Everett Daily Herald, September 30, 2015

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Second helpings: The best of Judyrae Kruse’s food columns

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D1 WEDNESDAY, 09.30.2015

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Tackling street nuisances Everett’s mayor is proposing a $1 million initiative that offers options for nonviolent offenders to receive services. By Chris Winters Herald Writer

EVERETT — Everett Mayor Ray Stephanson is proposing about $1 million in spending in programs for next

year to dramatically ramp up the city’s initiatives to combat chronic street nuisances. The effort builds on programs already happening through the city’s Streets Initiative task force and with various police

initiatives, such as hiring a fulltime social worker to ride along on police patrols. The new initiative would fund the hiring of four new police officers, one sergeant, two more full-time social workers and another prosecutor. The money would come from the city’s capital improvement budget. The slate of issues involves one

idea that was not a Streets Initiative proposal and that would need City Council approval: a revamped anti-panhandling ordinance that the council rejected in April. “Some in the service community said that this would See NUISANCES, back page, this section

What to do with memories Family struggles to find new use for items passed through generations

MARYSVILLE PILCHUCK

Dad guilty in guns case By Rikki King Herald Writer

SEATTLE — Raymond Fryberg was found guilty Tuesday of illegally possessing the gun that his son used to shoot five friends at Marysville Pilchuck High School last year. A U.S. District Court jury convicted Fryberg, the 42-year-old father of Jaylen Fryberg, on all six counts of illegal firearm possession. Raymond Fryberg was the subject of a 2002 protection order in Tulalip The Marysville Tribal Court Police Depart- that forment will hire three bade him school resource from owning officers, A3 guns. Fryberg’s lawyers claimed that he was never served with the protection order and therefore had no way of knowing he was prohibited from owning weapons. Fryberg’s attorney, John Henry Browne, alleged that his client was misled by the government into thinking he was allowed to have guns. Since 2002, Fryberg had passed background checks for gun purchases, obtained a concealed pistol license, and also had his name checked by game wardens during tribal hunting trips, Browne said in court. The tribal protection order was not entered into a database that can be checked during firearm purchases and during contacts with police. Jurors were provided testimony from the tribal court and others that the order was served. Prosecutors argued in filings this week that there was not enough evidence to support Browne’s theory, also known as “unintentional entrapment.” A judge did not allow the claim to become part of his instructions to the jury. Fryberg, who did not testify, faces more than a decade in prison. Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 11. The jury began deliberations Monday and announced its verdict late Tuesday afternoon. The case was investigated by the FBI and the Tulalip Police Department. The jury was not told about the high school shooting, which ended in five deaths, including Fryberg’s son by suicide. Rikki King: 425-339-3449; rking@heraldnet.com.

PHOTOS BY KEVIN CLARK / THE HERALD

Nebra Gallagher has her grandfather’s World War I uniform, a few of her grandmother’s wedding accessories and worries for the future of the collected treasures.

Herald Writer

EVERETT — She sees a soldier back from war and his bride in blue. Over the years, Nedra Gallagher, 59, inherited belongings passed down through family. Among them were her grandfather’s wool uniform from World War I and her grandmother’s blue bridal jacket, wool with silk embroidery, from their wedding in 1921. Gallagher keeps the items in storage at her Silver Lake-area home, not sure what else to do. A few years ago, she and her husband, Paul, went to an estate sale in their

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neighborhood. Seeing all that stuff being sold made them think. Their parents have passed. Their granddaughters are toddlers. What do they want to leave behind? What will matter and what might be lost? Every generation faces the same questions. “It’s so hard to say,” Paul said. High school sweethearts, he and Nedra have been married 37 years. They have a son and a daughter. Nedra’s grandfather, John Scott, survived being gassed in World War I. He and Agnes, the bride in blue, had three sons, one of whom was Nedra’s father, Deane Scott. Paul also has inherited items

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of family history. His dad, Bernard Gallagher, was a special investigator for the U.S. Army during World War II. Bernard Gallagher used to snap 33 millimeter blackand-white photos while flying to China over what was then called Burma, but is now known as Myanmar. A few years ago, Paul took his father’s negatives to a camera shop. The material was too fragile for the shop’s equipment, he was told, so he started digitizing the negatives by hand, but he got stalled. It’s so easy to lose track of things like that.

Opinion. . . . .A11 Sports . . . . . . . C1 Short Takes . . .D6

See MEMORIES, back page, this section

The Buzz How many episodes does it take to get hooked on a Netflix series? How cozy is your couch? Page A2

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