Manuel Valdes

Young cancer patients’ ‘Stronger’ video a big hit

  • more
    • All Share Services

SEATTLE (AP) — A video featuring cancer-stricken children, their nurses, doctors and parents lip-synching and dancing to the popular Kelly Clarkson song “Stronger” has become an online sensation.

Clarkson, in her own video message to the children at Seattle Children’s Hospital, said it was “amazing.”

“It made my day. I know it’s making everybody else’s day online,” Clarkson said in a message posted on her website. “I just can’t wait to meet you.”

The youngsters, many attached to IVs and holding signs that say “Stronger,” “Fighter” and “Hope,” dance along with parents and medical staff. One child even rides a bike through the hallways of the hematology oncology floor. The video is part of a creative arts program with cancer patients at Seattle Children’s.

The kids’ video went online May 6. It was the idea of 22-year-old Chris Rumble, a patient at the hospital who was diagnosed with leukemia in April. He wanted to do something to share with his old hockey team in the central Washington town of Wenatchee

“I’m everyone’s big brother and I have a lot of friends here at Seattle Children’s,” Rumble said on the hospital’s blog.

Dr. Douglas Hawkins said the patients and staff at Seattle Children’s have been thrilled by the response.

“This morning it was over 900,000 views. It’s really incredible,” he said Friday.

Hawkins said such projects help the kids maintain their spirits.

“When a child or young adult is treated for cancer, it puts their whole life on hold in a way that doesn’t seem fair at all,” Hawkins said. “It’s a fight for their life. But there are all these other normal things they want to be doing too, or things they want to focus on other than the medicine or the illness or their time in the hospital.”

___

Online:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihGCj5mfCk8

ACLU sues Border Patrol over traffic stops

  • more
    • All Share Services

ACLU sues Border Patrol over traffic stopsThis Wednesday, Dec. 15, 2010 photo shows Israel Ramos Contreras at Forks High School where he goes to school in Forks, Wash. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit Thursday, April 26, 2012 on behalf of Ramos and two other plaintiffs, seeking to stop U.S. Border Patrol agents from conducting traffic stops in Washington state. The lawsuit seeks an injunction to bar traffic stops by border agents saying that people are being pulled over without reasonable suspicion. (AP Photo/Manuel Valdes)(Credit: AP)

SEATTLE (AP) — The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Border Patrol seeking to bar agents from making traffic stops, saying people are being pulled over and questioned for the way they look and without reasonable suspicion.

The lawsuit stems from tensions between immigrants and the expanded presence of Border Patrol agents on Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula, which shares no land border with Canada.

“People are being stopped based solely on their appearance and ethnicity. This is unlawful and contrary to American values,” said Matt Adams, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, which also joined the lawsuit. “No one in a car should be stopped and interrogated by government agents unless the law enforcement officer has a legal basis to do so.”

The ACLU and the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project filed the lawsuit on behalf of three peninsula residents who have been stopped by Border Patrol agents.

Border Patrol spokesman Richard Sinks said U.S. Customs and Border Protection “strictly prohibits” profiling on the basis of race or religion.

“In determining whether individuals are admissible into the United States, CBP utilizes specific facts and follows the Department of Justice’s ‘Guidance Regarding the Use of Race by Federal Law Enforcement Agencies,’” Sinks said.

The agency has said it is following its mandate to enforce the country’s immigration laws and protect the border and shoreline from terrorists, drug smugglers and other illegal activity.

But one of the plaintiffs says Border Patrol agents stopped him numerous times, even though he’s a U.S. citizen.

Jose Sanchez, a prison guard at Olympic Corrections Center in Forks, Wash., said agents have followed him home and questioned him when he’s with his family. In one instance, they told Sanchez they were pulling him over because his windows were too dark, but they didn’t ask for his car insurance or registration, the lawsuit says.

Another plaintiff is Ernest Grimes, a prison guard at Clallam Bay Corrections Center and a part-time police officer from Neah Bay, Wash. Grimes said a Border Patrol agent pulled him over last year. According to the lawsuit, the agent approached Grimes, who is black, with his hand on his weapon while yelling at him to roll down his window.

