Monday, May 23, 2016

Port Townsend, Jefferson County Washington, Don't you CARE about your Drinking Water? Your Air Quality? Your Soil? Nestle was going to Bottle 1000 Gallons a Day, and they have been STOPPED. The Port Townsend Paper Mill USES, Pollutes, OVER 10 MILLION Gallons a Day of Fresh Pure Drinking Water, Spring Water, Creek Water. And you DO NOTHING to STOP Them. WHY?

Hood River County in Oregon Voted to BAN Nestle from bottling 1000 gallons of their fresh, clean, pure water a day. Yet the Port Townsend Paper Mill takes 11 MILLION gallons of fresh, clean, pure water a day and pollutes it then puts it in the Port Townsend Bay and the Locals DO NOTHING. They call it the Smell of Money.



Links to the Story

http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2016/05/opponents_of_water_bottling_pl.html

Hood River County Voters Approve Water Bottling Ban
http://www.opb.org/news/series/election-2016/hood-river-county-votes-on-water-bottling-ban/

Voters pass measure to keep Nestle out of Cascade Locks
http://koin.com/2016/05/17/hood-river-county-voters-water-bottling-measure-nestle-05172016/

Hood River County Voters Approve Water Bottling Ban
http://www.heraldandnews.com/news/northwest/hood-river-county-voters-approve-water-bottling-ban/image_2ed7ae82-bd01-558a-af92-8b2e3f6f1fe5.html


Port Townsend seems like such a progressive town. 

Yet they are NOT an example of New Economy, Clean Economy. Instead Port Townsend is an Example of a City Council and County Commissioners protecting the minority in favor of the profits of Big Corporations. 

Bottling the Water would be better than what Port Townsend Paper is doing. They are POISONING over 10 MILLION Gallons of Fresh, Clean, Spring Water a Day and they call it the Economy.


The City of Port Townsend and Jefferson County Washington PUT the interest and profit of BIG Corporations above the interest of Port Townsend, and of Washington State as well as other areas the water, air and soil affect.

Crown Paper is led by a group of high-level executives who formerly made up the corporate leadership of a global paper company called Smurfit-Stone and its successor company RockTenn.
Crown Paper Group and Crown Corrugated are NOT more important than Clean Fresh Water, Air and Soil. Yet Jefferson County Washington Makes them the MOST Important thing as the put PROFIT before People.


Port Townsend is said to be this cool, healthy, organic hippie place. However, the hippies and those who are into organics and clean air are NOT in CONTROL. Corporation MONEY and Greed is in control, and the people stand by and do NOTHING.

Jefferson County Washington could STOP this madness but they don't. Payoffs, Corruption, Big Money and more are important and your fresh water, clean air and clean soil is NOT.

Less then 300 People are Employed by Port Townsend Paper. The Population of Jefferson County is
30,000. Why is 1% of the populations jobs worth more then the other 99%'s jobs, health, life, quality of life, drinking water, clean air, clean soil and more important than the quality of water that goes into Port Townsend Bay and puget sound?

The MONEY is going to Hedge Funds, Greedy Corporations and NOT to the Benefit of the Majority of Jefferson County.  It is about Choice, Priorities and Stand up for What is Right.

Hood River County way to go, they stopped 1000 Gallons a Day of being taken by Greed. Jefferson County Washington promotes, stands up for, backs, and aids and abets the use and pollution of 11 MILLION gallons a day of Drinking Water by the Port Townsend Paper Mill. And the People do nothing, as they seem to be helpless.



For More Information
http://PortTownsendPaper.blogspot.com/

Port Townsend Paper, #PortTownsendPaper, #PortTownsendSmell, #PortTownsend, #JeffersonCounty #CleanAir #CleanEconomy #NewEconomy #JeffersonCountyHealth #PortTownsendCommissers


Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Jefferson County Washington puts PROFIT before People as they support an Industry that Pollutes the Air, Water and Soil of Port Townsend. Crown Paper is led by a group of high-level executives who formerly made up the corporate leadership of a global paper company called Smurfit-Stone and its successor company RockTenn.

"Crown Paper Group has promoted Colin Fernie to president of Port Townsend Paper and Crown Corrugated.

With the promotion, Fernie adds responsibility for the Port Townsend mill and retains responsibility for the Crown Packaging and Boxmaster plants in Vancouver, British Columbia, and distribution centers in Kelowna, British Columbia, and Calgary, Alberta.

Fernie is expected to be frequently in Port Townsend initially, then monthly, according to spokesman Alan Ulman. Fernie is not replacing anyone, and this is a promotion for him.

Carr Tyndall remains general manager of the Port Townsend mill, Ulman said.

