Unbelievable
This week’s watchwords
Missed field goal keeps Seahawks’ dreams alive,
STATE OF THE UNION:
President Barack Obama’s final one is Tuesday. Watch live at 6 p.m. on any of the major networks; stream live at wh.gov/SOTU.
Page C1
NEW SESSION: The 2016 Legislature
convenes today in Olympia, ever-hopeful about concluding important business (such as a path to school funding by the 2018 state Supreme Court deadline) in a regular 60-day session.
NATIONAL CHAMPS: Of college football will be determined tonight when undefeated Clemson takes on Alabama. ESPN at 5:30.
MONDAY, 01.11.2016
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Shooter’s father to be sentenced Raymond Fryberg was convicted of illegally possessing firearms, including the one his son used to kill himself and fellow students.
By Scott North Herald Writer
SEATTLE — The Tulalip man whose teenage son killed four students and himself at Marysville Pilchuck High School in 2014
is scheduled to be sentenced Monday after being convicted of illegally possessing firearms, including the handgun used in the shootings. Assistant U.S. attorneys are seeking roughly three years in
prison for Raymond Fryberg, 42, the stiffest punishment under federal sentencing guidelines. Fryberg’s defense attorneys, however, say the man and his family have suffered enough and two years of probation, with
Joy in a place of healing Muralist’s work at Dawson Place helps abused children feel safe
no time behind bars, is more appropriate. A U.S. District Court jury in September convicted Fryberg of six counts of illegal firearm See SENTENCE, Page A2
A tail with a happy ending After 5 long years, a pooch-napped canine and her grieving human are reunited, thanks to a microchip and some work. By Eric Stevick Herald Writer
PHOTOS BY ANDY BRONSON / THE HERALD
Muralist Mozelle Spencer, of Mozelle by Design, paints a hillside mural along a wall at Dawson Place on Dec. 15 in Everett. Dawson Place, the center that serves sexually abused children and teenagers, is getting a facelift thanks to a grant from Boeing employees.
EVERETT — Beige walls are being transformed into bright underwater seascapes, rolling hillsides and sturdy trees. A puppy and kitten and bees and birds share space on walls in the medical examination room. A lot of healing can go on between those colorful walls. Kids can feel safe and they are taught that it’s not their fault that bad things happened to them. Dawson Place Child Advocacy Center in Everett has been getting a facelift thanks to some support from Boeing
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and Amazon employees. The center received a $40,000 grant from the Employees Community Fund of Boeing Puget Sound. The money was used to hire muralist Mozelle Spencer, who is turning drab office walls into works of art. Dawson Place also was the first recipient of Amazon’s Local Love project. During the summer more than 100 volunteers painted, upgraded bathrooms and improved recording equipment. The volunteers logged more than 450 hours sprucing up the center. See MURALS, Page A2
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VOL. 115, NO. 333 © 2016 THE DAILY HERALD CO.
INSIDE
Business . . . . .A6 Classified . . . . B4
Comics . . . . . . B2 Crossword . . . B2
See MIA, Page A2
Trees rise behind a scale and blood pressure monitor
Wide left Seahawks win Gravedigger’s Shovel Bowl: Seattle advanced to the second round of the NFL playoffs Sunday with an improbable 10-9 win in subzero temperatures in Minneapolis (Page C1). After they regained their ability to breathe, Hawks Dear Abby. . . . B3 Horoscope . . . B6
fans realized what Lady Luck had just handed them, and headed to the nearest Quickee Mart to buy Powerball tickets. Winner gets most-favored nation status: The Powerball jackpot for Wednesday’s drawing is $1.3 billion, a record (Page A8). The odds of winning are
Lottery . . . . . .A2 Obituaries. . . .A4
Opinion. . . . . .A7 Short Takes . . . B4
roughly 1 in 300 million, but look on the bright side — they’re still better than the odds of Martin O’Malley, Rick Santorum or Mike Huckabee winning the presidency. Don’t know much about history: On this day in 1964, Surgeon General Luther Terry issued a report statSports . . . . . . . C1 Your Photos . . B1
ing that cigarette smoking “contributes substantially … to the overall death rate” (Today in History, Page B4). The findings directly contradicted a widely publicized report from about 15 years earlier, which concluded that more doctors smoked Camels than any other cigarette. — Mark Carlson, Herald staff
Leaden 44/36, C6
DAILY
Herald Writer
the buzz
By Diana Hefley
MONROE — Rosemary Murphy often wondered what happened to Mia, how her long lost Chihuahua-poodle mix was faring. It had been five years since the Sultan woman left her canine companion with a friend to watch for a few weeks. A neighbor of her friend took a liking to Mia. One day, the neighbor and Mia disappeared with no forwarding address. “I was heartbroken,” Murphy said. “I didn’t think I would see her again.” Last week, thanks to technology, a Good Samaritan, the help of two animal clinics and the Monroe Police Department, Mia and Murphy were reunited. On Tuesday, Mia was found at the Monroe Laundromat, but she had no collar or tags to identify her. The woman who found her asked around, but couldn’t find an owner. The dog was taken to the Cascade Animal Clinic, which determined it had an unregistered microchip
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