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To: LindyBill who wrote (336732)12/1/2009 12:21:03 PM
From: Brumar891 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793964
 
Now comes the crying about his being executed w/o trial.

A couple dozen police officers milled around at the scene where Clemmons was apparently shot, shaking hands and patting each other on the back.



To: LindyBill who wrote (336732)12/1/2009 2:15:59 PM
From: KLP1 Recommendation  Respond to of 793964
 
Three men jailed on suspicion of aiding alleged cop killer

seattletimes.nwsource.com

Originally published December 1, 2009 at 10:48 AM | Page modified December 1, 2009 at 10:51 AM


Three men have been booked into the Pierce County Jail, accused of rendering criminal assistance to Maurice Clemmons, the gunman accused of killing four Lakewood police officers on Sunday.

By Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporter

Three men have been booked into the Pierce County Jail, accused of rendering criminal assistance to Maurice Clemmons, the man accused of killing four Lakewood police officers on Sunday.

Clemmons was shot and killed by a Seattle police officer early this morning. He had a previous gunshot wound, apparently from one of the slain officers.

The manhunt for Clemmons had been hampered by friends and relatives, who helped him escape the crime scene and elude police, according to Pierce County sheriff's officials.

Clemmons was on the run for nearly two days and received assistance from a wide network of friends and family who provided him with places to stay, medical aid for his gunshot wound, transportation and cash, sheriff's spokesman Detective Ed Troyer said Monday night.

Clemmons' sister was detained Monday night. Troyer said she is believed to have bandaged Clemmons and driven him to their aunt's house in Seattle's Leschi neighborhood, where Seattle police attempted to capture Clemmons during an all-night SWAT raid. Clemmons managed to slip away.

As of this morning, the sister had not been booked into jail.
Another man — the suspected getaway driver who drove Clemmons from the crime scene near 112th Street South and Steele Street South in Parkland — is also being detained, Troyer said in an e-mail Tuesday.

The three men who have been arrested so far — ages 20, 22, and 47 — will make their first court appearances this afternoon.
Each man is being held on four counts of first-degree rendering criminal assistance for first-degree murder, one count for each officer who was killed by the gunman in a Parkland coffee shop.

The two younger men are brothers. The 20-year-old is also one of Clemmons' co-defendants in a third-degree assault case against a Pierce County sheriff's deputy in May. Clemmons was accused of punching the deputy in the face, and the 20-year-old fought with the same deputy, according to court documents filed in the case in Pierce County Superior Court.

The 47-year-old is Clemmons' half-brother, according to Arkansas court records.



To: LindyBill who wrote (336732)12/1/2009 10:25:54 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793964
 
This IS Outrageous !!! SeattleTimes: States at odds over warrant that might have kept Clemmons in jail

Tuesday, December 1, 2009 - Page updated at 07:01 PM

By Jim Brunner, Ken Armstrong and Jonathan Martin
Seattle Times staff reporters

seattletimes.nwsource.com

Arkansas officials today provided what they say is a copy of a warrant they say could have kept Maurice Clemmons in a Washington jail, preventing his release six days before he allegedly killed four Lakewood police officers.

But Washington corrections officials dispute that claim, saying it was not valid in Washington and that Arkansas had essentially washed its hands of Clemmons.

Whatever the intent, the result was that Clemmons was freed from jail on Nov. 23, six days before the four slayings.
Pierce County's Superior Court system has no record of a warrant being issued by Arkansas.

This warrant was the second issued by Arkansas this year for Clemmons. It came after the two states got into a bitter dispute in July, when Arkansas canceled an initial no-bail warrant that accused Clemmons of violating his parole in that state.

That decision angered officials in Washington desperate to keep Clemmons behind bars without the chance to post bond, correspondence shows.

"Hopefully, the offender will not get out on bail," a Washington corrections official wrote to Arkansas at that time.
At the time, Clemmons was facing eight felony charges in Pierce County, including accusations that he had assaulted two sheriff's deputies and raped a 12-year-old relative.
Police records also indicate Clemmons was deteriorating mentally, calling himself Jesus and expressing worry that the Secret Service was coming after him.

Clemmons had a long criminal history in Arkansas, including at least five prior felony convictions. He was last paroled from prison in 2004 in that state, but remained under supervision. He moved to Washington state soon after being released, and Arkansas transferred supervision responsibilities to the Washington State Department of Corrections.

Arkansas issued a "absconder" warrant on May 28, accusing Clemmons of violating his parole in Arkansas by getting into trouble in Washington. That warrant, which would be used to return Clemmons to Arkansas, would have allowed Pierce County to keep Clemmons in custody without offering him the chance to post bail.

But on July 16, an official in Arkansas, Barry Garland, wrote an e-mail to Washington state officials, saying his state was withdrawing its warrant.

Another Arkansas document obtained today says the warrant "was recalled at the request of (Arkansas Department of Community Correction) director G. David Guntharp after conversations he had with the offender's wife and mother."

Guntharp, in an interview today, said he does not recall discussing the matter with Clemmons' family. Clemmons' mother died years ago.

On July 23, a week after Garland sent his e-mail, Marjorie Owens from the Washington State Department of Corrections wrote back, saying: "Please provide your justification for canceling the abscond warrant."

She added: "I'm concerned that you have no problem releasing your offender into our community, based on his behavior. I thought ICAOS was all about community safety."

ICAOS stands for Interstate Commission for Adult Offender Supervision, an organization that oversees a compact between states to help keep tabs on people who have been released from custody but remain under watch.

Based on Arkansas' refusal to keep its warrant in effect, Washington dismissed its charge accusing Clemmons of being a fugitive on July 23.

Washington DOC Secretary Eldon Vail said today that Arkansas' decision to withdraw the first warrant essentially dumped Clemmons on Washington.

"[Gov. Chris Gregoire's] question to me about this case is a good one: Why would we ever take anyone from Arkansas in the future," said Vail. "I haven't gotten back to her."

Arkansas' second warrant for Clemmons — the one issued Oct. 2 — remains the subject of heated dispute.

Guntharp, the Arkansas community corrections director, said that warrant ought to have kept Clemmons in jail.

"They could have used the October warrant," Guntharp said.
But Scott Blonien, an in-house attorney for the Washington DOC, said two key elements indicated that Arkansas did not intend to make the warrant enforceable — and compel Arkansas to re-take Clemmons.

A coversheet attached to the Oct. 2 warrant left unchecked a box that reads: "Warrant issued. Keep us appraised of offender's availability for retaking," a term that means sending an offender home. The May 28 warrant had that box checked.

And, unlike the May 28 warrant, the second one does not indicate the warrant was entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), a nationwide law enforcement database that lists outstanding warrants and would have been available for Pierce County Superior Court.

"If (Arkansas) had done it, and done it properly, Pierce County would have seen it and acted on it," said Blonien.
An official with the Pierce County Superior Court said today there is no record of the Oct. 2 warrant in files there.

On Tuesday, Washington's DOC issued a timeline this afternoon saying the warrant was "valid only in Arkansas and asked Washington to continue to supervise Clemmons and notify them of what happens with his case."

On Nov. 23, Clemmons was able to post $190,000 bail, securing his release from the Pierce County Jail, where he was being held on the eight pending felony charges.

On Nov. 29, Clemmons allegedly killed the four police officers in a Parkland coffee shop.

Staff reporters Susan Kelleher and Maureen O'Hagan contributed to this report.
Jim Brunner: 206-515-5628 or jbrunner@seattletimes.com