Kirkland Reporter, September 02, 2011

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POISONING | Murder case faces “overwhelmingly complex” complications, defense says [7] George Wieman| Longtime Kirkland Kiwanian dies at 89 [2]

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Human trafficking survivor on set for film shooting Kim felt like a celebrity. But amidst the glitz and glam of filmmaking, Kim Russian mob had was confronted with a stark taken her identity past. long ago inside a dark The movie, “Eden,” that warehouse. was partially being filmed But now, on a sunny afterin Kirkland Aug. 25 was noon, the Korean-American inspired by her true story as a walked past the long white survivor of domestic human trailers that trafficking and lined Sevsexual slavery. “It was kind of like a enth Street in e film stars human market. The Th the Norkirk actress Jamie neighborhood, girls were tapped Chung and stopping at her actor Beau on the shoulder to dressing room Bridges. marked with be marketed out. Eden Proher name ductions was Sometimes the Chong Kim. on its 13th day A film crew girls came back – of shooting the assistant invit- sometimes they feature film, ed Kim to the which is being set – the inside didn’t.” Chong Kim shot entirely of a Kirkland in Washington house – and State. asked her if Kim came to she needed a chair. Another Kirkland from Texas to meet worker brought her a coke. the producers for the first Cast members, hairdressers time on Aug. 25. and makeup artists intro[ more FILM page 8 ] duced themselves. BY CARRIE WOOD

cwood@kirklandreporter.com

A

Film Producer Colin Plank, of Seattle, with Chong Kim (right) on set during a shooting of the film “Eden.” The movie, which was partially filmed inside a Kirkland home on Aug. 25, was inspired by the true story of Kim, a survivor of domestic human trafficking and sexual slavery. Kim came from her home in Texas to Kirkland last week to meet the crew and cast members for the first time. The film stars actress Jamie Chung and actor Beau Bridges. CARRIE WOOD, Kirkland Reporter

Embezzlement threatens future of Kirkland charity

Family of Nicaragua prisoner protests his conviction BY PEYTON WHITELY pwhitely@kirklandreporter.com

The family of a former Seattle-area man imprisoned in Nicaragua reacted with anguish and hope Tuesday at a Kirkland presentation intended to gain support for the prisoner. “He’s my firstborn. He’s my son. All of us will not rest until he’s back with us,” said Dr. Daisy Zachariah, the mother of Jason Puracal, who’s been held in the Central American

country for 10 months. The appeal for help was made at the Kirkland law offices of Anna M. Tolin at Carillon Point through an odd combination of circumstances that led her to become involved in the international controversy. Tolin, who is assisting the Puracal family at no cost, took an interest in the case because she’d met Jason Puracal’s sister, Janis Puracal, at a [ more PROTEST page 3 ]

BY PEYTON WHITELY pwhitely@kirklandreporter.com

The family’s quest to free Jason Puracal (pictured with family) suffered a setback Monday when a Nicaraguan judge convicted him of money laundering and drug trafficking. A Kirkland attorney, Anna M. Tolin, is representing the family at no cost. PEYTON WHITELY, Kirkland Reporter

A Kirkland-based charity that’s been swindled out of more than $112,000, according to federal criminal charges, has lost so much money that its future operations are in jeopardy. “This is an awful thing that’s happened to us,” said Steve Lamson, founder of the RMH (Ronald McDonald House) Holiday Cruise. “He took all our money.” The concerns have emerged from a financial saga that dates to 2009 and resulted in a federal grandjury indictment being issued

Aug. 25 against Randall R. Morrison. The indictment accuses him of two counts of wire fraud relating to his work as treasurer of the RMH Holiday Cruise, which was started in 1982 and operates with a volunteer staff from Juanita. Morrison is charged with stealing at least $112,220, although other parts of an investigation estimate the total loss at more than $142,220. “There might be $4,000, maybe $5,000 left,” said Lamson. Lamson founded the nonprofit cruise in 1982 and expanded it in 1996 by drawing [ more CHARITY page 5 ]

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fast, and participating in lots of pranks. He met the love of his life, Jacqueline, on a blind date. They would have been married 62 years on Sept. 10. He worked for Standard Oil of California for 25 years, becoming district sales manager in Elko, Nev., and then in Seattle. Subsequently, he Longtime started Horizon EnterKirkland Kiwanian prises, Inc., a gasoline/ George Downing car wash business that Wieman died at his he ran for 13 years. George Wieman Sun Valley, Idaho Wieman started home on Aug. 20. playing golf at age He was 89. 10 and continued until Wieman was born Jan. 25, four weeks ago. He loved to 1922, in Los Angeles, Calif. ski, starting at age 38 and He attended Beverly Hills continuing to perfect his High, Oregon State Univertechnique under the instrucsity and UCLA. He served tion of his children until age in the Flying Navy in the Panama Canal during WWII. 88. Boating in the San Juan Islands with his grandchilWieman grew up in Los Andren and friends brought him geles body surfing, diving for lobster, golfing, driving rather immense joy.

Wieman joined the Kiwanis International and Kiwanis Club of Kirkland in 1974. He served as the Kirkland Kiwanis president from 1975-1976 and board director from 1978-1980. He was recognized as the Kirkland Kiwanian of the Year in 1990. He was also governor of the Pacific Northwest District and Host Committee chairman for the Kiwanis International Convention in Seattle. He was instrumental in starting the I.D.D. (Iodine Deficiency Disorder) program, a Kiwanis concern. He is survived by his wife, Jackie; son, Randy; daughters, RenĂŠe and son-in-law Paul, Nanette and son-in-law Jean Marie; grandchildren, Danielle, Jens, Max and Jake; and his sister, Barbara Wieman. He is preceded in death by his father, George Carl and his mother, Madeline.

bound-to-eastbound left turn lane and update traffic signal controller equipment. The entire N.E. 85th Street Corridor Project will transform N.E. 85th Street from 120th Avenue N.E. to 132nd Avenue N.E. through a series of coordinated street improvements to reduce traffic congestion, increase capacity at key intersections, provide continuous sidewalks and landscape

planter strips, underground overhead utility lines, and resurface and re-stripe the entire corridor. Sound Transit has contributed funding for transitrelated improvements. Project information is available online at www.kirklandwa. gov/85thStreet, via email by subscribing to the “Kirkland E-Mail Alerts,� or by calling the 24-hour construction hotline at 425-587-3838.

OBITUARY

Longtime Kirkland Kiwanian dies

Construction begins on 85th Street The City of Kirkland has begun one of its most ambitious capital projects ever – the N.E. 85th Street Corridor Project. Construction has started at the west end of the corridor at N.E. 85th Street at 114th Avenue N.E. to build a second south-

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The family of Jason Puracal, who’s imprisoned in Nicaragua, meets with the press at their attorney’s office in Kirkland on Tuesday. From the left is Janis Puracal, sister, and Anna Tolin, attorney. PEYTON WHITELY, Kirkland Reporter The background of the despair is that Jason Puracal, 34, grew up in Tacoma and graduated from the University of Washington, then joined the Peace Corps and eventually started a real-estate business in Nicaragua. He was arrested in November and charged with 10 other defendants with taking part in an organized-crime conspiracy of drug trafficking and money laundering, said his sister. “He did not know any of the co-defendants,� said Janis Puracal. She added that the family believes the charges were politically motivated to remove opponents to the ruling Nicaraguan government. Jason Puracal is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 6 and faces up to 30 years in prison.

