Saturday, April 26, 2014

Prop. 1 defeat has implications here


Madison Park loses late-night service 


The landslide defeat this week of King County's ballot measure to support public transportation will have a minor impact on our neighborhood if Metro's recently announced route cuts and service reductions are implemented.  Press reports have noted that Bus Route 84 to Madison Park will be eliminated as a result of the changes Metro is planning. That route, however, is not the main bus route to Madison Park. Route 84 ("Night Owl") makes two runs to the neighborhood, leaving Third and Pine downtown and at 2:15 am and again at 3:30 am and arriving here at 2:32 am and 4:08 am respectively.  Quick service on empty streets.

Our principal Metro Bus service, however, is along Route 11, which currently has a total of 52 bus runs from downtown to Madison Park each weekday, busses arriving at 42nd Avenue E. and E. McGilvra Street in the hours between 5:00 am and 1:30 am. Metro plans to reduce the number of runs by having the last run to the Park arrive at 11:30 pm.  The expected bus arrival times (every 15 minutes during peak hours and every 30 minutes during mid-day) are expected to remain unchanged, however.

If approved by the Metropolitan King County Council, the proposed changes to Route 11 will take effect in September 2015.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

The longer-term view of Madison Park real estate



2013 in context


As we often caution, sales statistics for Madison Park can be misleading given that ours is a pretty small market, with relatively few sales in each period.  Moreover, the mix of housing in the neighborhood is eclectic, to say the least.  Mansions abound in Broadmoor and Washington Park, with mega-houses now a feature in each of the three major sections of Madison Park.  Yet at the same time, there are plenty of less-imposing structures even in the more exclusive enclaves, and there’s a wide mix of construction styles throughout the neighborhood. Because of this hodgepodge, appraisers have reported that it’s more difficult to find good comps here than in most other Seattle neighborhoods.

Statistical information about Madison Park housing, therefore, should be looked at over the long term, rather than on a month-by-month or quarter-by quarter basis.   Perhaps a good way to evaluate the trend of housing values here is to look at sales price per square foot over a period of years.  The chart below shows the movement in value for single-family residences sold in the neighborhood since the height of the market, at least in terms of this variable, in 2008:


While Madison Park remains 21% below the high of $534.70 per square foot achieved five years earlier, it’s worth noting that there were almost twice as many total house sales in 2013 as there were in 2008, 103 versus just 56.  A wider mix of sales may skew the numbers in some respect.  Last year was a banner year for single-family homes sales in the Park, the 103 total sales being an increase of 32% over the previous year’s 78 sales.  In 2008 sales lagged at just 46.  Unfortunately, as we’ve chronicled in recent months, buyers during 2013 took most of the for-sale housing in Madison Park, and potential sellers did not replenish the inventory.  We note as an aside that there are fewer than 20 houses for sale in the market today.

What the price-per-square-foot chart tells us is that by this measure the market has been bumping along at about the same level for the past four years.  The fact that 25% of the 2013 sales were of houses priced at less than $1 million may have had the effect of pushing the average price per square foot down for the year.  Lower-priced homes do not command the same per-square-foot price as the more expensive abodes.

The most expensive house sale

In 2013, almost as many houses changed hands at the $2 million or more level as were sold at the under $1 million level: 21 in total.  Six of these were over $4 million, the most expensive being a “Georgian colonial…with sweeping, jaw-dropping views” (to quote the sales brochure), along McGilvra Boulevard in Washington Park, which sold for $4.8 million.  The house, built in the final year of the last century, has 5,270 sq. ft., with five bedrooms and five bathrooms.  Its $904 price per square foot is nearly double the average for the market as a whole, which pretty well demonstrates our earlier point.

Average days on market for houses sold in 2013 was just 98.  Forty houses sold in 30 days or fewer, including three houses priced at more than $3 million. Each of them sold within a week.  On the other hand, some sellers really held out for the long term, one home selling after 869 days (and at a significant discount) and two others selling in over 600 days.

As is always the case, there were differences in the average sales prices for houses located in Washington Park and Broadmoor versus the rest of Madison Park.  The differential between these more exclusive sections and the less well heeled was $200,000 to $300,000.


