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Get drug users off the street and save money? It's coming Seattle Post Intelligencer (blog)

On the heels of the mayor vetoing Councilman Tim Burgess's panhandling law, I offer up a project that would actually walk the talk of dealing with Belltown's drug problems, as opposed to just having police write poor people tickets for begging.

It's called the Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion program, or LEAD, and its intent is to save the cost of booking, jail time, prosecution and, oh, yes, the never-ending cycle of reoffense by getting people to treatment -- including allowing police to take low-level drug offenders directly to services after an arrest.

The Racial Disparity Project of Seattle's Defender Association has been working on the project for more than a year now with city and county officials in and around their discussions of the need -- or lack thereof -- for a new municipal jail that Seattle and the county's northeast cities still seem set on building.

They might not need to, the public defenders argue, if they institute LEAD. It would be similar in nature to pilots programs that the city currently funds in the Central District (GOTS) and Rainier Beach (CURB), which use peers -- that is, people who've been there -- to talk drug users into services. The Racial Disparity Project is hoping to start two LEAD pilots by year's end in Belltown and Skyway, if the group gets a much-needed starter grant that it plans to apply for in June.

King County deputy who beat girl could face federal charges

By Carlos Miller
A King County Sheriff’s deputy who viciously beat a teenage girl in a holding cell may wind up facing federal charges for the incident that was caught on video.

And that could result in a longer prison term for Paul Schene, who attacked the 15-year-old girl after she flipped her sneaker at him.

Schene said the sneaker caused him “injury and pain” - which is why he pounced on her; kicking her, punching her and dragging her down by the hair before planting his knee on her back and punching her a couple more times.

The girl was charged with third-degree assault, which is a Class C felony in Washington, punishable by up to five years in prison.

After the video emerged, Schene was charged with fourth-degree assault, which is a gross misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail.

Apparently, the gross discordance wasn’t lost on the U.S. Justice Department, which rejected a plea deal conjured by prosecutors that would have allowed Schene to serve between six to nine months in jail if he resigned from the sheriff’s office.

If the Justice Department decides to indict Schene, he could serve up to three-and-a-half years in prison, according to the Seattle Post Intelligencer.

His trial is set for September 9. He remains on paid administrative leave.

Schene has been involved in two-officer involved shootings during his eight-year career, including shooting a mentally ill man 11 times in the back during a 2006 traffic stop.

Shortly after the shooting, he was stopped for driving under the influence after mixing alcohol with prescription medicine. He received a deferred sentence and was placed on probation.

As Injustice Everywhere (formerly Injustice in Seattle) could tell us, justice in King County is far from just. And the fact that it needs the feds to step in to ensure that justice gets served should be a complete embarrassment to them.

Of the more than 100 comments in the Seattle P.I. article, the following came from somebody who claims to be former King County deputy Joseph Pellegrini.

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Read more...

the time of the shooting, had a criminal record and served time in state prison in 2007 and 2008. Alameda County Superior Court records indicate ...

King County Criminal Records - News


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