He’s being held in deplorable conditions in a dirtfloored cell infected with insects, where his health has suffered on a constant diet of beans and rice, with no fruits or vegetables, said his sister. “It’s been making him very sick,� she added. The family remains hopeful and determined that he still will be freed, said Janis Puracal, and a number of options are being pursued. They include appealing the conviction to a higher court in Nicaragua, seeking assistance through the U.S. State Department, and getting help from congressional leaders and other political figures. “I’m appealing to the President of the United States to step in,� said Dr. Zachariah. “We need action, not statements.�

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legal conference in Ohio last year. When she learned of the family’s ordeal, Tolin said she agreed to help. The family’s quest to free Jason Puracal suffered a setback Monday when a Nicaraguan judge convicted him of money laundering and drug trafficking. Family members and Tolin emotionally denied those accusations at the Carillon Point gathering before reporters and television cameras. “This is a drug case where there are no drugs,� said Tolin. “It would never have held up in a million years in a court in this country.� Janis Puracal added that the family never expected the Monday conviction. “We were absolutely certain Jason would be coming home today,� she said. “The judge took 15 minutes to come back with a verdict. In my mind, the entire Nicaraguan judiciary is flawed.� Dr. Zachariah said she is particularly disturbed and feels responsible for what’s happened to her son because she encouraged him to join the Peace Corps in 2002, eventually leading him to move to Nicaragua. “My heart is like a piece of rock,� she said. “I feel responsible because I encouraged him to go into the Peace Corps.�

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KIRKLAND

OPINION

[4] September 2, 2011

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● QUOTE OF NOTE:

“This is an awful thing that’s happened to us. He took all our money.“ Steve Lamson, founder of the RMH Holiday Cruise

EDITORIAL

School’s back in – slow down

S

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Last week’s poll results: “Has the volatility in the U.S. stock market hurt you personally?” Yes: 64% No: 35%

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REPORTER

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Forget car-tab fees and bus cuts I must disagree with my paper’s support of Councilmembers Jane Hague and Kathy Lambert’s about-face to vote in favor of the $20 King County cartab tax hike to bail out our socialist bus system in King County. Instead of another tax hike to rescue our government-run monopoly and centrally planned bus system (Metro), we should just legalize private jitneys. And similarly, limits on cab medallions (business licenses to drive a cab) should also end. The county bus monopoly loses money and can’t support itself. Sales taxpayers and car drivers must make up the difference between what the bus

passenger pays and what the ride really costs. As some said on July 13, many buses are empty and most are too big. That’s government monopoly. If we only had one grocery store to use because of a countywide monopoly, we’d riot. But we take a bus monopoly lying down. We should break up King County’s bus monopoly by legalizing jitneys and other private, non-fixed-route carriers like motorcycle cabs, minivans and gypsy cabs. Gypsy cabs are freelance cab drivers, like you or me, who need some extra money. Gypsy cabs could be fully freelance or in a loose organization. Jitneys are like buses but are more flexible in their Jeff E. Jared

?

“Do you think the Kirkland City Council should pass a $20 car-tab tax per vehicle to fund road maintenance?”

MY TURN

Question of the week:

chool is back in session on Sept. 6. The ringing of school bells tells us kids are back in class. It also should tell drivers to slow down. School zones – with a 20 m.p.h. speed limit – are there for a reason. They save lives. According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, a pedestrian struck by a vehicle traveling at 20 m.p.h. is nearly two-thirds less likely to be killed compared to a pedestrian struck by a vehicle traveling at 30 m.p.h. AAA has some other good advice. Research shows that taking your eyes off the road for just two seconds doubles your chances of crashing. Don’t rush into and out of driveways. Expect pedestrians on the sidewalk, especially around schools and in neighborhoods. Stop at stop signs. It seems self-evident, but research shows that more than one-third of drivers roll through stop signs in school zones and neighborhoods. Watch for bikes. Children on bicycles are often unpredictable so expect the unexpected. It may be tempting to drive around a stopped school bus, but not only is it dangerous, it’s against the law. In Washington, school districts can now install and operate automated school bus safety cameras to detect traffic violations involving overtaking or meeting a school bus. If you can’t or won’t meet these minimum safety rules, at least do kids one favor: drive a route that doesn’t take you past a school. One more school note – there are many school kids still without backpacks and school supplies, even in the Lake Washington School District. There are several opportunities for you to help. Bill Henkens, owner of the Game Neighborhood Bar & Grill, is accepting backpacks filled with school supplies through Sept. 6. Your donations will go to families served by the Eastside Domestic Violence Program. Please drop off donations to 13510 100th Ave. N.E. in Kirkland, or call 425- 821-8006 for more information. Also, Coldwell Banker Bain in Kirkland is hosting a school supply drive through Sept. 3 that will benefit Sibling House. The Kirklandbased nonprofit organization lends support to foster families who take in sibling groups when they are in foster care. Drop off donations to 8525 120th Ave. N.E., Suite 100, or call 425-602-4150. Please also check out page 12 for the organization’s school supply wish list.

routes and usually the size of minivans. Let others “cherry pick” bus stops. Let a free market operate and transportation routes would flourish as supply meets demand. Government centrally planned monopolies don’t do this and always lose money requiring subsidy. See Amtrak and the US Postal Service. And the federal Urban Mass Transit Act of 1964 should be repealed. There is no place for the feds in local transportation. Fixed-route monopoly bus systems using downtown cities as their hubs is a 1960’s idea that doesn’t reflect modern population and travel patterns.

Jeff E. Jared is a Kirkland attorney and political writer who writes from a libertarian and law-and-economics perspective. more story online… kirklandreporter.com

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mail attn: Letters, Kirkland Reporter, 11630 Slater Ave. N.E., Suite 8/9 Kirkland, Washington, 98034; fax 425.822.0141. Letters may be edited for style, clarity and length.

Sternoff has best interests of Kirkland at heart A few readers believe Councilman Bob Sternoff should not be re-elected because of “ethical lapses.” Oh, the righteous indignation! It’s unlikely these writers would be so incensed were their own candidate guilty of similar behavior. Anyone who paid attention to the Kirkland City Council at the time of the events will recall that the “debates” were polarized to the point of lacking civility, and quite likely immensely boring for those on the opposing side of the argument. Probably most of the

council would have preferred to be elsewhere doing something else. I myself have found Sternoff to be a rational, clear-thinking, responsible, approachable, helpful and principled city councilman, with the best interests of Kirkland at heart. I look forward to his re-election.

Chuck Pilcher, Kirkland

Sternoff did not violate any laws As chair of the Kirkland Ethics Task Force, I can tell you that Councilman Bob Sternoff supported the establishment of an ethics and conduct code throughout the process. While his personal use of his city email account

was inappropriate, the investigation determined that he didn’t violate any city or state laws. He apologized sincerely, immediately, publicly, in writing and during a council meeting. He did not ask the city to withhold the content of any of his emails, although under the “Tiberino” case he could have asked for the content of many of them to be redacted by the city as being private and not pertaining to the conduct of government. The matter was thoroughly investigated, and the city council, without Sternoff present, voted unanimously that there was no reason to pursue the matter further. The proposed Code of Ethics and Code of Conduct does, in fact, address the circumstances of this

matter. It states unequivocally that use of public resources for personal purposes is an ethics violation. It says that the conduct of officials must be above reproach and avoid even the appearance of impropriety, and that they must refrain from abusive conduct, threats, personal accusations and verbal attacks upon the character or motives of other members of council, boards and commissions, the staff or public. It says that council members must listen courteously and attentively to all public discussions and focus on the business at hand. The Ethics Task Force had this matter in mind when drafting these provisions.