“We hired Colin in May 2015 knowing his record of building high performing packaging businesses, and confident he would do the same with Crown Corrugated,” Crown Paper CEO Steve Klinger said in a May 17 press release.

“In the year since, we made significant strategic investments in Crown Corrugated. Colin leveraged the investments and led Crown Corrugated to improved performance, benefitting our customers and owners. At the same time, we have made significant, strategic investments in Port Townsend Paper, which is executing a plan to become a high performing mill. Colin’s charge is to lead Port Townsend Paper and Crown Corrugated to accelerate progress across the board.”

Asked what accelerated progress referred to, Ulman told the Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader that the mill is switching to compressed natural gas, has added pollution control system and is making infrastructure improvements.

“Port Townsend Paper is the primary supplier to Crown Corrugated and Montebello Container, our corrugated sheet producer in Southern California, so high performance at any of the operations benefits all of the operations. We also made significant strategic investments in Montebello, and the Montebello team is building a strong packaging business by leveraging these investments and implementing our ‘Manufacturing Excellence’ strategy,” said Klinger.

Anthony Salcido continues as president of Montebello Container, reporting to the Crown Paper Group.

Crown Paper Group is a holding company for investments in the paper and packaging industries."

Source and Full Article
http://www.ptleader.com/news/fernie-named-president-of-port-townsend-paper/article_e90d63d6-1c84-11e6-adce-4335617c70f4.html

DO YOUR HOMEWORK. The jobs of the Port Townsend Paper Mill are NOT worth the Harm. The fine particles you are breathing are HARMING you. Look at documents, studies, reports and DO NOT believe those policing themselves or the county protecting them. The PT Paper Mill Jobs are around 1% of Jefferson County, there are about 330 jobs or so. There are way more people, thousands and thousands in Port Townsend doing things that are not POISONING the air, water and soil.

The Long term VALUE they speak of is for THEIR stocks and Profit and not for your health or quality of life. The Port Townsend Paper Mill is poisoning the Air, Water and Soil of Port Townsend. Don't believe me or anyone, do your homework, read the reports of what goes into the SLUDGE and where it goes, what is in the air REALLY, what is going into the Port Townsend Bay. Greed and Profit Before People is Not what Port Townsend is About.


Jefferson County public records case hits state Supreme Court. Mike Belenski says county gave inadequate response to request.

"A Jefferson County man is awaiting a decision after arguing his Public Records Act (PRA) case against the county May 12 in front of the state Supreme Court.

Mike Belenski, 59, is best known for his prolific history of requesting public records, suing elected and public officials, and getting under the skin of the county's civil deputy prosecutor, David Alvarez.

Alvarez also appeared in court May 12, but he let Olympia-based attorney Jeffrey Myers of Law, Lyman, Daniel, Kamerrer & Bogdanovich argue on behalf of the county.

Joining Belenski as a friend of the court, and making closing arguments, was Michele Earl-Hubbard of the Allied Law Group, representing individual newspapers around the state as well as the Coalition for Open Government, Allied Daily Newspapers of Washington and the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association, of which the Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader is a member.

“This is really the first time in the 16 years I've been here that the county has been in front of the state Supreme Court for a civil case,” Alvarez said. “It's very rare.”

INTERNET ACTIVITY

At issue in this case is a request Belenski, who lives in the Mats Mats area north of Port Ludlow, made in September 2010 for Internet access logs – or metadata about the websites county employees visit while on the job – from the prior eight months.

Nine years earlier, then-Washington State Auditor Brian Sonntag wrote a letter to the county, in part acknowledging a concern of Belenski's that county employees had violated county policy by listening to Seattle Mariners baseball games online.

Through an earlier records request, Belenski found a memo from then-Central Services director Gary Rowe asking department heads to ensure employees don't listen to games online because it was bogging down the system, writing: “We would all be pretty embarrassed if information about Internet usage were published in the local newspaper.”

The fact that employees had been visiting adult sites, gambling sites, fortune-telling sites, sports sites, celebrity fan sites, as well as a gore fetish site, eventually did make the newspaper in March 2005.

'NO RESPONSIVE RECORDS'

Days after filing his 2010 request, the county responded to Belenski, advising it had “no responsive records.”

“When they say no responsive records, it means [there are] no records,” Belenski told the court's nine justices May 12, pointing out that the county offered no further explanation. “The county has repeated hard drive failures; They could have reconfigured their software, which they've done; They could have had a massive hard drive failure. Give a person some kind of a reason.”

In March 2011, Alvarez told Belenski he did not receive the logs because “we don't use them for anything so we don't have to keep them,” suggesting they did not exist.