Broadmoor had the highest median sale price, at $1,520,000.  This is basically even with 2012 and down 8% from 2009. Broadmoor’s high-water mark was a $2 million median sale price in 2007.  21 houses changed hands in this most-exclusive enclave last year, a 250% increase over the dismal six sales recorded in 2012. The most expensive house sold for $4.3 million.  Only one home sold for under $1 million, though almost 50% of total Broadmoor sales were for houses priced under $1.5 million.  That’s what passes for affordable in the context of Broadmoor.


Washington Park, meanwhile, recorded a median sales price of $1,405,000.  Houses took a bit longer to sell than those in Broadmoor (121 days versus 98 days for Broadmoor), but sellers took a slightly lower discount from list price than those in the gated community.  The least expensive house sold in Washington Park during 2013 was a $580,000 cottage, built in 1941, located on Lake Washington Boulevard E. A total of 11 houses sold for $1 million or less in Washington Park, all of them on 33rd Avenue E. or further west, an area that’s considered to be Madison Valley by many residents at or near the top of the hill in Washington Park.


In the rest of the Park, the median house sold for $1,212,500 during 2013. This is a big increase over previous years and is almost as high as the $1,250,000 median price at the height of the market in 2008. The average days on market was 77 and the average price per square foot was $412.88. The most expensive home sold was a secluded 6,280 sq. ft. house on the 1900 block of 37th Place E., built in 2000. It went for $3,495,000.

The most expensive condo sale was in this building

There were also 39 condos sold in Madison Park during 2013, with a median price of $445,000, average square feet of 1,141, and an average price per square foot of $454.60.  The highest priced condo sold last year was a 1,400 sq. ft. unit in a condo building on 43rd Avenue E., across the street from Swingset Park, which sold for $1,150,000.  Condos spent an average of 136 days on the market, though one notable exception was a condo that that languished for 1885 days---owned apparently by someone those in the industry would probably characterize as “an unmotivated seller.”

[Thanks, as always, to Laura Halliday of Windermere Real Estate for her help in providing sales statistics from the Northwest Multiple Listing Service.  Current market data provided by Redfin.]

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Madison Park: not exactly a crime oasis


Kegs 'lifted' from The Attic


In the annals of neighborhood brazenness this scene is hardly going to be recorded as anything more than a footnote.  After all, Madison Park recently experienced a surreal, though terrorizing, bank holdup. MPB reader Candace Baer, who lives at Madison Court (42nd E. & E. Newton) witnessed the incident captured in this photo, which she says shows two guys emancipating kegs from the back of neighborhood alehouse, The Attic, at about 6 pm on Tuesday night.  That passes for broad daylight in Seattle at this time of year.

Candace says she yelled at the suspects and then ran after them. She reports that they had a pickup truck parked in her building's loading zone, into which they threw the kegs. They raced off as Candace dialed 9-1-1. She says the police arrived quickly. Unfortunately she didn't the license number of the vehicle, and the cops were unable to locate the truck.

Multiple times a year there are stories in the Park of brazen criminal activity. These are usually house break-ins that occur while occupants are clearly at home (in most cases sleeping).  But there are also the occasional gun incidents, and earlier this week we witnessed a drug deal go down in front of our house (and not for the first time).

Relatively crime free, we are.  A crime oasis, however, we're not

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Tax fraud hits home



Dumb-cluck IRS lays an egg


Commentary by Bryan Tagas

After electronically filing my 2013 federal income tax return using TurboTax last week, I requested that I be notified as soon as the IRS officially accepted my filing.  Sure enough, about three hours later I got a text message from TurboTax. Unfortunately, the news was not good: “Your Federal Tax Return Rejected – Action Needed!”

“Here’s the problem with your return,” the message continued, “IND-513 – The Spouse SSN in the Return Header must not be equal to the Spouse SSN in another return filed for the same tax year.”  But then there was this hopeful bit: “Don’t worry, we can help.” Well, actually, not.