Toby Nixon, Kirkland


September 2, 2011 [5]

www.kirklandreporter.com support from the Kirkland Police Department and other sponsors, now including the Medina Police Department, the Seattle Police Officers Guild, Argosy Cruises and the Overlake Golf & Country Club. “It just kept growing,� said Lamson, and now the cruise takes hundreds of ill children and their families on Christmas Eve voyages on Lake Washington annually. The children are victims of such illnesses as leukemia and are residents of Seattle’s Ronald McDonald House. The financial devastation began after Morrison was recruited to become the RMH Holiday Cruise treasurer, said Lisa Haistings, president. Morrison was brought in because he’d been working with financial matters at Microsoft Corp., said Haistings, and he seemed like a good fit to take over the RMH cruise money matters. He joined the charity in 2005. The cruise has raised funds through contributions and an annual auction at the Overlake country club. Morrison sometimes has been identified as a former Kirkland resident, but Haistings said she never knew exactly where he lived, adding that he used a Kirkland postoffice box as an address when he worked with the Holiday Cruise. Haistings said she’s hopeful new individual dona-

tions will allow the cruise to continue, but added that Morrison “took the majority of money we had.� The financial problems were discovered in January, 2009, when Haistings got a phone call from a healthcare company in Cleveland, Ohio, explained Don Carroll, a Kirkland detective who works with the United States Secret Service in investigating financial fraud. Morrison had moved from the Kirkland area to Ohio in about August, 2006, to go to work as chief financial officer for the Cleveland company, Carroll added. He continued to handle the Kirkland charity’s finances by telephone and email. “Morrison had embezzled company funds through the improper use of his...corporate credit card,� wrote Carroll in an affidavit of probable cause filed in United States District Court in Seattle in May. “Among other things, Morrison had directed several sizable, unauthorized payments to RMH Holiday Cruises and similarly named entities,� Carroll added, but the money instead went for his personal use. The Ohio call led the Holiday Cruise to start checking its own accounts. Haistings “discovered large discrepancies,� Carroll continued. In one transaction cited as an example, Carroll noted how a $3,000 check was writ-

ten against the cruise account at the Bank of America to Chase Bank and marked for the “RMHHC Fidelity.� But the cruise charity didn’t have a Chase account, he added. Morrison “improperly obtained no less than $142,220 from RMH Holiday Cruise,� Carroll continued, adding that he may have paid back about $30,000. That payment was described in an Express Mail package sent to the charity in April, 2009, in which Morrison enclosed a letter estimating he’d stolen about $95,000 from the Holiday Cruise and had made a $30,000 repayment in 2006. Morrison was suspended by the Ohio company in 2008 and formally fired in 2009, Carroll added. Morrison was dismissed from the Holiday Cruise on Jan. 20, 2009, for suspected theft. He now lives in Tallahassee, Fla. When he was asked about the possible thefts in 2008 and early 2009, Morrison replied that he “had a gambling problem,� Carroll continued. Morrison is free on a bond that includes such restrictions as confining his travel to Florida and Washington and requires that he attend a gamblers-treatment program. Morrison was scheduled to appear for arraignment on Thursday. Contact the RMH Holiday Cruise at rmhholidaycruise. org or 425-820-6586.

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[6] September 2, 2011 accidents, 35 noise complaints, 16 thefts, five burglaries, 12 car prowls, 11 domestic violence calls, eight calls for harassment, seven acts of fraud, 21 calls of a disturbance and seven animal-related calls. At least 34 people were arrested.

CRIME

ALERT

This week’s…

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Police Blotter

Trespass: 12:10 p.m., 12010 120th Place N.E. A Motel 6 employee reported an unwanted and verbally abusive man refusing to leave the motel. The 27-year-old man was issued a trespass letter at the motel’s request. He refused to leave the property and called 911 to speak to a sergeant about his unfair treatments. After numerous warnings, he was eventually arrested for second-degree trespass.

Aug. 23

The blotter feature is both a description of a small selection of police incidents and a statistical round-up of all calls to the Kirkland Police Department that are dispatched to on-duty police officers. The Kirkland Reporter Police Blotter is not intended to be representative of all police calls originating in Kirkland, which average about 1,000 per week.

DUI: 11:55 p.m., 327 Parkplace Center. A 30-year-old Spanaway man was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. He submitted a blood alcohol content sample of .104 and .097.

Theft: 6:46 p.m., 10020 N.E. 137th St. A 19-yearold Kirkland man was detained by Safeway store security after he was seen leaving the store without paying for some hot food. Police arrested the man and he was booked into Kirkland Jail and released.

False statements: 8 a.m., 10600 block of N.E. 68th St. A 32-year-old Colorado man was arrested for making false statements to a public servant and having a misdemeanor warrant.

Between Aug. 19 to Aug. 25, the Kirkland Police Department reported 484 traffic violations (10 DUIs, five hit and runs), 35 alarm calls, 21 car

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Domestic violence: 2:30 a.m. A mother called to report that she had a physical altercation with her 15-year-old son, who pushed her. The boy told police he “didn’t mean to

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push his mother that hard.” He was arrested for fourth-degree assault and provided portable electronics that the mother believes may have been stolen. An investigation is ongoing. DUI: 1:45 a.m., Central Way. A 28-year-old Sammamish woman was arrested for DUI after committing several traffic offenses. She performed poorly on field sobriety tests, submitting a .141 and .142 blood alcohol content samples. DUI: 3 a.m., 900 block of Sixth St. A 26-year-old King County man was driving north bound on Sixth Street and struck a parked vehicle. The man then called to have his vehicle towed from the scene. A towing representative called police about this matter. Police stopped the man while he was walking back to his vehicle and admitted to driving the vehicle, but missed the part about hitting another vehicle. He failed all field sobriety tests and was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol.

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DUI: 1:20 a.m., 100 block of Kirkland Avenue. A 21-year-old Snohomish man was stopped and arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol after he almost collided with a police officer’s patrol vehicle. The man provided a preliminary breath test of .190 and blood alcohol content samples of .175 and .195.

Assault, malicious mischief: 2:25 a.m., 9000 block of N.E. 116th Place. A Kirkland couple got into an argument over text messages. During the argument, the 27-year-old woman damaged the man’s computer he uses for work and bit his bicep. She was arrested and booked for fourth-degree assault and malicious mischief, third-degree damage to private property. A no contact order was issued.

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electrifying urban jazz show to the Kirkland Performance Center. The performance begins at 8 p.m. Sept. 10 at the KPC, 350 Kirkland Ave. A Kirkland native, Wolverton now lives in Los Angeles where he has assembled one of the most dynamic ensembles to join forces in years. Tickets are $30. For information, visit www.kpcenter.org or call 425-828-0422.

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Traffic offense: 6:49 p.m., 11600 block of N.E. 125th St. A 26-year-old Kirkland woman was stopped for a traffic violation. The responding officer found that she was driving with a suspended license for fraud-related reasons. The woman was placed into custody and admitted to taking the Department of Licensing driving test for her identical twin sister who had problems pass it, so DOL suspended her license.

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DUI: 10:20 p.m., 14500 block of 119th Ave. N.E. An officer observed A 21-year-old Bothell man’s failure to stop at a stop sign. He was arrested for DUI, refusal to comply, resisting arrest, driving with a suspended license and several outside warrants. He was booked into Kirkland Jail.

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Traffic offenses: 4:14 p.m., 12200 block of 120th Ave. N.E. A 49-year-old Everett man was stopped on traffic violations. On contact he was found to be driving while his license was suspended with four previous convictions. He also had a non-extraditable warrant out of Anacortes. He was arrested and booked into

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Questionable action: 1:56 p.m. 10 block of 11th Avenue. The victim reported that he saw a subject he recognized from a previous traffic incident. He saw the same subject walking through his neighborhood and was concerned the subject may be stalking him.


September 2, 2011 [7]

www.kirklandreporter.com

Poisoning murder case faces complexities, defense says also has waived her right to a speedy trial, which normally would have called for her to murder case involvface her accusers by Deceming a 2006 poisoning ber. death in Kirkland is Instead, her attorney, Gary generating massive amounts Davis, of the Seattle-based of paperwork and other com- Associated Counsel for the plications as it moves through Accused, has asked for extra the court process. help in handling the case and The death was of Roger has argued that the matter Mitchell Lewis, 56, who has become nearly overwas found dead in a whelmingly complex. DaKirkland apartment vis did not respond to a in the 500 block of request for comment, KIRKLAND Sixth Avenue in and his attempt to October 2006. have a second defense An investigation attorney appointed by led to first-degree the court later was denied. murder charges beBut in his request for help, ing filed against Redmond Davis told how the death resident Janjira Jeffrey Smith, and subsequent search for then 51, and the discovery of Smith has come to involve what the charges describe as a thousands of documents, mystery involving a poisoned hundreds of contacts by liqueur and a five-year investigators and possibly investigation ranging through 24 non-law-enforcement several countries before she witnesses, some of whom was extradited from England speak only the Thai language. over the summer. Besides that, there are 18 Now Smith has a schedulofficers who may be called to ing hearing Sept. 7 in King testify, he added. County Superior Court and “The defense has received BY PEYTON WHITELY

pwhitely@kirklandreporter.com

A

CRIME

the first installment of 900 pages of discovery, along with notice ... there will be approximately several thousand pages forthcoming to be delivered in several banker boxes,” Davis said in his filings. Davis argued that the charges “are largely circumstantial” and there are no eyewitnesses. “The murder investigation took five years to complete and extended into Oregon, California and ultimately to Thailand,” Davis added. It’s expected to take “an extensive amount of time” to contact and interview potential witnesses, he continued, and the defense also expects to raise “specific issues” about the collection of crime-scene evidence. Davis argued that a second attorney would be needed to “keep the case moving forward and allow the defense to be better prepared for trial and for any post-conviction motions, if necessary.” All the legal activity