The agent provided no reason for the traffic stop while he interrogated Grimes about his immigration status, the lawsuit alleges. Grimes was wearing his guard uniform at the time.

The third plaintiff, 18-year-old Ismael Ramos Contreras of Forks, was with a group of friends when four agents pulled them over. The lawsuit says one of the agents tried to take the keys out of the ignition and interrogated the teenagers but never provided a reason for the stop. Ramos also was asked for his immigration status outside a courthouse in Forks.

“The Border Patrol’s actions have created a climate of fear and anxiety for many people living on the Olympic Peninsula. The residents in this suit all are U.S. citizens who worry that they could be stopped and questioned without reason any time they drive or are passengers in cars,” said Sarah Dunne, the ACLU’s legal director.

The lawsuit says traffic stops by Border Patrol agents violate the Fourth Amendment and exceed the agency’s legal powers. It seeks to bar such stops until agents are trained on what constitutes reasonable suspicion.

Border Patrol agents “have implemented a practice of stopping vehicles or participating in vehicle stops based on a hunch or intuition, including stops based solely on the ethnic and/or racial appearance of the occupants of the vehicle, and thus without sufficient suspicion on which to base the stop,” the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit says the Border Patrol’s behavior in Washington state is similar to that of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in Arizona, which the Department of Justice recently condemned.

One of the chief arguments in the lawsuit is that similar behavior in the 1980s by immigration and Border Patrol agents in the Yakima Valley was deemed illegal by a federal court in eastern Washington, which issued a statewide injunction.

“It worked for a while,” Adams said. “Our suit is trying to create more accountability.”

The suit also asks the court to require that agents file paperwork justifying each traffic stop and make it readily available to a court-appointed special master. The lawsuit is seeking a class-action status.

ACLU of Washington spokesman Doug Honig said the lawsuit is focused on Border Patrol activities on the Olympic Peninsula, but “a favorable ruling presumably would cause the Border Patrol to re-examine its practices across the northern border.”

After the Sept. 11 attacks, President George W. Bush ordered U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which oversees the Border Patrol, to beef up its presence on the U.S.-Canada border, which is almost twice as long as the U.S.-Mexico border.

In 2007, the northern border had nearly 1,100 agents. Now it has more than 2,200. In the same period, the number of agents in the Blaine sector, which covers the border area west of the Cascades, went from 133 to 331.

Over the years, Border Patrol enforcement practices common on the southern border, such as highway checkpoints, have been implemented along the northern border, miffing residents on the Olympic Peninsula, the area’s congressman and an U.S. Senator and local authorities. Agents cut back on road and ferry checkpoints after objections mounted.

Tensions rose last year after a forest worker drowned following a foot chase with a Border Patrol agent. The Mexican national jumped into a frigid river to elude the agent. His body was found entangled in roots three weeks later.

The Olympic Peninsula is home to rural towns around the edge of the 1,441-square-mile Olympic National Park. Many immigrants from Mexico and Guatemala have moved there to work in the forests picking salal, an ornamental leaf.

The peninsula sits across from Canada’s Victoria Island, separated by the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

___

Manuel Valdes can be reached at https://twitter.com/ByManuelValdes

Continue Reading Close

Traffic impact of Seattle arena to be studied

  • more
    • All Share Services

SEATTLE (AP) — A venture capitalist who wants to build a sports arena to bring professional basketball back to Seattle will pay for a study to determine the impacts on traffic and parking following objections by his potential neighbor – the Seattle Mariners.

King County Executive Dow Constantine and Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn announced the study at a Thursday news conference. Chris Hansen’s pledge comes after the Mariners baseball team said they worried about traffic problems in the SoDo neighbhorhood if a third sports arena was built there. The area is already home to the Mariners’ Safeco Field and CenturyLink Field, where the Seattle Seahawks and Seattle Sounders play.

Hansen has offered a plan calling for up to $290 million in private investment and capping the public investment at $200 million.

Federal criticism leads to Seattle police reforms

  • more
    • All Share Services

SEATTLE (AP) — Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn on Thursday proposed a series of police reforms in response to a damning federal report that came after several high-profile incidents involving minorities.

