34
Kamiak
28
Glacier Peak
Mville Pilchuck 10
Mariner
12
Lynnwood
O’Dea
30
Cascade
41
6
Jackson
31
The to-do list Circus: The Ringling Brothers circus has shows at 11:30 a.m. and at 3:30 and 7 p.m. today and 1 and 5 p.m. Sunday at Xfinity Arena in Everett; $21-$71.
18-17: Lakewood hangs on to beat Murphy,
Oktoberfest: Celebrate all things German with beer, food and activities for all ages; 11 a.m. to midnight today and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday at the fairgrounds in Monroe. 21 and older after 7 p.m. today, all ages the rest of the weekend. $10 today, $5 Sunday. Kids 12 and younger free.
Page C1
History: The Snohomish Historical Society’s home tour is noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Pick up tickets, $12-$15, at the Waltz Building, 116 Avenue B, Snohomish. SATURDAY, 09.20.2014
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Woman quickly found A tracking bracelet that can be worn by people who are living with dementia and other conditions helped searchers. By Eric Stevick Herald Writer
MONROE — The call came in at 3:55 a.m. Sunday. A Monroe woman, 74 and
living with dementia, had wandered off in the middle of the night from a home in the 300 block of Kelsey Street. Her husband contacted their daughter, who in turn called 911.
The dispatcher paged Snohomish County Search and Rescue. Three search and rescue volunteers and a deputy sheriff found the missing woman an hour and four minutes later, thanks in large part to technology as well as a call from someone living nearby.
The woman is one of roughly 65 people in the county now wearing a Project Care Track bracelet issued by the sheriff ’s office. The bracelet uses radio signals to help searchers pinpoint their whereabouts. In the woman’s case, the
See FOUND, Page A6
Hitch up your lederhosen
Judge denies return of guns A Stanwood man facing multiple charges after a run-in with police wanted them back to sell so he could to pay his rising legal costs. By Diana Hefley Herald Writer
the ages of the children, citing privacy laws. One hundred sixty cases of enterovirus D68 have now been
EVERETT — A judge says a man who was shot by a Snohomish County sheriff ’s deputy can’t have his guns back yet. Gene Fagerlie was in court Thursday to request that the multiple firearms police seized from his house be turned over to his father. Snohomish County Superior Court Judge Ellen Fair was told that Fagerlie needs to sell the guns to pay growing legal costs. The Stanwood man is facing multiple felony charges stemming from a run-in with police outside his home in August 2013. He is scheduled to go to trial next month. Prosecutors allege that Fagerlie, 37, pointed a gun at Snohomish County sheriff ’s deputies. His ex-girlfriend called 911 after Fagerlie reportedly fired a bullet near her. She warned dispatchers that Fagerlie was armed and wearing a bulletproof vest. Deputy Art Wallin shot at Fagerlie multiple times and struck him in the hand. The defendant maintains that he was lowering his weapon when Wallin opened fire. Police recovered three guns near where Fagerlie fell. They found more than a dozen others inside the house and some along a fence line on the property, court papers said. The bulk of the guns were found in a safe inside his bathroom closet and aren’t relevant to the events that unfolded outside, Everett defense attorney Mark Mestel said Thursday. “He never displayed those firearms and they have nothing to do with the case,” Mestel said. Also excluded from the
See VIRUS, Page A6
See GUNS, Page A6
Saxophonist Gordon Keller raises a glass during the singing of “In München steht ein Hofbräuhaus” inside the Oktoberfest Monroe Festhalle on Friday. Keller, a member of the band The Beer Barrels, will continue to play this weekend during the second annual festival at the Evergreen State Fairgrounds. Join the festivities, Page A5.
One case of confirmed virus from county By Sharon Salyer Herald Writer
the buzz
SEATTLE — The respiratory virus that has been spreading across the nation,
sickening children, has now been confirmed in Washington. Two children — one each from Snohomish and King counties — tested positive for the enterovirus D68, health officials
Russkie brewskis Get it yourself, Vlad: A Russian company, Oasis Beverages, has bought the maker of Pabst Blue Ribbon, Rainier Beer and other bargain brands. Oasis Chairman Eugene Kashper called PBR the “quintessential American brand” representing “individualism, egalitarianism and freedom of expression — all
the things that make this country great” (Page A10). Just a couple of words of advice, Eugene: No potatoes. Or did we learn nothing from Bud Light Lime? And we don’t want to see a Rainier ad with a bare-chested Vladimir Putin carrying a six-pack and riding a horse through a mountain stream. I want to play with my ding-a-ling: Apple devotees
said during a news conference Friday. No information was available about how long they were hospitalized. Both were discharged earlier this week. Officials refused to disclose
waited in line overnight to get their new supersized iPhone 6 or 6 Plus. “I’m not going home to sleep. I’m going to be playing with it,” said one delirious customer (Page A10). And until you’ve played Angry Birds on a 5.5-inch screen, rather than a 4-inch screen, you just won’t understand. Was there a Batboy? Fox
on Monday premieres “Gotham,” its Batman origins series that focuses on a young detective, James Gordon, before he became Commissioner Gordon and got his bat signal and bat phone (Page D4). Well, OK, he had the BatPhone 5, but he was embarrassed to use it because it wasn’t the new BatPhone 6 Plus with the bigger screen.
—Jon Bauer, Herald staff
INSIDE Business . . . .A10 Classified . . . . B1 Comics . . . . . .D2 Crossword . . .D2 Dear Abby. . . .D3 Good Life . . . .D1 Satisfying 74/53, C8 VOL. 114, NO. 222 © 2014 THE DAILY HERALD CO.
Horoscope . . .D6 Lottery . . . . . .A2 Obituaries. . . .A9 Opinion. . . . .A13 Sports . . . . . . . C1 Short Takes . . .D4
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