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concerns a tangled series of relationships that ended with the death and a poisoning in the fall of 2006. At the time, according to charging documents, Smith and Lewis had been dating. Smith, who originally was from Thailand, learned that Lewis was planning on meeting another woman, Thanyarat O. Sengpharaghanh, who was known as “Nina.” Lewis then had returned from a trip to the Philippines and told Smith that he would be marrying a woman he met during the trip. “Smith reportedly did not receive this news well,” a court affidavit

continues. Smith then contacted Nina and told her that Lewis liked to have a drink before going out and arranged to have a bottle of Jagermeister liqueur delivered to Nina’s apartment on Sixth Avenue. On the night of Oct. 6, 2006, Lewis drank a full glass of the liqueur and Nina drank about a half of a glass, the charges add. On Oct. 7, emergency crews were called after Nina was found by a friend disoriented and blind at the apartment and Lewis was found lying face down between a couch and coffee table. He

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was pronounced dead. Nina was taken to Evergreen Hospital, where it was found she had suffered a stroke from a lack of oxygen. She recovered, and Smith also is charged with first-degree assault for that poisoning. Laboratory tests found a toxic insecticide known as Methomyl inside the liqueur bottle and the two glasses used by Lewis and Nina. Kirkland detectives then interviewed Smith, who told them she and Lewis had been living together for 18 months.


[8] September 2, 2011 [ FILM from page 1] “It’s just so unreal,” she said as she watched actors clad in shiny black pants and netted shirts disappear inside the house to play their parts. “Rolling!” A crew member called.

www.kirklandreporter.com

Kim was 19 when she was trafficked and forced into sexual slavery in 1995. She was studying law enforcement at a technical college in Dallas when she met a soldier at a bar. “He pretended to be my

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boyfriend,” she recalled. The man kidnapped Kim, chained her up in the basement of an abandoned house in Oklahoma and destroyed all of her documents. He threatened her and said if she left she would lose her rights and be treated like an illegal alien. After escaping, a woman from an escort service offered to help. She told Kim she would get paid to go on dates with men. Once she accepted the job, she was raped and sold to who she refers to as her “master” in Las Vegas. “My traffickers were organized criminals,” she explained. “I lived in a distribution warehouse – it wasn’t like a brothel or a massage parlor.” In the warehouse, woman and young girls slept on old mats. “It was kind of like a human market,” Kim said, noting women were forced to service up to 35 men per day. “The girls were tapped on the shoulder to be marketed out. Sometimes the girls came back – sometimes they didn’t.” During her two-plus years of sexual exploitation, she was transported with about 50 other girls from warehouse to warehouse throughout the country. Time did not exist. “When you are being held, there is no clock, no light,”

she said. “There were times when it would feel like it was forever.” She eventually became a madam and escaped in 1997. “I had to rank up in order to get out,” she said, noting her frustration with people asking her why she didn’t escape sooner. “It’s not like I wanted to be a madam - I did it with the intent to get out.” It took several years for Kim to realize what happened to her. She was interning as a legal advocate for a law firm in 2003 when she heard a Russian woman talk about her human trafficking experience. “I didn’t think of it as human trafficking. In the 90s, we didn’t hear of trafficking,” said Kim. When she heard the woman’s story “I said, ‘oh my gosh – she’s telling my story.’” Kim started to speak out about her experience. That is when Seattle native Rick Philips saw a newspaper article and contacted her in 2005. With Kim’s help via email, Philips wrote and completed the script four years later. Colin Plank, who is coproducing the movie with Jacob Mosler – both Seattle natives – said most of the film crew are local. Director Megan Griffith is also from Seattle. He noted the film is funded in part by a non-profit organization, Washington Filmworks, which supports the state’s film industry. Eden

Mobile dressing rooms and other trailers lined Seventh Street in Kirkland Aug. 25 for the film shooting. CARRIE WOOD, Kirkland Reporter Productions is shooting the film in-state for 25 days. Earlier in the week, the company filmed outside footage in Ellensburg and on Friday they moved to Lynwood to shoot a scene at a warehouse. Plank said Kirkland was a good location for the film because it is quiet and also has ample street parking. Location manager Dave Drummond arranged to have an interior scene filmed inside Will Diefenbach’s Kirkland home. A former Microsoft Corp. employee, Diefenbach’s home was also the site of a Microsoft video earlier this year. “The part of the film we are shooting today is set in the mid-90s, so his home fits in that genre easily,” he said on Thursday. Diefenbach said the crew shot footage in his garage, media room, downstairs guest bathroom, great room

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and master bedroom. “There were people and gear everywhere,” Diefenbach later told the Reporter. “I worked from home that day to watch what I could without getting in the way. I was able to see a few of the shots. It was really fun - the amount of effort involved in just this aspect of film making is incredible and the cast and crew all seemed ultimately professional.” Kim said she was amazed that the film is coming to fruition and was overwhelmed with the crew’s support. Now 36, she lives in Texas with her husband and son. She has visited universities around the country to speak about her personal story. She has also worked with law enforcement and political officials with the goal of strengthening the advocacy system that reaches out to victims of trafficking. Officials estimate between 14,500-17,500 people — mostly women and children — are trafficked in the U.S. each year. Washington was the first state to criminalize human trafficking in 2003. King County prosecuted the state’s first human trafficking case in 2009 involving a West Seattle street gang, according to news reports. But Kim still sees cases where human trafficking victims are tried as prostitutes. “Many people don’t know how to save these girls if they don’t know what to look for,” she said. Aside from public speaking, Kim is also a children’s advocate for Hoby. There are times, she says, when she has to “get away from the whole trafficking topic.” But when she’s confronted with a tough situation, she still calls on her past. “I hear kids all the time say, ‘I’ll never amount to anything,’ and I tell them, ‘If I’ve been through this, then you can get through this too.’”

For more information, visit www.theedenfilm. com/. To learn more about Chong Kim, visit www. chongkim.net.


REAL ESTATE KIRKLAND

SEPTEMBER 2011

Your guide to Real Estate and home buying & selling

Just ask Scott and Amber, of Home Builders/Wells level of affordability, alongfirst time home buyers in Fargo Housing Opportuside historically low interest their late 20’s, nity Index (HOI) rates, has not translated who were able to indicates that in into as many national sales recently purchase today’s market “72.6 as the industry would like a single fampercent of all new to see. ily home in Rose and existing homes Lawrence Yun, NAR Hill. “We had sold in the second chief economist, said there been wanting quarter of the year is still a tug and pull on the to own a home were affordable to market. “Affordability confor the last few families earning the ditions this year have been years but we just the most favorDebbie Walter national meweren’t able to able on record Realtor - RE/MAX NW dian income “There are smaller make our budget of $64,200.� markets that see an dating back to work. When we There are even higher rate of 1970, but many sat down with our Realsmaller markets that affordability, such buyers are betor and Lender it became see an even higher ing held back as Kokomo, Ind., crystal clear that we could rate of affordability, because banks where 95.8 percent actually make this happen such as Kokomo, are offering of homes sold because of these crazy low Ind., where 95.8 financing to during the second interest rates and prices percent of homes only the most quarter of 2011 having come down even sold during the highly qualiwere affordable ... � fied borrowers, more from two years ago!� second quarter of The fact is: when it 2011 were affordable See graph on page 10 ignoring a large comes to home affordabilto families earning share of otherity, levels are at near record the area median income of wise creditworthy buyers,� generational highs. $59,100. he said. The National Association Unfortunately, this high Yun continues, “Those

potential buyers represent the difference between an uneven recovery and a much more robust housing market that could stimulate additional economic activity and create jobs.� The NAR reports that the national median existinghome price was $174,000 in July, down 4.4 percent from July 2010. Distressed homes still made up nearly 1/3 of the market, at 29 percent. Fortunately, for Kirkland home owners, the median sales price in August was $475,000, with 51 homes sold (the highest sale being a $2.3million dollar home on Holmes Point). This is in comparison to last August 2010, where the Kirkland median sales price was $480,000 with 47 homes sold (the highest sale being a $1.6million dollar

transaction costs of buying and selling a home, you may end up losing money if you sell any sooner - even in a rising market. Consider this purchase a 5-year hold. 2. Start by shoring up your credit. Since you most likely [ more REAL ESTATE page 10 ]