They can’t help, in fact, because the problem is that my wife is a victim of what’s known as “stolen identity refund fraud.”  Someone somewhere has filed a tax return and, presumably, gotten a nice juicy refund using my wife’s social security number in the process.  When my wife confirmed all of this with the IRS she was told, surprisingly, that she ought to be thankful that the fraudster had only listed her as a spouse and not as the primary filer (no mention, however, of how horrific that particular circumstance might have been).  Oh, and there was another piece of positive news from the IRS: “Fortunately, there is much less tax fraud this year than there was last year!”

We’re already feeling much better about the whole thing.

The IRS was not willing to say, however, whether the person using my wife’s SSN actually
received a refund as a result of the fraudulent filing.  Apparently it is IRS policy not to say.  And that’s probably for a very good reason:  it’s damn embarrassing that the federal government is so lax as to allow perfectly preventable situations like this to occur.

According to press reports, hundreds of millions of dollars are scammed this way each year, probably billions.  Taxpayers should be outraged.  A quick search of the Internet turns up some incredible stories.  In one notorious case, the IRS gave refunds totaling $1.2 million to a woman who filed more than 400 fraudulent electronic tax returns from a single IP address at her home.  She used the illegally obtained Social Security numbers of hundreds of people. Other unbelievable cases are documented at the IRS’s own identity theft tax fraud webpage.

How did my wife and I get caught up in a tax-fraud situation? Well, the story begins with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle and its failure to protect the confidential information of its employees, vendors, and volunteers.  Perhaps you’ve read the articles in the local press. My wife volunteers as a once-a-year art instructor for a Catholic elementary school. With good reason, the Archdiocese does a background check on all such volunteers—and it apparently maintains a database that contains the social security numbers, addresses, and other personal information of these individuals.  The Seattle Archdiocese reported last month that its computers had been hacked and it warned current and former employees and volunteers that they should take steps to determine whether they had been victimized.

I dismissed the matter, given that we always file our taxes electronically and I know that the IRS only accepts our returns if the PINs of both my wife and myself are entered correctly and we have accurately reported the exact amount we paid in taxes for the previous tax year.  And there were other possible safeguards that I was aware the IRS could employ to protect us.  Besides, as far as I knew, we actually owed money to the feds for the 2013 tax year, so presumably no one could fraudulently get a refund using our Social Security numbers anyway.  Certainly the IRS was smarter than that!

Unfortunately, I was thinking logically, like the banker I am.  But this is the government, after all.  And apparently when it comes to the IRS, it’s a first-come, first-served world. Whoever submits the first return with a particular SSN locks out anyone who comes later using that same SSN, even when that second person is the legitimate filer!  Now it’s up to us to prove to the IRS that we’re legitimate.  We’ll have to file manually, attach an affidavit claiming identity theft, and wait up to six months for our refund--assuming we qualify for one.

Now anyone who ever tries to change their password or home address on a financial website should expect an email or snail mail confirmation of the change.  That’s just prudent operating procedure.  If fraud has occurred, the victim is immediately put on notice.  The IRS doesn’t work that way, however.  In fact, the IRS takes pride in stating that it NEVER sends emails to taxpayers.  That rule supposedly exists so that no one will ever, therefore, be scammed by someone pretending to be the IRS!  Everyone, of course, knows the IRS doesn’t send emails.  Right?

So no email.  But the IRS could have sent us a letter, and it might have read as follows:

“Dear Taxpayer:  We have accepted your recent tax return, but we noticed the following discrepancies: 1) your refund address or bank account has changed since your last tax filing, 2) you have a different spouse from all your previous tax returns, 3) if you filed electronically your PIN does not match our records and if you filed manually you either did not fill in the PIN box or failed to write in the correct number, and 4) your reported income does not match the W2 and 1099 information for you that was provided to us by third parties for 2013.  However, because your Social Security number is correct, we are preparing to send your tax fund to the new address or bank account you specified. Sincerely, the Internal Revenue Service.”

Inexplicably, we didn’t receive such a letter. Presumably, the IRS was just too busy getting those fraudulent tax refunds processed efficiently.