Following a subsequent request in November 2011 for that year's logs, Belenski was told a catastrophic hard drive failure had wiped out nearly all of them.

In January 2012, Belenski attended a county meeting where he asked then-Information Services Manager David Shambley why he hadn't received any records. Shambley told him an employee “decided that you didn't have the software to look at them,” confirming the existence of the records.

In August 2012, Belenski filed another records request, this time learning that one day after he submitted his 2010 request, the same Information Services employee wrote an email to Alvarez acknowledging the existence of the records but expressing concern about Belenski's ability to read the logs without generating “a human readable” report.

FILING SUIT

On Nov. 19, 2012, nearly 26 months after making his 2010 request, Belenski filed suit against the county in Clallam County Superior Court. The county won on summary judgement, arguing it did not provide the logs because it decided they were not public records.

On appeal, the logs were found to be public records, but the court still dismissed Belenski's claim because not only had the PRA's one-year statute of limitations to bring a lawsuit expired, but so too had a generic two-year statute usually applied when no other is provided.

The question before the state Supreme Court: Which statute applies in Belenski's case? The court's answer will apply to all such cases statewide.

“We’ll be making a rule that applies to all requesters, not just to this one requester,” Justice Sheryl Gordon McCloud said.

OPENING ARGUMENT

Belenski, along with Earl-Hubbard, argued the generic two-year statute of limitations does not apply to PRA cases as the PRA is already equipped with such a statute.

“The two-year statute of limitations can never apply in a PRA case because it is a gap filler and the PRA has a statute of limitations: it is the one-year," Earl-Hubbard said.

Under PRA, a requester may file suit within one year of an agency's claim of an exemption or its last production of a record on an installment basis.

“When I ended up filing the lawsuit, it still hadn't started to run because I hadn't gotten the exemption log or the records,” Belenski told the court, adding that he could not be expected to bring suit sooner as he did not yet know whether the records he requested even existed.

“The agency is the one that has all the knowledge about the records," he said. "You're requiring the requester to be a mind reader. If you go to court, you need proof, and if somebody tells you ‘no responsive records,’ how do you know there actually are records?”

COUNTY'S ARGUMENT

Myers, arguing on behalf of the county, said it would be “an absurd consequence” to conclude the statute of limitations can only be triggered by one of the two prescribed agency responses, thus potentially allowing a requester to sue many years later upon discovering the agency failed to produce a record.

“There are lots of other kinds of public records responses,” Myers said. “I think it’s an absurd consequence to say that [the start of the statute] jumps around depending on how the agency chooses to respond. What if it was a single record, and it wasn’t done in installments? I think you have to clarify that. You could also read it to say the last production of a record is also the date that you determined there are no records to produce.”

Myers said generally a statute of limitations begins to run when a person has the right to sue and, in this case, he said Belenski had the right to sue when the county made its initial response.

“So you're recognizing somebody might be forced to bring a lawsuit while they're still negotiating back and forth with the county?” asked Justice Debra L. Stephens.

“I think that is a possibility,” Myers said.

“Wouldn’t that tell all requesters: ‘Always sue; As soon as you get that, always sue, just in case?” Justice McCloud asked.

“I think that is one strategy people might use,” Myers said.

CLOSING ARGUMENT

Earl-Hubbard said the PRA ensures the public's right to inspect public records and entitles requesters to an adequate response. Without an adequate response, she said, the requester does not know whether they have cause to sue.

“You said in numerous cases that the failure to give an adequate withholding explanation is a violation of the adequate response because the person doesn’t know what they’ve been denied,” she said. “If we’d been here on Wade’s Eastside Gun Shop involving lead contamination of people and we’d been told there’s no responsive records, I would have thought that meant there was not a lead contamination investigation by L&I of this particular place. In 20 years of seeing PRA denials that say that, I think it means there are no records.”

Earl-Hubbard said Myers' assertion that a requester should be prepared to sue within a year of receiving an initial response puts too much of the onus on the requester.

“You do not want to cut short this idea of negotiation, you don’t want to force people into court and then try to discover and negotiate later,” she said. “Yes, a person might be able to sue if they think the response is inadequate, but that puts a burden on our courts we don’t want to impose and puts a requirement on a requester that the law doesn’t allow.”

Earl-Hubbard said the county should have told Belenski in the first place why it would not provide the records.

“They knew they had records, they decided they weren’t public records and they could have, in their explanation, at least said that and then he would have had a choice: Do I go to court? Do I question this? Do I fight with them?”

RETAINING RECORDS

When Belenski made his 2010 request, the county's software was, by default, retaining the last 13 months of logs, automatically deleting the oldest day of logs with each new day.