McGinn and police Chief John Diaz said among the 20 initiatives to be implemented over 20 months were training for all officers on use of force standards, the development of protocol to make sure encounters don’t escalate and steps to address biased policing.

“As mayor, I will be holding police leadership accountable to achieve these changes,” McGinn said at a City Hall news conference.

In December, the U.S. Justice Department said inadequate supervision and training had led officers to grab weapons such as batons and flashlights too quickly, intensifying confrontations — even when arresting people for minor offenses.

The department launched an investigation following the fatal shooting of a homeless Native American woodcarver and other reported uses of force against minorities.

Federal investigators determined Seattle police engaged in excessive force that violated federal law and the Constitution.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington and other community groups called for the inquiry after a Seattle officer shot and killed the woodcarver, John T. Williams, in 2010.

Video from Officer Ian Birk’s patrol car showed Williams crossing the street holding a piece of wood and a small knife, and Birk exiting the vehicle to pursue him. Off camera, Birk quickly shouted three times for Williams to drop the knife, then fired five shots. The knife was found folded at the scene, but Birk later maintained Williams had threatened him.

Birk resigned from the force but was not charged. A review board found the shooting unjustified.

Other incidents captured on surveillance or police-cruiser video include officers using an anti-Mexican epithet and stomping on a prone Latino man who was mistakenly thought to be a robbery suspect; an officer kicking a non-resisting black youth in a convenience store; and officers tackling and kicking a black man who showed up in a police evidence room to pick up belongings after he was mistakenly released from jail.

Continue Reading Close

Girl’s voice mails gone after T-Mobile promotion

  • more
    • All Share Services

SEATTLE (AP) — When Faron Butler wanted to hear his daughter’s voice, he went to the voice mails she left him before she died of cancer at the age of 14.

“If I had a bad day or week, I’d listen to her voice. I’d listen to it a couple of times a week,” Butler said Friday from his home in Elma, Wash., holding back tears. “She’d be there, saying, ‘Daddy, I love you and I miss you.’”

But the voice mails are gone, erased in February when Butler joined a free trial of a messaging service offered by his cellphone carrier, T-Mobile, and he doesn’t believe company officials when they say the company can’t retrieve them.

“T-Mobile deeply regrets the sorrow the Butler family is experiencing. If we could retrieve this voicemail for the family we absolutely would, but unfortunately that is not possible,” said T-Mobile spokeswoman Cara Walker in a statement. “We sincerely apologize that the Butlers were not adequately made aware of this possibility and are working internally to assure this information is clearly communicated to customers in the future.”

T-Mobile said it’s working to compensate but has not been able to have a direct discussion with them.

Butler and his attorney, Chris Crew, said they are preparing legal action asking a court to force T-Mobile to retrieve the voice mails. The family also is seeking damages for emotional distress.

“I think it’s technically unbelievable to make that statement,” said Crew, who argues that in situations where law enforcement is involved, such digital information can be retrieved. He says T-Mobile is trying to avoid the expense of retrieving the messages.

Butler’s daughter, Rhema, was diagnosed with cancer when she was 12, and died two years later, in June 2011. About a week before she passed away, she called her father. That’s one of the voice mails that’s gone. He had held on to them for about eight months.

Continue Reading Close

Wife, accused soldier spoke briefly on the phone

  • more
    • All Share Services

SEATTLE (AP) — An attorney for the wife of an Army staff sergeant charged with killing 17 Afghan civilians says the couple has been able to talk twice since he was detained.

Attorney Lance Rosen says Staff Sgt. Robert Bales called his wife, Karilyn Bales, first from overseas shortly after the March 11 massacre, then from the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., on Wednesday.

Rosen says Bales and his wife were warned the call was monitored, and they would only have 10 minutes to talk. He says that on Wednesday’s call the couple talked about family matters and “re-affirmed their love for each other.”

Rosen also says the family has set up a defense fund to help pay Bales’ legal fees.

The military charged Bales on Friday with 17 counts of murder.

Page 1 of 3 in Manuel Valdes