Originally published August 20, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified August 20, 2008 at 12:40 PM
Local Digest
New murder charge brings guilty plea
A former lawyer who shot a Bellevue attorney in 2004 pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a new charge filed after the victim later died of a gunshot wound.
Bellevue
New murder charge brings guilty plea
A former lawyer who shot a Bellevue attorney in 2004 pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a new charge filed after the victim later died of a gunshot wound.
The plea was entered by William Joice, who was convicted in December 2005 of attempted murder for shooting Kevin Jung outside Jung's Bellevue law office in November 2004. Joice was sentenced on the attempted-murder conviction in February 2006. Then, just a week later, Jung died of his wounds.
That led the King County Prosecutor's Office to amend the original charge to reflect that Jung had died, which led to Joice's plea Tuesday to the new charge of first-degree murder.
King County Superior Court Judge Julie Spector sentenced Joice to the same 380-month term in prison — more than 30 years — that had been imposed for the original conviction.
In 2006, Spector ordered an exceptional sentence for Joice, finding that he had meticulously planned the attack.
Seattle
Man, 20, charged in fatal stabbing
Police are seeking a 20-year-old Seattle man who has been charged in the fatal stabbing of a Bellevue high-school student.
On May 22, Ivan Hernandez-Vazquez was found dead in Seattle's View Ridge neighborhood. The 18-year-old Interlake High School student had last been seen the day before, when he told his guardian he was going to wire money to his grandmother in Mexico.
Police questioned Jose Ruiz-Antonio, who was with Hernandez-Vazquez when he was last seen. Ruiz-Antonio said the two had gone to Redmond before he dropped Hernandez-Vazquez off near Bellevue. Police said that Ruiz-Antonio disappeared shortly after questioning.
![]()
In June, police found Ruiz-Antonio's Honda Civic abandoned near Shoreline and found dried blood on a seat cushion, according to the charging papers filed on Aug. 12. Crime analysts with the State Patrol determined the blood matched Hernandez-Vazquez's DNA profile, charging documents said.
Ruiz-Antonio has been charged by warrant for second-degree murder.
Seattle
Sonics owner's deal with city now final
Clay Bennett's ownership group has reached a final settlement with the city of Seattle allowing the former Sonics franchise to move to Oklahoma City.
Attorneys filed a document Tuesday in federal court in Seattle, noting the parties would each pay their own court costs.
Bennett announced last month that a settlement was being negotiated that would involve his making a payment of as much as $75 million to Seattle to get out of the final two years of a lease at KeyArena.
Seattle City Attorney Tom Carr said in an e-mail to The Associated Press that the city had reached an agreement superseding the memorandum of understanding the parties reached on July 2.
The initial memorandum called for Bennett to pay $45 million to the city of Seattle to break the lease, and make another $30 million payment if the city doesn't have a new NBA team within five years.
That agreement also allowed Seattle to retain the rights to the Sonics' name, logo and colors.
The federal court didn't release terms of the final settlement, and Carr didn't immediately have them available. Dan Mahoney, a spokesman for Bennett, did not immediately return a telephone call from The Associated Press.
Bennett still faces a lawsuit filed by former Sonics owner Howard Schultz seeking to void his 2006 sale of the team.
Tukwila
Man found stabbed to death in hotel
A 67-year-old man was found stabbed to death in a Tukwila hotel room Tuesday, according to Tukwila police.
Tuesday night police said they had no suspects.
Police found the man in his room at the Riverside Residences on Tukwila International Boulevard. He had been stabbed with a knife, police said.
The King County Medical Examiner's Office has not released his identity.
Lincoln County
Residents are told to evacuate
Residents of nearly 50 homes were told Tuesday they needed to evacuate to escape a wildfire in Eastern Washington's Lincoln County.
The Swanson Lake Fire was burning over 15,415 acres Tuesday night — more than 24 square miles.
