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The Straight Story

(48,121 posts)
Mon Nov 26, 2012, 02:28 PM Nov 2012

Seattle Cold Case Unit Shuts Down after Losing Federal Grant

Seattle Cold Case Unit Shuts Down after Losing Federal Grant

Seattle-area criminals who have gotten away with murder over the years are rejoicing this week, as a local cold case unit prepares to shutter its doors at the end of the year. Building on an effort that began in 2006, the King County Sheriff’s Office started a cold-case squad in 2009 with a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice that funded two full-time detectives and a crime analyst. The grant was renewed for 2012, but not for 2013, forcing King County to supplement the unit’s budget so it could keep its doors open until the end of December.

Many cold cases remain, but police admit that without funding they will have no time to investigate them properly. According to the Sheriff’s website, the squad has a library of 223 cases, some dating back to the 1940s, including 149 homicides and 74 missing person cases. “Loss of the funding is a real blow, and it means some cases will likely go unsolved,” said King County Sheriff-elect John Urquhart.

Nevertheless, over just four years, the squad identified suspects in eight killings: those of Arlene Roberts, Nicole Pietz, Ken Ruffer, Frank Kouny, Mike Emert, Becky Marrero, Paul Audett and Katherine LaRocca. Some of these cases yielded convictions, in some the likely killer is dead, and others have yet to go to trial.

Given the tight budgets associated with the Great Recession, the Sheriff’s Office cannot afford to reinstate the squad on its own, so evidence from cold cases will remain in a warehouse. The Seattle area will not be entirely without cold case detectives, however, because the Seattle Police Department has a cold case squad that will remain in business. It has solved about 30 cold case homicides, according to the Police Department website.

http://www.allgov.com/news/where-is-the-money-going/seattle-cold-case-unit-shuts-down-after-losing-federal-grant-121125?news=846289

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Seattle Cold Case Unit Shuts Down after Losing Federal Grant (Original Post) The Straight Story Nov 2012 OP
Dave Reichert can suck on his no tax pledge alcibiades_mystery Nov 2012 #1
 

alcibiades_mystery

(36,437 posts)
1. Dave Reichert can suck on his no tax pledge
Mon Nov 26, 2012, 02:38 PM
Nov 2012

Dave Reichert - who was instrumental in solving the Green River murders, long after they would have technically gone cold, byt the way - was King County Sheriff for eight years. He is now a Republican in Congress. He made news recently by being the first person the FBI agent went to on the Petraeus matter - Reichert referred the matter to Cantor.

So Dave Reichert wants cuts? OK, here's a cut. No cold case unit for King County. How do you like those cuts, Congressman Reichert? This is what we mean by cuts, in any case. The GOP likes to think they will get all their cuts by starving inner city minorities, or whatever fantasy they have of the federal budget.

Wrong. Grants for local law enforcement can go, too. Cold case? Well, if it hasn't been solved yet, do we really need to be paying for it? Hell, privatize the whole thing: have those Cold Case shows on Investigation Discovery pay for local cold case units.

You wanted cuts, Congressman Reichert? Well you sure got it, pal.

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