News Dec 23, 2024 at 3:36 pm

Two Notable Stabbings in the Past Two Months May Point to Failures in Mayor Bruce Harrell’s Policies

Mayor Bruce Harrell's downtown crackdown may have led to predictable agitation in the city. Anthony Keo

Comments

1

How is Mayor Harrell’s crack down on 3rd tied to a suspect who possibly murdered a roommate a year ago in the Ravenna neighborhood? Seems like this tragedy falls on the inability of the KCPO to bring a case against this dude a year ago.

2

"We should make sure people in this city fall into a social safety net, not a jail cell."

The jail cell IS the social safety net to keep evil people out of society and away from continued murdering.

3

If we had the excess $8B that Mark Dones said we need to solve homelessness, I’d be at the front of the line advocating for writing checks. That not being the case, I can’t help but see this as another blow to the Seattle working class — the bus drivers and remaining riders that have no other choice but take the bus. Let’s get these drivers what they need to feel safe and find some other supports for riders too, or we will continue to see divestment in public transit.

4

Murders don’t need a social safety net. They need to be in jail. The Stranger will blame everyone except the actual murderer… that’s a bad look but certainly fits TS’s M.O.

5

Another installment in the "law enforcement causes crime" fantasy adventure series serialized here in the Stranger. Tune in next week for another thrilling episode!

6

I can assure you that arresting violent criminals and locking them up in jail for long periods of time will improve the lives of Seattle's citizens. It probably will even improve the lives of the arrested if they take advantage of the opportunities in prison to clean themselves up. I don't actually care much about the latter however. Improving the lives of the vast majority of Seattle's citizens should be the priority. And incarceration of those few that are determined to make life for the rest of the citizens worse is a very good way to do exactly what Ashley demands...make life better for Seattle citizens.

7

Why is the person who complains about the cost of parking tickets covering the public transportation beat? Does she even use the system?

8

Housing Jahmed Haynes didn’t seem to help Ruth Dalton very much

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/law-justice/man-accused-of-killing-80-year-old-seattle-dog-walker-found-incompetent/

9

I'm with Totoman on December 23, 2024 at 4:37 PM. We cannot risk having transit be divested. Just cannot.

That means backing the blue and I certainly commend those cops shining spotlights into faces, going the extra mile to find this bus driver's killer.

Also jail is where we can place correctional services like counseling and job skill training. No harm in that.

10

Another day, another article where The Stranger once again argues that wherever any policy choice results in tradeoffs, the city should resolve them in favor of homeless people. Whether it is bus drivers, bus riders, shop owners, pedestrians, parents,.or children trying to walk to school, The Stranger beleves that the City of Seattle should prioritize the homeless above all of them.

11

I find it strange that King County Metro doesn't train its drivers in de-escalation or better yet just don't engage in the first place. We don't have mental health facilities in this country like we did before Reagan gutted funding. The outdoors and prison has become our mental hospital and everyone needs to be made aware of it.

12

I'm a King County Metro Bus Operator.

I want homeless people who are just looking for a place to sleep off of the bus, because I want them in an actual bed. Not somewhere where they're kicked off every hour so I can my coworkers can take our break.

Metro is one of the agencies bearing some of the brunt from the City, County, State, and Country's failed housing, mental health, and drug treatment policies. The homeless, mentally ill, and drug addicted deserve better. The people of Seattle and King County deserve better.

Operator compartments are important, but they're only one tool for operator safety, and they're meaningless the moment we need to secure a wheelchair, go to the bathroom, or close a coach window.

The communities that Metro operates in needs to be safe before the inside of the buses is safe.

13

Well said, Ashley.
It blows my mind the people in power won't see the obvious and respond appropriately.
((hugs)) to all public workers who are trying their damnedest to give us a functioning society while our politicians continue to bend over for ineffectual rich people. We need real people to vote for, not more arse kissers climbing up the status pole.

14

@12 Thank you.

15

Such a strange headline:

"King County Metro Bus Driver Shawn Yim’s Death Is a Tragedy"

Typically, news headlines report news - not an obvious sentiment. This comes across as backpedaling, like "Yes, The Stranger admits there are some really awful crimes!"

16

I can't imagine how fed up bus drivers must be with vagrents using their bus as a homeless shelter (and not paying a fare). I also feel sorry for all the normal people stuck riding public transport in this city!

17

@1: The 2023 incident wasn't "in the Ravenna neighborhood".

18

@17 Officers responded to a 911 call about an assault on the 5500 block of University Way Northeast around 1:30 a.m. - I consider that Ravenna, maybe you consider it edge of the U District. In either event, dude had no connection to 3rd.

