Islands' Sounder, October 28, 2015

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SOUNDER THE ISLANDS’

Serving Orcas, Lopez and San Juan County

NEWS | Sheriff ’s Log [3] COUNTY| San Juan County being sued [6] SPORTS |Vikings have a great homecoming week [8] COMMUNITY | Halloween events on Orcas [9] AWARENESS | A domestic violence advocate shares [10]

WEDNESDAY, October 28, 2015  VOL. 48, NO. 43  75¢  islandssounder.com

Happy homecoming

Colleen Smith Armstrong/staff photos

Left: Viking cheerleader Emma Minnis with aspiring cheerleader Mia Ashcraft. Above: The sophomore class performing during the assembly. At right: Football coach Justin Frausto with his daughter Ember in her Vikings gear. For homecoming sports coverage, see the story on page 8.

A Sounder tribute: remembering Gene Knapp by ANNA V. SMITH Journal reporter

What do you remember best about Gene Knapp? A myriad of things come to people’s mind: his success as an attorney, his passion for land use issues, his involvement with the Land Bank and San Juan County Council. But overwhelmingly it was his calming disposition that set him apart. Gene passed away at his home on Orcas Island Oct. 18 after an extended illness. “One thing I learned from him after time is listening very carefully to people and making sure you treat them with respect and dignity. Those are very important things,” said Charles Silverman, who served as San Juan County prosecuting attorney criminal deputy during Gene’s tenure. “Sometimes lawyers jump up and down and never stop talking. I know I’m that way. And that wasn’t Gene. He would listen, contemplate, and then say something.” Gene and his wife Tish Knapp arrived on Orcas in 1979 from Seattle to live full time, though Gene had a farm there since 1966. After being assured that murder wasn’t common in the islands, Gene accepted a position as San Juan County Prosecuting Attorney in 1980, making Silverman his

deputy that same year. “I was a kid who came from New Jersey and everything is black and white and you meet someone like Gene and realize it has nothing to do with you,” Silverman said. “It’s your responsibility to work with the community and keeping your mouth shut sometimes to hear what they have to say.” Tish recalls that shortly after Gene accepted the position, a slew of murders rang through the county, including the memorable Rolf Neslund case that Gene’s office won, despite the absence of a body as evidence. But, Tish said, Gene was most interested in land use issues, and helping to guide the county in proper zoning and comprehensive use plans to preserve the islands. “The fact that this place is still beautiful and hasn’t been developed in the wrong way is so hugely a part of his work,” Tish said. She tells the story about how the two first met: on a cruise in the Caribbean. Tish was with two friends who she describes as gorgeous. “And he walked right past those women to me. I thought Santa Claus had just dropped him down my chimney. Either we were in love or we were seasick, we didn’t know which,” Tish said laughing. After the days on the cruise and

Above: Gene Knapp.

Contributed photos

a visit to the Pacific Northwest, Tish stayed for good, building a family with their children from previous marriages and their own. “He was so real and unaffected, and had integrity,” Tish said. “I lived with this man and his integrity was unquestionable. He was so truthful and he dealt with people so much like that. I’ve never met anybody who was so much like that than Gene.” Gene served as prosecuting attorney from 1980-1986, and then continued at a private practice in Mt. Vernon and Bellingham, commuting from the islands daily. “I never heard one word of complaint from him about that. He considered that work time,

those two hours on the ferry,” Tish said, recalling that he would give legal advice at those times, or simply catch up with all the people he knew on the ferry. “He was not a talker. I’m the talker. But he was a wonderful listener. He wouldn’t say anything or make judgement but just clear his throat and it would be so dang good. He really was a wise man.” Karen Vedder worked with Gene for 12 years at Lane Powell in Mt. Vernon, and was mentored by him, eventually becoming a lawyer under his tutelage. “He had a powerful presence. He was a quiet guy. He would sit through most of what could be a very lively discussion, but then when he spoke all heads turned towards him,” Vedder said. “He didn’t like to think of litigation as a fight but as problem solving, and that’s how he approached conflict.” Vedder recalls Gene’s ability to make his peers feel valued and important, even if they were on conflicting sides. Dean Brett, who worked with Gene during his time at the law firm Brett and Daugert in Bellingham, initially met Gene on opposite sides of the court room aisle: Brett for the plaintiff and Gene as the defense attorney. Brett liked him so much that they ended up working at the firm together.

“He was a great lawyer because he was a great person. He was so interested in people, and great with people,” Brett said, remembering him for his absolute honesty and integrity. Brett also recalls the farm and the menagerie of animals the Knapps kept, from the regular

SEE KNAPP, PAGE 6

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