Anyway, when I told my wife I was going to write a blog posting about our maddening tax-fraud experience, she warned me not to do it: “They’ll audit us for sure,” she said. “No way,” said I.  “The IRS certainly doesn’t take retribution against citizens who exercise their constitutional right to say the agency is incompetent.”

Then I remembered: I was also the one who said that there was no way the IRS would ever accept a tax return from someone else using her Social Security number.
Live and learn?  Me?

Apparently not.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Getting caught up


Graffiti epidemic angers property owners


Many neighborhood businesses and a few residential properties were hit by tagging "artists" on Thursday or Friday last week.  The above example, one of the worst, is at the bus stop next to Madison Park Hardware on 42nd near E. Madison St.  Among the neighborhood icons tagged were the cute red phone box in front of the former Best Buds shop and the not-so-cute "Black Hole of Madison Park" (Constance Gillespie's building next to the Bank of America).


Those who have experienced vandalism may report it using the Seattle Police's CORP (Community Online Reporting Program), but no one should expect much of a police investigation of this kind of criminal activity. That's just the way it is.



Another neighborhood business to exit


Ann Marie Lingerie (4000 E. Madison St.) is closing up shop later this month, at least at its current location.  Store manager Felicia Klabo tells us that Ann Marie may ultimately move to another physical location, but for the time being it's going to be exclusively an online merchant. The store is having a 50-75%-off moving sale, so those looking for the latest Hanky Panky nightwear or Prima Donna underwires should rush right down.

If you are among those who bemoan the loss of Madison Park's retail core, this closing is no doubt particularly sad.  Ann Marie has been one of the very few neighborhood clothing stores to survive (The Original Children's Shop being the only other). The store has been a neighborhood fixture for many years, but the current ownership of Nathalie Scandiuzzi began in 2011.

At the other end of "The Village," however, a new establishment opened during the last month, at 1928 43rd Avenue E.  City Sweats is another neighborhood spa, this one offering "Far Infrared Sauna Treatment, massages, Himalayan salt scrubs, Lymphatic Drainage and a full tonics bar menu."  Oh, and "chromotherapy."


Meanwhile, interior construction work is now underway at the old Mad Pizza location on E. Madison St. next to Scoop du Jour.  We see that "Vophan Restaurant & Catering LLC" has applied for a beer and wine permit for this location, but there's no official confirmation yet that this new entity is going to be providing the neighborhood with sushi. Nevertheless, it's a pretty strong rumor.  Further down the street, however, no work seems to be underway at the former Best Buds location, rumored to be the site of a future taco stand.


Finally, there's the HomeStreet Bank branch, still building away more than a year after the bank first took the space on.  As we understand the story, the hundred-year-old building turned out not to be in very good condition, requiring a lot of work that was not initially anticipated. As you can see (above), there's much to do before the branch can open sometime later this year.



Madison Park home wins prestigious award


A recently constructed "passive house" at 4211 E. Lee Street in Washington Park has won an American Institute of Architects National Housing Award. The award was established to recognize "the best in housing design and promote the importance of good housing as a necessity of life, a sanctuary for the human spirit and a valuable national resource."

The house uses 90% less energy for heating and cooling than is typical of conventionally built structures. NK Architects designed the home, which was constructed by Cascade Built.



Easter egg hunt this Saturday


Madison Park (the City park, that is) will be the scene of a mad scramble for easter eggs this Saturday.  The hunt will begin at 3:30 and continue until all the eggs are found or the parents get bored. There will be a "bunny petting lounge" and a "little ones hunt" as well.  Let's hope for sun.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

The new 520 pounds its way across the Lake


Madison Parkers give bridge the stink eye


There’s literally been a lot of water under the bridge since we last wrote about the floating-bridge project.  Some of that water, unfortunately, was in the new pontoons. That design-related problem has supposedly been fixed, though at a whopping cost. WSDOT reported earlier this year that an additional $208 million will be needed to cover the cost overruns associated with repairs to the four leaky pontoons that were already on the Lake and design changes to the pontoons that were yet to be produced.  That uses up the project’s remaining reserve fund, initially pegged at $250 million. Meanwhile, the timetable for completion of the floating-bridge portion of the project has been delayed by nine months.  If the bridge is completed before spring 2016 it will be a miracle.  It was originally supposed to be drivable by July 2015.