19

The gap between progressive delusion and reality continues to grow. I identified as a progressive for years. Now I watch in anger and disgust as the far left destroys cities. Leftist have trashed their brand with failed policies that ignore reality and increase crime, misery and disorder. This is why the middle is swinging right. The left deserves to lose elections if they can’t produce results that make life better for the residents of this city. I spent 15 fucking years waiting for results.

20

Listen up - Rumor or Lead:

What the press and police aren't telling people: Sitzlack is said to be German-Venezuelan who came illegally into the US in 2000. (I gather he speaks English like an American but it's not his first language. His first language is Spanish or possibly Spanish/German bilingual and he is fluent in English.) And he came into the U.S. possibly because he's wanted for murder in Venezuela? But I guess we can't ask the Venezuelan authorities because our government still isn't speaking with them?

(You now, they have police depts too like other civilized nations, so maybe some enterprising reporter or someone else could inquire? If he came in legally, he would have obtained from the Venezuelan govt what is called something like a Certificate regarding Criminality - which shows that the person doesn't have a criminal record. But I bet he doesn't have that.)

On his alleged roots, there's a municipality in northern Venezuela largely or partly populated by white German Venezuelans who emigrated over in the 1800s. There's a fairly well-known German church there. And you will find a Richard Siztlack and Ebergard (the other one listed in Miami at the same PO box) listed for that area in Venezuela.

21

@18: "In either event, dude had no connection to 3rd."

True. But 3rd Avenue is where Harrell chose to move his transit police emphasis. And crime/bad behavior goes where the police are not. That said, issues over an open window seems to be a weird hill to die on. Yim had a face full of pepper spray. But he had Sitzlack off the bus. Retreat. Report the incident. It may or may not be dealt with by the proper authorities. But that's the way Mr Mayor chooses to run his city. The downtown business district gets the attention, outlying neighborhoods do not.

22

@21 "That said, issues over an open window seems to be a weird hill to die on"

I don't think the bus driver knew he was risking his life by asserting his authority as the bus driver. He can't safely drive with a fogged window, though, and the passenger is supposed to understand this. When he tells a passenger to do something, they're supposed to listen to the bus driver or get th off the bus. And if they're too mentally ill to handle this, then they shouldn't be riding around on public transportation.

I think the sequence of events, too, as described in the article, are entirely accurate. They keep describing it as an altercation - as if the bus driver bore responsibility for being attacked (blaming
the victim) and this just wasn't the case. It was just Sitzlack attacking Mr Yim and then killing him for laying down the rules and who was in charge on the bus.

It bothers me that the answer to this, in some people's minds, is some kumbayah "deescalation training." Well, I suppose that's always a good skill to have under your belt, but there should be 911 buzzers for the drivers to press which would instantly go off at the police station and instantly require a one minute response time from SPD, given the fact that it's a red alert from a bus driver.

This used to be normal in our society - to have a rapid police response time to an emergency call from public transportation.

Lastly, this man is/was obviously dangerous. He murdered a housemate who tried to kick him out of the apartment, and then he murdered this bus driver for trying to kick him off the bus because he wasn't behaving - and probably wasn't behaving as a housemate, either.

But somehow that incident too was cast as "altercation" in which Sitzlack was defending himself?

I mean, c'mon. Enough of this baloney.

I wouldn't be surprised if Siztlack is even wanted for murder in Venezuela where he's allegedly from. (see @20) Are the authorities even checking?

This is happening too because city, state, and federal officials are not sufficiently addressing the national homelessness crisis; Seattle has some of the highest numbers, nationwide, and as a result, the problem is flowing onto the public transportation system.

There are increasing numbers of bus incidents with mentally unstable and often homeless people that are unfortunately yet potentially quite dangerous. They are trying to get out of the weather - the cold. And the shelter system is awful so they don't want to go there, and in many cases, it's not even there anyway (i.e. they don't have sufficient space). They need housing, for goodness sakes.

With the ever-growing increase in these incidents on the public transportation system, it's been very predictable that something like this would horribly yet eventually happen. Will it be a wake-up call, though? Apparently not. And who will be next?

Not the City Council, of course, though I am beginning to think that any City Council member should not be allowed to drive a car or take a cab or uber in Seattle. They should be required, at all times, to only ride the bus system. Or get out of office.

Happy New Year; you're all fired.

23

@29 typo: "I think the sequence of events, too, as described in the article, [aren't] entirely accurate."

24

@23: The timeline seems to agree with what I've read published elsewhere (Seattle Times, etc.)


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