Fire spokesman Mark Morrow said the level-three evacuation order was issued in the Hawk Creek Ranch area, about 10 miles northwest of Davenport. A level-three order — the highest level — means residents should leave immediately, because rescuers likely won't be able to reach them if the situation worsens.
Morrow said nobody was hurt, and about 390 firefighters and support personnel were on the scene. The fire was burning in grass and sagebrush along with some scattered timber.
The blaze, reported Monday afternoon, was burning on state Department of Resources land and some fire-district land.
Morrow says the cause of the fire is under investigation, but lightning is a likely suspect.
Ellensburg
Coroner: Hantavirus claims officer's life
A rare disease linked to mouse droppings has been blamed for the death of an Ellensburg police officer.
The Yakima County coroner reported report that 34-year-old Sgt. Nelson Ng died Friday of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.
Police say Ng was previously in excellent health.
Hantavirus is typically contracted from airborne droplets of mouse urine or particles of dried droppings. It can fill the lungs with fluid and cause death in less than 48 hours.
Details on the circumstances in which Ng contracted the ailment have not been released.
North Bend
Man who drowned in river is identified
A man who drowned Saturday while swimming in the Snoqualmie River near North Bend has been identified as Ryan Lu.
The King County Medical Examiner's Office said Lu, 20, drowned and ruled the death an accident.
Rescuers found Lu's body in about 15 feet of water at the popular swimming spot east of North Bend.
Tumwater
Coroner: Worker severed artery in fall
The Thurston County coroner says a 23-year-old worker who died at a glass plant in Tumwater fell against a pane of glass and severed an artery in his neck.
The man was 23-year-old Christopher Benson, of Lacey.
Coroner Gary Warnock says Benson tripped on the plant floor about 2:30 a.m. on Monday and his neck hit the edge of a pane of glass that was coming off the line. The glass was lying flat.
The state Department of Labor and Industries is investigating.
Seattle Times staff and news services
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 09:46 AM
Exxon Mobil wins ruling in Alaska oil spill case
NEW - 7:51 AM
Longview man says he was tortured with hot knife
Longview man says he was tortured with hot knife
Longview mill spills bleach into Columbia River
NEW - 8:00 AM
More extensive TSA searches in Sea-Tac Airport rattle some travelers

(The Associated Press) Fuel rules get support A Consumer Federation of America survey conducted in April found that a large majority of Americans R...
Post a comment
- Seattle’s NBA hopes still high as league warms to expansion
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Navy dolphins discover rare old torpedo off Calif. coast near Coronado
- An innocent slip of the (long, slinky) tongue by NBA honcho | The Wrap / Ron Judd
- Sex-with-animals advocate told to stay off Internet
- It’s time to limit presidency to one term | Danny Westneat
- Dark, massive asteroid to fly by Earth on May 31
- Seattle Sounders knock off FC Dallas, 4-2, to extend unbeaten streak to six
- Mariners may have reason for optimism after a slow start | Larry Stone
- Premiums under new health-care law remain about the same
- IRS office was perplexed, inundated with tax-exempt applications
253 - Mariners seeing what that crucial speed element looks like
195 - Game thread: Felix Hernandez looks to halt Mariners skid
187 - Seattle’s NBA hopes still high as league warms to expansion
144 - Premiums under new health-care law remain about the same
114 - It’s time to limit presidency to one term
112 - China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
108 - Aide: Obama learned about IRS from news accounts
58 - Tea party looks to take advantage of moment
25 - Snohomish transit organization rejects anti-gun ad
17
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Community Dinners church nourishes bodies, souls
- Premiums under new health-care law remain about the same
- 129 concerts to see this summer
- Columbia Hills State Park is a Gorge wonder
- The stories behind Huntington’s disease | Nicole & Co.
- Fremont: Quirky, lively and very popular | NW Neighborhood
- Navy dolphins discover rare old torpedo off Calif. coast near Coronado
- Cancer survivor exudes calm in Legislature’s budget battles
- Diversity means opportunity in Tukwila