Even when the floating bridge is completed, it will not be the end of the new 520’s woes. The southern, eastbound half of the Western Approach (that’s the two fixed bridges to be built between Montlake and the start of the floating bridge) still awaits funding, as does as the section of the roadway that will connect Interstate 5 to the two Western Approach bridges (one for eastbound and one for westbound traffic).  The northern, westbound approach bridge is funded, with construction to begin later this summer.

As a result of delays and design changes, both taxpayers and bridge users will, one way or another, be paying a lot more for the privilege--and other road projects will be denuded of funding (but thereby be developed more efficiently, in the words of the WSDOT press office).  Meanwhile, the legislature has apparently given up on trying to pass an omnibus transportation bill for the near term, WSDOT dysfunction providing a handy cover for the legislators’ inaction.  So there’ve been and will continue to be big implications resulting from the 520 screw-ups.

Many in Madison Park, of course, have more parochial reasons for being upset with WSDOT.  The local media has done several stories on how residents here are dealing with the noise and vibrations of 520 pile driving (apparently, not well).  That constant pounding!  And at all hours of the day and into the night--even on weekends!  More distressingly, at both the Canterbury Shores condo building and the Edgewater Apartments residents report that cracks have appeared that are possibly due to 520 construction.  It’s not clear at this point whether these problems are merely cosmetic or have structural significance.  The State will investigate (and, if necessary, compensate) once the project ends, according to WSDOT.

The near-term good news is that the pounding has apparently stopped for a while. According to a WSDOT spokesperson, pile driving related to the West Connection Bridge ended in early March, though pile removal has been underway since that time--and that, too, “can cause noise and vibration, but not nearly as much as pile installation does.”

The pilings in question were only temporary and were placed there to aid the construction of that portion of the highway that will connect the new floating bridge with the old Western Approach. This new West Connection Bridge (shown in the photos above and immediately below) is a necessity because the new floating bridge will need to channel traffic onto the old highway while the new westbound West Approach Bridge North is being constructed, along with the fact that since there’s no funding yet for the new 520's permanent, eastbound approach bridge to the west of that point (Pier 36). We’re talking about the area just off the northern shore of Madison Park.


Construction on this 1,330 foot connector bridge began last summer and will be completed in the fall of this year.  This graphic shows the progress of construction:

(click to enlarge)

The twelve piers, shown in green, are all completed, and the roadway above is now being constructed.  Pier 36 will connect directly to the new floating bridge when completed.

Also on the subject of construction progress, here’s a graphic showing the status the 77-pontoon floating structure of 520:

(click to enlarge)

As noted, there are 32 pontoons on Lake Washington.  Some of these are anchored (those shown in dark green) some are sitting on the Lake temporarily moored (light green), and some are either under construction (orange), pending transit (yellow) or yet to be built (white).  And then there’s Pontoon U, the one shown in dark green with the orange cross hatching.  That’s the remaining problem pontoon that is now being repaired.  Work on that began in early March and should be completed by the end of spring.  After that point, in theory at least, water should only be going under and around the new bridge and not literally into it.

Pontoons parked north of Madison Park

WSDOT’s 520 bridge director, Julie Meredith, reported last month that the new floating bridge is halfway to completion, with 46 pontoons produced to date and all of the bridge’s 766 concrete deck panels for the bridge's low-rise section scheduled to be out of their Kenmore production facility by fall 2015.  And with completion of the West Connection Bridge on the near horizon, it’s just possible that from the standpoint of noise, vibration, and other intrusions the worst will soon be over for Madison Parkers.

Or perhaps not.  WSDOT will begin construction of the westbound West Approach Bridge North project this summer.

Many Madison Parkers haven't enjoyed the 520 nighttime work

[All photos courtesy of WSDOT.]

