 per $1,000 of assessed value in 1997 and 1998. The Newport and Selkirk school districts have levy proposals in Pend Oreille County.