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[10] September 2, 2011

Real Estate

www.kirklandreporter.com

REAL ESTATE KIRKLAND

Your guide to Real Estate and home buying & selling

3FBM &TUBUF 4BMFT JO ,JSLMBOE 8" r "VHVTU 3FTJEFOUJBM )PVTJOH JO 13123 114th Lane NE 11243 NE 131st Lane 6465 NE 130th Place 14703 122nd Place NE 10233 132nd Ave NE 14224 110th Ave NE 13619 115th Ave NE 8841 NE 144th St 10610 NE 137th Place 8420 NE 137th Ct 12202 104th Ave NE 12820 84th Ave NE 9501 116th Ave NE 7544 126TH Ave NE 13820 116th Place NE 12114 NE 134th St 11023 NE 143rd St 10626 NE 125th Place 11311 127th Ave NE 14543 119th Ave NE 443 15th Ave 11410 NE 106th Lane 13033 NE 102nd Place

$165,000 $180,000 $181,000 $193,000 $200,000 $200,000 $220,000 $255,000 $267,000 $269,900 $275,000 $285,000 $305,500 $319,000 $325,000 $339,000 $345,000 $360,000 $365,000 $368,000 $392,500 $417,505 $419,000

13045 NE 139th St 11635 106 Ave NE 12125 104th Ave NE 10809 NE 45th St 12427 68th Ave NE 1534 5th Place 8432 NE 123rd Place #Lot 6 10819 NE 62nd St 420 10th Ave W 13720 NE 136th Place 1931 10th Place W 11730 NE 95th St 1914 5th St 433 7th Ave 7023 126th Ave NE 737 State St 11501 111th Place NE 9429 116th Ave NE 1021 1st St 10026 NE 110th St 1002 State St S 708 2nd St 5704 125th Lane NE 500 Waverly Wy 9829 111th Ave NE 6303 105th Ave NE

$428,000 $470,000 $475,000 $550,000 $575,000 $584,000 $615,000 $616,500 $640,000 $646,900 $650,000 $655,000 $675,000 $695,000 $695,000 $725,000 $725,000 $735,000 $755,000 $835,000 $880,000 $900,000 $925,000 $970,000 $973,900 $1,080,000

10812 NE 60th St 11665 Holmes Point Dr NE

Residential Housing Averages Average. List Price $593,057 Average Sales Price $560,445 CDOM (Cumulative Days on Market) 77

Condos/Townhomes JO 12600 NE 145 St #G56 12525 NE 145th Place #F98 14510 124th Ave NE #H89 12513 NE 130th Wy #C106 10017 NE 138th Place #B-1l 10015 NE 120th Lane #E201 12411 109th Ct NE #C102 12323 NE 97th St #L 12905 126th Ct NE #L106 10037 NE 138th Place #D2 10127 NE 124th Place 11304 124th Ave NE #201 11905 93rd Ave NE 11905 93 Ave NE 14703 122nd Place NE

[ REAL ESTATE from page 9] will need to get a mortgage to buy a house, you must make sure your credit history is as clean as possible. A few months before you start house hunting, get copies of your credit report. Make sure the facts are correct, and fix any problems you discover. 3. Aim for a home you can really afford. The rule of thumb is that you can buy housing that runs about two-andone-half times your annual salary. But you’ll do better to sit down with a professional mortgage lender to get a better handle on how your income, debts, and expenses affect what you can afford. 4. If you can’t put down the usual 20%, you may still qualify for a loan. There are a variety of public and private lenders who, if you qualify, offer

le

nd ilab a a ts lo av ch ow a n Be ing c an

$1,099,000 $2,363,000

$61,000 $61,760 $61,800 $62,000 $95,000 $108,000 $120,000 $135,000 $141,000 $146,000 $162,000 $181,000 $187,000 $187,000 $193,000

15007 123rd Ave NE 9039 NE Juanita Dr #306 733 S Lake St S #109 102 State St S #204 11323 101st Place NE 4561 Lake Wash Blvd NE #206 611 State St S #7 11311 Ohde Cir 10020 124th Ave NE 703 4th Ave #105 109 2nd St S #521 11342 NE 67th St #A2 555 Kirkland Way #306 631 Market St #204 631 Market St #102 9727 NE Juanita Dr #202 221 5th Ave S #E203 703 9th Ave S 433 7th Ave 500 Waverly Wy

$217,000 $238,500 $267,000 $280,000 $290,000 $315,000 $326,950 $332,000 $335,000 $375,000 $392,000 $424,900 $472,500 $501,168 $520,000 $535,000 $545,000 $570,000 $695,000 $970,000

Condos/Townhomes Averages Average. List Price $311,874 Average Sales Price $300,102 CDOM (Cumulative Days on Market) 153

low-interest mortgages that require a down payment as small as 3.5 percent of the purchase price. 5. Buy in a district with good schools. In most areas, this advice applies even if you don’t have school-age children. Reason: When it comes time to sell, you’ll learn that strong school districts are a top priority for many home buyers, thus helping to boost property values. 6. Get professional help. Even though the Internet gives buyers unprecedented access to home listings, most new buyers (and many more experienced ones) are better off using a professional agent. Look for an exclusive buyer agent, if possible, who will have your interests at heart and can help you with strategies during the bidding process. 7. Before house hunting, get pre-approved.

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Getting pre-approved will save your the grief of looking at houses you can’t afford and put you in a better position to make a serious offer when you do find the right house. Not to be confused with pre-qualification, which is based on a cursory review of your finances, pre-approval from a lender is based on your actual income, debt and credit history. Just imagine: home ownership means you no longer pay monthly rent for the roof over your head. You can do what you want with your house (within reason) and you get to deduct the interest, property taxes and mortgage insurance against your taxable income in order to minimize taxes owed to Uncle Sam. The best part of buying when affordability is at its all time best? When you leave, you can sell it to recoup the purchase price and - with any luck - earn a profit too.

For further information or suggestions on future topics, please contact Debbie Walter @ www.DebbieWalter.com or (206) 930-8699. Debbie is a REALTORÂŽ with RE/MAX NW Realtors in Kirkland. Debbie is a member of the National Association of Realtors (a trade organization that promotes real estate information, education and professional standards).


Real Estate

September 2, 2011 [11]

www.kirklandreporter.com

Windermere Real Estate East, Inc. Kirkland/Yarrow Bay Office 3933 Lake Washington Blvd NE, Suite 100

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NATASHA BOSCH

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DOWNTOWN KIRKLAND

$1,149,000

Large unit with 240º views. Wrap-around decks for indoor-outdoor living. Stroll to the heart of town just 2 blocks. 2 BR+ Den. Immaculate high-end finishes. www.BigDogRealty.com

HEIDI BRIGHT 425-820-5343

HOUGHTON

$949,950

Beautiful custom built home designed with a rich patina of materials & amenities. Highlighted by 3 large bdrms, 3.5 baths, den/office, + bonus rm w/3,220 sqft of living space. Gorgeous low maintenance yard w/pri deck & patio. Photo gallery at www.Gaudry.com MLS #265233

CRAIG GAUDRY

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GG GETZ

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Impossible to find combo in townhome:stunning lake,city,mt views; 25 x 25 ft rooftop deck; secret garden patio crowned by Wisteriacovered arbor; Great Room;Food Network-worthy kitchen lavishly remodeled. 11332 NE 67th ST. www.gggetzresults.com.