The latest on those Arboretum ramps


Outta here by 2016


There may be three or four people out there who are still unaware that as a result of the construction of the new SR-520 floating bridge, the existing bridge's on- and off-ramps in the Arboretum will be demolished, along with the infamous "ramps to nowhere."  Those thousands of people who regularly traverse E. Madison Street or Lake Washington Boulevard in order to access or pile off the freeway in the Arboretum will just have to find another channel through which to flow. This re-direction is a major concern for many East/West commuters, as well as for many residents of Madison Valley and Montlake who are going to be negatively impacted by the new heavier-volume traffic patterns once those "convenient" ramps are gone.

We've covered this story in some detail (for that background see here).  At this time two years ago we reported that the Arboretum ramps had received a stay of execution. Although the westbound exit to Lake Washington Boulevard had originally been scheduled to be demolished in 2012, WSDOT decided to delay that effort until sometime this year.  The eastbound entrance to 520, however, was always scheduled to be removed next year, and that plan, at least initially, did not change.

However, we learned something new as a result of doing the update (above) on the new bridge's progress. We asked WSDOT for a current estimate of when drivers will no longer have access to 520 through the Arboretum, and this is answer we got from Roger Thompson, spokesperson for the SR-520 Bridge Replacement and HOV Program: "While we don't know the exact date and month, we anticipate that the westbound Arboretum off ramp will likely be removed by late 2015. This is because before the contractor can build the bridge portion of the West Approach Bridge North, the westbound off-ramp must first be removed--as it physically lies in the area we need to construct the bridge." Drivers exiting 520 westbound will have a new 24th Avenue East off-ramp through which to access Montlake and the Arboretum.



With regard to the Eastbound entrance ramp to 520, that demolition will not take place until "Stage 3" of bridge construction.  Tentatively, construction of that ultimate phase of the project is scheduled for the fall of 2016.  But that timetable is subject to factors beyond the direct control of WSDOT. As Thompson noted, "Future construction phases for the west side--primarily from I-5 to Montlake Boulevard--have yet to be funded. Timing and sequencing the removal of the eastbound Arboretum on-ramp depends on additional funding.  We're working closely with the Governor and Legislature to identify this funding and will have more information once funding is secured."

So there you have it.  At some point in the not-too-distant future, the Legislature willing, those ramps will be history.

Enjoy them while you can.

The ramps as seen from Google Earth
[Upper photo courtesy of WSDOT.]

Saturday, April 5, 2014

The shooting: pondering the imponderable


Bizarre incident raises many questions


Commentary by Bryan Tagas

It was a surreal three hours in the otherwise placid life of Madison Park this week:  a cross-dressed sous chef terrorizes customers and employees of the neighborhood Wells Fargo office by staging a holdup with a "realistic looking" airsoft gun; makes off with the cash; races down McGilvra in an underpowered Hyundai, just ahead of converging police; somehow manages to flip his car in Denny Blaine; heads for the bushes while shedding his women's attire; leads police on a multi-hour man hunt; allegedly brandishes a fixed-blade knife when finally accosted; runs threateningly towards a police detective while refusing to drop his weapon; is immediately shot dead ("pop, pop, pop" in the words of a witness).  Not your typical day in the neighborhood.


If you're at a loss to explain how this sequence of events could possibly unfold here, you're not alone. The robbery and shooting are the talk of the town.

First of all, those who believe it was insanity to attempt a bank robbery in Madison Park should know that it has been done before. The fact that the neighborhood is at a the "end of the road" does not mean that it's impossible to make a successful getaway from The Park.  The neighborhood Bank of America branch, back when it was a Seafirst office, was successfully robbed multiple times.  It's a challenge, but not an impossible one.


And then there's the issue of Why?  It's probably impossible to know. The suspect has been identified as Cody Spafford, a dependable, likable four-year employee at the highly-regarded The Walrus & The Carpenter  oyster bar in Ballard.  Although he had a police record, according to media reports, Spafford's criminal history had apparently been limited to several misdemeanors and one case of felony possession of marijuana in Oregon.  Nothing to presage the high-drama, "act of desperation" he graduated to in Madison Park on Thursday. Almost certainly his close friends and family know something that his co-workers quoted in the press may not have known. But in the absence of that personal testimony, Cody's bizarre presence in Madison Park this week is inexplicable.


