Tacoma Daily Index, June 15, 2015

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MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2015

Vol. CXXIV, No. 114

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE CITY OF TACOMA Devoted to the Courts, Real Estate, Finance, Industrial Activities, and Publication of Legal Notices

Published Published Since Since 1890 1890

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LEGAL NOTICES BANKRUPTCIES LIENS ORDERS FEDERAL COURT AUDITORS OFFICE NEW BUSINESSES editor@tacomadailyindex.com

John Hathaway A Tacoma gadfly's voice goes silent

Posted online Fri., June 12 Article and Photos By Todd Matthews, Editor For many years, one particular table inside the dimly lit lounge at the Hob Nob restaurant near Wright Park was almost always claimed by one couple. The pair would drop in to have a drink, eat dinner, or chat with a friendly bartender. "This was our table," said Carolyn Perry, a 68-year-old University Place resident whose companion and significant other for nearly five years, John Hathaway, passed away last week at the age of 69. Hathaway was a political cartoonist and the publisher of The New Takhoman, a Web site that skewered Tacoma City Hall, the Tacoma Police Department, and other local elected officials. Tacoma residents may recall Hathaway as many things— curmudgeon, crank, gadfly, and muckraker. In person, Hathaway (a former fashion reporter) was a shadowy figure who covered his head with a stylish fedora, draped his lean figure in a vintage suit, kept his thin mustache neatly trimmed, and spoke in a scratchy rasp that was a reminder of how much he enjoyed unfiltered cigarettes and a good glass of scotch. It was a persona he supported and promoted, referring to his online alter ego as "Paul Malone" and often cheekily signing off on his latest, scandalous post. In 1995, Hathaway began to publish The New Takhoman (first in print, then on the Internet). His biggest break as an online publisher came in the spring of 2003, when an anonymous tipster sent Hathaway a cache of legal documents and divorce papers that included domestic violence allegations made by Crystal Judson against her husband, David Brame, who was Tacoma's police chief at the time. Hathaway—whose was working as a bartender at a local bowling alley at the time— reported on the information. Several days later, Brame murdered his wife and committed suicide in a parking lot in Gig Harbor. Suddenly, Hathaway and The New Takhoman were in the media spotlight. A national radio personality described Hathaway as the Matt Drudge of Pierce County. Hathaway was featured on an episode of the CBS television program 48 Hours. He was a major subject in the true-crime book Tacoma Confidential, which was written by a CBS News producer named Paul LaRosa and published

Carolyn Perry (TOP) outside the Hob Nob lounge in Tacoma. Her boyfriend, John Hathaway (TOP RIGHT), a political gadfly and the publisher of The New Takhoman, passed away on June 3 at the age of 69. "It's still hard to imagine a Tacoma without John Hathaway," said Tacoma political cartoonist R. R. Anderson (ABOVE RIGHT). "He was like the WikiLeaks of Tacoma." in 2006. "Although the city's newspapers far outmanned Hathaway in personnel and had regular reporters on court and police beats, not a single mainstream reporter beat this over-the-hill onetime fashion reporter to the biggest story to hit Tacoma in decades," wrote LaRosa. He added: "Like a lot of gadflies, John Hathaway rubs people the wrong way. While he has his supporters, there's a general sense of 'who hired this guy anyway?' whenever his name comes up. That, and a lot of eye-rolling." A profile published in The News Tribune in 2003 introduced Hathaway to average Tacoma residents and laid out his backstory. Hathaway was born on Aug. 15, 1945, in Tacoma. He was the youngest of two sons born to Jack and Jean Hathaway. When he was six weeks old, his family home was destroyed in a fire that also killed the family dog, according to the The News Tribune article. The family moved to South Tacoma and Hathaway attended Lincoln High School, wrote for the school's newspaper, and graduated in 1963. When Hathaway was 18 years old, he was driving in Tacoma when he struck and killed a five-year-old girl who ran out in front of his car, according to The News Tribune article. Hathaway earned a Business degree at Olympic Junior Col-

lege in Bremerton, and later moved to Seattle to work at a pipe-fitting company. In 1984, he quit that job and opened the J. Paul Shirt clothing store in downtown Seattle. A few years later, the business failed and Hathaway eventually returned to Tacoma—broke and living with his mother. Five years later, The New Takhoman was born and the rest was history. Two days after Hathaway passed away, I contacted Perry by telephone to learn more about the circumstances of his death, which was confirmed by Mountain View Funeral Home in Lakewood. Perry told me Hathaway died due to complications of severe emphysema and cirrhosis of the liver. He was rushed by ambulance to St. Joseph Medical Center during the early-morning hours of Weds., June 3. He died a little after 3 p.m. that afternoon. One week later, Perry and I met for an interview at the Hob Nob. She was able to fill in some blanks in Hathaway's life—he was married four times and was the estranged father of two children; serious health issues facing two of his former wives sank Hathaway into a deep depression; although the booze and cigarettes did him in, Perry claimed Hathaway had given up alcohol toward the end of his life. What about the fedoras and the vintage suits? "This was something that went way back from when he was in high school and started getting into fashion, started wearing shirts and ties to school," she told me. "There was just something that somehow or another he got into that. Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall—that was his time, that was what he liked, that was his persona, that was his dress, that's where all of that came from. I've got a closet full of suits, all of CONTINUED them from the 1940s. At ON PAGE 2 one time, he had over 100


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