206-915-7777

KIRKLAND

KATHRYNE GREEN

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$329,950

Luxe and light in Rivertrail! 2 Bdrm, 2.5Bth Townhome w/attach gar in stellar dntwn Redmond. Slab granite in kit & bth, new ss appl, main level all hdwd flrs, tile flrs in all baths, gas FP. Private patio leads to lawn, trees, pond and 26 miles of Rivertrail!

KATHRYNE GREEN

425-766-1315

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$369,950

Sweet Cottage w/tons of upgrades just 3 blocks from Juanita Beach Wtrfrnt Park. Giant sunny wrap-around deck nestled at base of Goat Hill on Huge 13K Sq Ft Lot. Detached studio options: MIL/Garage/Shop? Listing courtesy John L Scott

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$169,900

Wonderful shy acre lot w/level areas & great lake, city, mtn views. Peaceful setting close to Denny Park and boat launch. Water & Sewer recently brought into street. TOPO completed with buildable main structure as well as ADU/Garage.

KATHRYNE GREEN

425-766-1315

BOTHELL

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$114,950

Why RENT when you can OWN for less! FAB top floor 2bd/2ba condo w/vaulted ceilings, hardwoods and updates galore! Prv GarXtra parking...MINUTES to 405/I-5 and EVERYTHING! MLS#232044 (bank approv required) www.CarleneSandstrom.com

CARLENE SANDSTROM

206-910-3662 519888

KIRKLAND

Main floor Master Craftsman cottage nestled on secluded lot backed by greenspace. No “cookie cutter” home here! Great Room. Granite Island Kitchen w/skylights & hardwoods. Flex rooms for your flexible needs. 404 20th Ave. www.gggetzresults.com


[12] September 2, 2011

Real Estate

www.kirklandreporter.com

We give back to Sibling House with our Community Partnerships

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Sibling House Really Needs Your Help School Supply Drive Aug. 5-Sept. 3 Sibling House lends support to foster families who take in sibling groups when they are in foster care. Your little Kirkland charity is now helping over 500 foster children. Sibling House really needs your help! Please bring your donation to Coldwell Banker Bain – Kirkland (directly south of Costco) between now and September 3rd. Monetary donations can be made at www.siblinghouse.org. Please join Coldwell Banker Bain in making the lives of these children and foster parents just a little bit easier.

“Working to keep siblings together while in foster care”

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Real Estate

September 2, 2011 [13]

www.kirklandreporter.com

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[14] September 2, 2011

www.kirklandreporter.com

KIRKLAND

SPORTS

Finding strength in the intangible

KIRKLAND RESIDENT PLAYS IN EWGA FINALS Kirkland resident Diane Ginther recently earned a spot in the Executive Women’s Golf Association championship round during the semi-finals tournament in Pullman. She won with the low net in the fourth flight of the Pacific Northwest Semi-Final Championship held in late August. Ginther earned a spot in the finals, which will be held in October in Palm Desert, Calif. The EWGA Championship finals bring members together who qualified first for the local championship, then the semifinal winners.

DON JAMES GOLF CLASSIC SEPT. 9 Join the Dawgfather – Coach Don James, and over 250 other golfers and guests for the 18th Annual Don James Golf Classic and Gala presented by Cobalt Mortgage on Sept. 9 at Newcastle Golf Course. All proceeds benefit the Kirkland Boys & Girls Club as they work to provide a safe and positive place for kids. Register at www.onepositiveplace.org/ donjamesgolfclassic. Cost is $325 per individual golfer and includes tee prizes, warm up range balls, box lunch provided by Ezell’s Chicken, green fees and cart, and dinner banquet and auction ticket.

BY MEGAN MANAGAN

mmanagan@kirklandreporter.com

Teams can easily be defined by the numbers they post on a daily or weekly basis. Wins over losses, shutouts and swept matches. But every good team knows there is something extra that propels the top teams into the higher spots. It’s all about the intangibles – the things teams can’t quite put their fingers on, but that are there, every moment of every practice or game. In the Lake Washington High School gym, the Kangs volleyball team is working on their numbers, but understands those unknowns are going to be key. “I think our strength is going to be in the intangible. In the ability that despite how young we are ... it’s going to be in the passion and desire to win,� said head coach Claire Lazar. Besides the unknowns, Lazar does know that defense

is key in KingCo. “That’s one of our biggest things. Defense wins the game,� said the coach. “To win a game you really only need to play offense once and play defense 24 times. My philosophy is big on defense, however, this is the first year we’ll be running some new offensive plays. That will be exciting, to see our hitters, and be able to see them get some plays, and our setters.� Lazar said the program as a whole has grown, but she has a smaller varsity roster this fall, so her focus has been from the beginning on community. “Really one of my goals is to get that sportsmanship award again this year,� said Lazar. “I want to be more about this team and to make it a place where people want to come, not that we hate going to that school because their crowd is terrible. We want it to be about community and building our own.�

Kangs senior volleyball players include: Katy Harding, Eleanor Lyon, Jessica Lund, MacKenzie Morgan, Shyanne Singstad, Maddy Warnick (not pictured) and Taylor Lipking (not pictured). MEGAN MANAGAN, Kirkland Reporter The team has some goals of their own, on the more tangible side of things. “Honestly, their goal is to place at state this year,� said the coach. “For me, it’s one game at a time, one day at a time.� The Kangs will get an early taste of how everything comes together during a

non-conference match against a team from Juneau Alaska. Then they will play in a tournament at Juanita High School on Sept. 17. Lake Washington will play its first home game of the regular season against Mount Si on Sept. 14 – the game circled on the Kangs’ calendars.

“We’d like to unsettle the top seeded team this year,� said Lazar. “The top teams in our league are usually Mount Si and Mercer Island and really one game at a time, but Mount Si is the game we’d really like to win.� The team will play at Interlake on Sept. 12 in the first conference game of the season.

Rebels revamp for volleyball season BY MEGAN MANAGAN mmanagan@kirklandreporter.com

After losing nine seniors last fall, the Juanita volleyball team has some new faces and definitely looks a little different, but that doesn’t mean the goals aren’t the same. The Rebels, just points from making its first ever team state appearance last fall, aim to finish the project this season. “We want to go to state. We have never been,� said returning head coach Teena Bambolo. “Last year was sickening, we were points away from state. We just don’t want

to be team No. 6. Five teams go from our district and we should be in that top five, if we can stay healthy.� Returning to help the Rebels obtain that goal is senior outside hitter Dana Michels, and junior setter Jade Finau, both keys to the team last year, and the Rebels captains. Despite the team losing a lot of players last year, Bambolo said she has talent this year, it’s just fitting new pieces into the puzzle and finding where things gel together. “We definitely have talent, it’s just getting it to all work together,� she said. “We’ve been doing a lot recently

in the pre-season on team building, stuff away from volleyball just to get them to know each other.� Michels said one of the captains’ goals is for the team to trust each other and work together, which will bring the team together and then the wins can follow. “We are working on consistency and being there,� said Finau. For their coach, working on fundamentals has been a key in the early season. “Honestly, I think fundamentals are the most important,� said Bambolo. “It doesn’t matter who is in your league or who they have, it

Juanita volleyball captains, Jade Finau, a junior setter, and senior outside hitter Dana Michels. MEGAN MANAGAN, Kirkland Reporter matters who is the strongest and soundest fundamentally. It matters who is going to win the serve receive battle.� To get plenty of serve receive practice before the sea-

son begins in earnest, Juanita is hosting a tournament on Sept. 17 at the high school.

more story online‌ kirklandreporter.com

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September 2, 2011 [15]

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...today’s parent

Stay a step ahead of the college admissions game

Eastside Prep to host free screening of bullying film

Prep’s school counselor and the school’s student body president and vice president, both girls in their senior year. While “Finding Kind� is certainly geared towards girls, Eastside Prep invites all those interested to attend. In “Finding Kind,� filmmakers Lauren Parsekian and Molly Thompson, who met while in school at Pepperdine University, set out in a cross-country journey of discovery and education. Interviewing women and girls along the way about their lives and experiences, Parsekian and Thompson find, among all the unique personal stories, some uni-

versal truths about growing up as girls. This is a document of that journey, and of the filmmakers’ quest to take these experiences and find a common ground of kindness and

missions. She has prepared thousands of students for the SAT test. She is also the president of Romance Writers of America’s Young Adult Writers chapter.