And what about that final, tragic scene, seemingly straight out of one of those TV cop shows? As summed up by a local TV reporter, it was not the kind of act one expects to play out "in a neighborhood of multi-million dollar homes."  But was it a case of Suicide by Cop?  What possesses a young man to lunge at a rifle-toting police officer other than a desire to end it all?  This is what the SPD police blotter reported about the incident:

"The detective began talking to the suspect and repeatedly ordered him to drop the knife, but the suspect told the detective he would not drop the knife.

As the detective was working to get the suspect to drop the knife, a lieutenant at the scene called for officers with Tasers to respond to the courtyard.

The suspect, brandishing a knife, ran toward the detective. The detective fired multiple rounds from a rifle, striking the suspect. Officers and detectives called for medics and began performing CPR on the suspect. The suspect died at the scene. Although officers armed with additional less-lethal tools were responding to the incident at the time of the shooting, police are trained to use deadly force when facing a threat from a deadly weapon, such as a gun or a knife."

Perhaps it had to end this way, Cody by his actions having removed the authorities' non-lethal options.  A thorough investigation of the shooting and a full reporting of the results will be needed, however, to assuage any lingering doubt.

The homeowner who called police to alert them to Cody's presence on her property adds this postscript: "I have seen the write up on the young man killed.  I am so sorry I was a part of this.  What happened to those tazers the police were issued?"

Too late, too late.

[Photos courtesy of the Seattle Police Department.]

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Wells Fargo branch robbed



Suspect flees, crashes car, is shot by police


At about 9:15 this morning a man robbed the Madison Park Wells Fargo branch and, after getting money from a teller, fled the branch on foot.  The SPD Blotter states that the man, who reportedly was wearing a wig, makeup, and women's clothing, was seen getting into a  silver-colored car parked nearby.  About ten minutes later, SPD received a report that a silver-colored car had crashed and flipped over near 39th Avenue E. and E. John Street.


The driver of the crashed Hyundai then exited the scene, rolling or carrying a suitcase with him.  Witnesses at the robbery scene had reported that the suspect had a rolling suitcase in hand when he got into his getaway vehicle.

Police helicopters and news helicopters soon converged over the Denny Blaine neighborhood as police on the ground blocked off the area and began their search. The suspect was described as being white, about 5' 7'' in height,170 pounds, and wearing a large bandage on his nose.  When confronted by police, the suspect reportedly brandished a knife, which he refused to put down.  Police then shot the man, who was pronounced dead at the scene.

Google Map view of area where suspect was shot: 39th Avenue E. and E. Howell St.

The earliest word we received regarding this incident was a posting on the Next Door newsfeed  by Community Council member Bob Edmiston, who was actually in the branch as the robbery was happening and ran out to call 911.  He reports that everyone in the branch was unharmed.  Police locked the branch down immediately thereafter to investigate the crime.  The area where the suspect was shot is also closed off while the investigation proceeds.

Intersection of Lake Washington Blvd. & 39th Avenue E.

Afternoon Update:  MPB reader Geri Nelson, who lives on E. Howell, reports that she confronted the robbery suspect in her yard late this morning, just before the police discovered him.  "He looked [to be in his] early twenties," and was "kind of preppy," she says. He was "wearing tan shorts, a tan hat, a blue collared shirt, and carrying a tan over-the-shoulder bag that he was clenching against his hip."  She asked him what he was doing on her property, but she couldn't understand his response. "He split to the next yard thru the laurels.  I immediately called 911 and they had him before I got off the phone."  She reports that the suspect had some money in the bag that he was carrying, and he had stashed his luggage in the neighbor's garage. While searching for the suspect, police had earlier discovered some discarded women's clothing that had apparently been used by the suspect in the robbery.

The fatal shot came at about 11:45 a.m., approximately two and a half hours after the robbery occurred.  It is not clear why the suspect was shot, though an Seattle Police spokesperson has been quoted in the media as stating that the officer who confronted the suspect felt threatened.

[Overturned-vehicle photo courtesy of the Seattle Police Department.]