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mutual respect. In addition to all of the girls and women who share their personal experiences about girl on girl bullying, the film includes interviews with respected experts and authors.

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Eastside Preparatory School will be one of only a few locations in the region to host a screening of FREE the independent documentary “Finding Kind.� The issue of bullying, particularly among girls, is an especially relevant and current topic. Eastside Prep’s commitment to strong and healthy relationships has prompted them to offer this screening at no cost to the public. The screening will be held at 7 p.m. Sept. 26 at the Kirkland Performing Arts Center, 350 Kirkland Ave., Kirkland. A question-and-answer session will begin immediately following the screening. This session will be facilitated by Dr. Kelly Moore, Eastside

many options. I recommend for my students to apply to at least nine schools – three that are safeties, three that are matches, and three that are reaches. This way you won’t be stuck attending the only school you were accepted to since you will have choices.

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class. 2. Make your essays sparkle! If I read one more essay about building latrines in Costa Rica, the last minutes of a high school sporting event, or how climbing a mountain gave you clarity on life – I’ll find another line of work. Admissions counselors read countless versions of these clichÊd topics again and again. Think outside the box and find a topic that only you could write about. 3. Apply to the right amount of schools! There are so many wonderful schools out there – do your research so you have

COLLEGE PREP

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516899

F

or millions of high school seniors, fall brings a sense of anticipation and fear about applying for college admissions. After enduring an endless barrage of standardized tests, honors classes, and extra curricular activities, many students are completely stressed out and overwhelmed. Even more discouraging, the enigmatic admissions process causes students and parents consternation. Here are three easy tips to streamline the college admis-


[16] September 2, 2011

www.kirklandreporter.com

KIRKLAND

CALENDAR

Washington at O.O. Denny Park with the Denny Creek Neighborhood Alliance’s DennyFest from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 18. The event features a dog parade, chili cookoff and pie contest, trail tour, arts and crafts. Volunteers are needed to help with the Arts and Crafts projects (one hour shifts) and with grilling food. Please contact info@dennycreek. org if you would like to help. Tents, tables and chairs are also needed for the day of the event. Please contact info@dennycreek.org if you can loan us any of these items.

FARMERS’ MARKETS Juanita Friday Market: The Juanita Friday Market runs from 3-7 p.m. Fridays at Juanita Beach Park, 9703 N.E. Juanita Drive. The market hosts 35-plus vendors selling: fresh organic fruits and vegetables, beautiful flowers, bedding plants and herbs, honey products, dry dip mixes, chutneys, kettle corn, taffy, cupcakes, breads, and other tasty treats. Kirkland Wednesday Market: The market runs from 2-7 p.m. through Sept. 28 on Park Lane. Produce featured varies by the season, but is all locally grown. The market will also have various local crafters/artists every week. For information, visit www.kirklandwednesdaymarket.org or email kirklandwednesdaymarket@gmail.com.

ARTS

Calendar submissions: The free community calendar is published Fridays on a space-available basis and includes free and non-profit local events and groups. Submit items at least a week in advance of publication dates to: calendar@kirklandreporter.com

EVENTS Sept. 18 DennyFest: A celebration of neighbors and the environment returns to the shores of Lake

‘Every Picture Tells a Story’: The “Every Picture Tells a Story” senior art exhibit is the only mixed artists’ show hosted by Evergreen Hospital and Madison House Retirement & Assisted Living is honored to help make this 6th Annual event possible. Madison House transported the over 70 pieces by artists age 65-98 to Evergreen Hospital, where the show is on display in the Silver and Red Galleries through October for viewing. You may also vote for your favorite! For more information, call 425-821-8210. The Brothers Four: The smooth musical sounds of The Brothers Four have delighted millions for five exciting decades. These national icons – America’s musical ambassadors to the world – return to Kirkland for an evening of familiar tunes and new discoveries at 7 p.m. Sept. 11 at the Kirkland Performance Center, 350 Kirkland Ave. Tickets $32-$35. For tickets, visit www.kpcenter.org or call

Live Guitarist: Guitarist Jake Olason takes requests from 7-10 p.m. every Wednesday at St. James Espresso, 355 Kirkland Ave. For information, visit www.kirklandsbestcoffee.com.

425-893-9900. Jim French’s Imagination Theater: Imagination Theater unlocks the magic of live radio drama. You will delight in live sound effects, captivating mysteries, and the excitement of knowing that every Imagination Theater show is recorded at KPC and distributed all over the world. Happens at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 12 at the KPC, 350 Kirkland Ave. Tickets $9. For tickets, visit www.kpcenter.org or call 425-893-9900.

BUSINESS

Master Chorus Eastside auditions: Master Chorus Eastside is holding auditions in all sections in preparation for its upcoming 2011/2012 season, including an exciting collaborative performance of Verdi’s monumental Requiem in Benaroya Hall. All interested singers must have choral experience and basic music reading ability. For an audition appointment, call 425-392-8446. For information, visit www.masterchoruseastside.org. Second Friday ArtWalk: Artwalk runs from 6-9 p.m. the second Friday of the month at participating galleries in downtown Kirkland. The event includes sidewalk activities, temporary artist placement in participating businesses and live performances. For a free, self-guided Artwalk map go to www.kirklandartwalk.org. Second Saturday Contradance: A new community dance series will be held every second Saturday at the Juanita Community Club, 13027 100th Ave. The evening will be primarily contradances - a social dance form originally from New England. Dances are presented by a caller with a live band of traditional folk musicians. A walk-through is provided for each dance. Attending with a partner is not necessary. Beginner contradance instruction starts at 7:30 p.m. and the dance gets into full swing by 8 p.m. Free ice cream is provided during the break. Admission is $8 at the door; $4 for student with an ID. Info www.folkhorizons.org or 425-605-0804. Folk Horizons is a non-profit organization. Skylight Open Studio: Kirkland Arts Center students and members are invited to enjoy free weekly drawing and painting sessions from 1-5 p.m. Fridays in the Skylight Room at the Kirkland Arts Center. For information, visit www.kirklandartscenter.org. Artluck!: On the last Friday of each month, artists come to Kirkland Arts Center to share a meal, view new work, and discuss current art issues. Each month features a short presentation or exercises to boost creativity. Potluck begins at 6:30 p.m. at KAC, 620 Market St.

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CRAZY, STUPID, LOVE. (PG13) 1:30 4:30 7:00 9:30

As of Monday September 5th we will be CLOSED after 8:00pm Sunday-Thursday for the winter season.

Honoring Your Animal Companion and Your Grief: The AHELP Project, an Eastside animal hospice nonprofit, will be sponsoring the first event in their 2011-2012 Speakers Series on Sept. 8 in the Chrysalis Education Room, Shoreline Unitarian Universalist Church, 14724 1st Ave. N.E. The title is “Honoring your Animal Companion and your Grief,” focused on memorializing the life of our animal friends, and how doing so can help the grief process any family feels surrounding a loss as devastating as this. The presentation will be from 6:308:30 p.m. to include time for questions, and speakers include Anne Auerbach of Kirkland. Pre-purchase tickets for $17 in advance, or $20 at the door. Email michelle@AHELPProject. org or call Michelle at 425-223-5722 for more information. Free Legal Clinics: Eastside Legal Assistance Program, a nonprofit that provides free and low-cost legal services in King County, announced that its volunteer attorneys are offering a free legal consultation clinic at the Kirkland/Northshore Hopelink. The clinics, which are designed to help low-income residents of east King County understand and assess civil legal issues, will take place twice a month. To make an appointment, call 425-747-7274. Free Break Dancing for teens: Practice your freezes, flexes, spins, pops and locks and get rock-solid footwork as you develop your own unique break-style. Classes are held from 7-9 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Kirkland Teen Union Building. No previous dancing experience required. Visit www.ktub. org/programs/.

GFWC Kirkland Woman’s Club: The woman service organizations meets twice a month at noon the first Thursday of each month (even days, potluck; odd days, lunch is served) and 1 p.m. the third Thursday of each month for coffee and dessert at the Kirkland Woman’s Club, 407 First St., Kirkland. For reservations, call 425-829-7720. Eastside The Compassionate Friends: For any parent who has experienced the death of a child, at any age, from any cause. The group meets the second Thursday of every month from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the Holy Spirit Lutheran Church, 10021 N.E. 124th St., Kirkland. The group will host a balloon release during the Aug. 11 meeting. For information, call 425-325-0357. The Eastside Welcome Club: Meets the first Wednesday of the month at 10 a.m. in members’ homes and on various days of the month for other activities and outings. If you are new to the area and want to meet new people and join in different interests and social groups, please contact Barbara at 425-868-2851. Kirkland Moms Network: An on-line support group for stay-at-home moms (or dads) who live in or near the Kirkland area. The group meets several times a month for

PUBLIC NOTICES

Next Baby’s Day at the Movies is on Friday, September 16 @ 9:45am

519307

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CLASSES

SUPPORT GROUPS

Kirkland Arts Center Store: This is the place for unique, affordable, quality work in 2-D, ceramics, jewelry, sculpture, fiber arts, glass, and more. Conveniently located at the core of downtown Kirkland at 336 Parkplace, Kirkland Arts Center’s has store is open seven days a week, and offers art-making activities for kids and special in-store events. Store hours are Monday-Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information call 425-827-8219.

CINEMA 6

Kirkland First: This free service offered by the City of Kirkland gives local businesses and consumers the opportunity to connect and do business locally. Kirkland businesses or non-profits are invited to create a free listing on the Web site or search for local Kirkland businesses quickly in one place, at Kirklandfirst. org. For information, contact Elizabeth Ordos at 425-587-3013.

To place your Legal Notice in the Kirkland Reporter please call Linda Mills at 253-234-3506 or e-mail

PUBLIC NOTICES

outings and play dates. For more information, visit kirklandmomsnetwork.groupsite.com.

visit ECA Thrift Shop at 12451 116th Ave. N.E., Kirkland. For information, call 425-825-1877.

Overeaters Anonymous: Meets at 7 a.m. Tuesday at Bellevue Alamo Club, 12302 N.E. 8th St. All are welcome.

Elementary School Speedwatch: Volunteers “adopt” a local elementary school and monitor car speeds during flexible morning and afternoon shifts (minimum of one shift per week). Volunteers are trained to use hand-held radar units and record license plate numbers for speeding vehicles. Vehicle owners receive a friendly reminder from the Kirkland Police Department to drive at safe and legal speeds in school zones. E-mail Julie Huffman jhuffman@ ci.kirkland.wa.us or call 425-587-3012 for an application.

Bellevue Women’s Club: A support group where you can make new friends on the Eastside who have similar interests and participate in activities you enjoy, including Bridge, Pinochle, Bunco, book club, theater group and more. Monthly luncheons and programs are held on the third Wednesdays of every month at various times and places. For information, call Jan at 425-391-1135.

ONGOING ‘Get Around Puget Sound’: Knowledgeable volunteers help people learn how to use all the transportation options available for getting around the Puget Sound region, from buses to taxis. Kirkland residents who want to use their cars less, or don’t have their own transportation and aren’t sure how to get where they need to go, now have some place to turn for help and answers. Hopelink provides a “Getting Around Puget Sound” service free to anyone who has transportation questions. The two-hour sessions will be held from 9-11 a.m. the first Thursday of every month at the Peter Kirk Community Center, 352 Kirkland Ave. in Kirkland. For more information, call 425-943-6769.

Kirkland Arts Center: KAC relies on volunteers with all skill levels for special events, gallery, outreach, and arts education programs. Interested persons should contact Ashley Baldonado, volunteer coordinator, at 425-822-7161. Kirkland Performance Center: Each performance at KPC is staffed with volunteers who help take tickets/ usher, manage concessions and assist with pre- and post-performance needs. Front of house volunteering at KPC is a great way to see shows and become more involved in the community. Visit www.kpcenter.org/volunteer.htm to sign up, or for further information about ushering or other front of house duties, please contact the Box Office Manager at info@kpcenter.org.

Free Assessments: Residence XII, a nonprofit alcohol and chemical dependency treatment center for women and their families in Kirkland, offers free assessments to women who are considering seeking treatment for their addictions. Residence XII’s assessment and referral counselors are available 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday-Friday. To make an appointment, call 425-823-8844 or 800-776-5944. To learn more about what the assessment entails, visit www.residencexii.org/assessment.html.

Evergreen Hospice and Palliative Care: Volunteers are needed to serve patients and families throughout King and Snohomish counties. The hospice and palliative care volunteers provide service to the patient and family by providing companionship, life review, compassionate presence, light household help, running errands, or providing respite so the primary caregiver can have a break. To learn more about the volunteer program, call 425899-1040 and/or apply online at the Evergreen Healthcare website at www.evergreenhealthcare.org/hospice.

VOLUNTEER

MEETINGS

Teen Parent Program Daycare Volunteers: BEST High School is looking for volunteers to come and play a game, rock youngsters to sleep, read a book, and more in the Teen Parent Program Daycare. If interested, visit www.lwsd.org, click on “Volunteer Application Packet.” Fill in all information, print it and send it, along with a copy of driver’s license to: BEST High School, 10903 N.E. 53rd St., Kirkland, WA 98033.

Eastside Homelessness Advisory Committee: EHAC coordinates efforts to mitigate and end homelessness on the Eastside. Monthly meetings are held from 2-4 p.m. on the second Thursday of each month at the First Presbyterian Church of Bellevue, 1717 Bellevue Way N.E. All are welcome.

Spanish-Speaking Financial Educator Needed: Hopelink is looking for a Spanishspeaking volunteer for its “Money Smart” programs in Bellevue, Kirkland and Shoreline. Must have strong financial literacy and Spanish language skills and be comfortable explaining banking practices, checking procedures, money management and budgeting skills, savings practices, consumer protection skills, credit and borrowing skills, and credit report interpretation skills. Must be 18 years or older with at least a high school diploma. Money Smart is a five-week series with a 2-hour class offered one night per week for five consecutive weeks. Commitment: three to four hours per week with two hours class time and one to two hours prep time (depending upon instructor preference.) Volunteers are required to create a profile and pass a background check at: community.hope-link.org and attend a volunteer orientation. Eastside Community Aid Thrift Shop: ECA is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that raises money through its thrift shop. All profits are donated back into the Eastside community through grants. No experience needed. Fun way to give back to your immediate community. Open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Volunteer a couple of hours, half a day or all day once a week. Call or

Singles Golf Group: Hey single golfers. Have you been missing opportunities to play a variety of great courses while meeting new people and having fun? The group is looking for golfers of every level and age to join them and experience a lot of good tee times and a variety of people who love the game as much as you. The ASGA (American Single Golf Association) holds monthly dinner meetings on the second Tuesday of each month at The Big Fish Grill, 10426 Northup Way, Kirkland. For information, e-mail singlesgolf.com or call 206-444-4055. Kiwanis Club of Kirkland: The group meets from 12-1:15 p.m. every Wednesday at the Crab Cracker in Kirkland. The global organization of volunteers is dedicated to changing the world one child and one community at a time. For information, visit www.kirklandkiwanis. org or contact Matt Gregory at 425-828-0231 or e-mail MollyTaffy@msn.com. Rotary Club of Kirkland Downtown: Weekly meetings held on Tuesday mornings at the Crab Cracker restaurant in Kirkland begin with coffee, conversation and a buffet breakfast at 7:15 a.m. For information, visit www.RCKD.org. Rotary Club of Kirkland: The club meets at 6:15 p.m. Mondays at the Woodmark Hotel, 1200 Carillon Point. For information, contact Barb Seaton at: tbseaton@comcast.net or 206-782-3815.


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September 2, 2011 [19]

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