The county stopped retaining records of employee computer use all together in January 2015, Alvarez said.

“Because of the potential cost to the county of having to maintain those records and redact for exemptions, we were forced to turn those things off so they wouldn't become a potential liability,” county Administrator Philip Morley said, noting that a single day of logs amounted to 2.7 million Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. “The primary reason is to be able to take out internal IP addresses so we don't compromise the security of the county network.”

The county still has the ability to turn on the log-retaining function, Morley said, but instead it relies on employees and department managers to monitor each other and report concerns for follow up.

“We try to minimize the risk of misuse by turning off access to a number of inappropriate sites,” he said. “But there is always the possibility that an employee could misuse something.”

"A Jefferson County man is awaiting a decision after arguing his Public Records Act (PRA) case against the county May 12 in front of the state Supreme Court.

Mike Belenski, 59, is best known for his prolific history of requesting public records, suing elected and public officials, and getting under the skin of the county's civil deputy prosecutor, David Alvarez.

Alvarez also appeared in court May 12, but he let Olympia-based attorney Jeffrey Myers of Law, Lyman, Daniel, Kamerrer & Bogdanovich argue on behalf of the county.

Joining Belenski as a friend of the court, and making closing arguments, was Michele Earl-Hubbard of the Allied Law Group, representing individual newspapers around the state as well as the Coalition for Open Government, Allied Daily Newspapers of Washington and the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association, of which the Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader is a member.

“This is really the first time in the 16 years I've been here that the county has been in front of the state Supreme Court for a civil case,” Alvarez said. “It's very rare.”

INTERNET ACTIVITY

At issue in this case is a request Belenski, who lives in the Mats Mats area north of Port Ludlow, made in September 2010 for Internet access logs – or metadata about the websites county employees visit while on the job – from the prior eight months.

Nine years earlier, then-Washington State Auditor Brian Sonntag wrote a letter to the county, in part acknowledging a concern of Belenski's that county employees had violated county policy by listening to Seattle Mariners baseball games online.

Through an earlier records request, Belenski found a memo from then-Central Services director Gary Rowe asking department heads to ensure employees don't listen to games online because it was bogging down the system, writing: “We would all be pretty embarrassed if information about Internet usage were published in the local newspaper.”

The fact that employees had been visiting adult sites, gambling sites, fortune-telling sites, sports sites, celebrity fan sites, as well as a gore fetish site, eventually did make the newspaper in March 2005.

'NO RESPONSIVE RECORDS'

Days after filing his 2010 request, the county responded to Belenski, advising it had “no responsive records.”

“When they say no responsive records, it means [there are] no records,” Belenski told the court's nine justices May 12, pointing out that the county offered no further explanation. “The county has repeated hard drive failures; They could have reconfigured their software, which they've done; They could have had a massive hard drive failure. Give a person some kind of a reason.”

In March 2011, Alvarez told Belenski he did not receive the logs because “we don't use them for anything so we don't have to keep them,” suggesting they did not exist.

Following a subsequent request in November 2011 for that year's logs, Belenski was told a catastrophic hard drive failure had wiped out nearly all of them.

In January 2012, Belenski attended a county meeting where he asked then-Information Services Manager David Shambley why he hadn't received any records. Shambley told him an employee “decided that you didn't have the software to look at them,” confirming the existence of the records.

In August 2012, Belenski filed another records request, this time learning that one day after he submitted his 2010 request, the same Information Services employee wrote an email to Alvarez acknowledging the existence of the records but expressing concern about Belenski's ability to read the logs without generating “a human readable” report.

FILING SUIT

On Nov. 19, 2012, nearly 26 months after making his 2010 request, Belenski filed suit against the county in Clallam County Superior Court. The county won on summary judgement, arguing it did not provide the logs because it decided they were not public records.

On appeal, the logs were found to be public records, but the court still dismissed Belenski's claim because not only had the PRA's one-year statute of limitations to bring a lawsuit expired, but so too had a generic two-year statute usually applied when no other is provided.

The question before the state Supreme Court: Which statute applies in Belenski's case? The court's answer will apply to all such cases statewide.

“We’ll be making a rule that applies to all requesters, not just to this one requester,” Justice Sheryl Gordon McCloud said.

OPENING ARGUMENT

Belenski, along with Earl-Hubbard, argued the generic two-year statute of limitations does not apply to PRA cases as the PRA is already equipped with such a statute.

“The two-year statute of limitations can never apply in a PRA case because it is a gap filler and the PRA has a statute of limitations: it is the one-year," Earl-Hubbard said.

Under PRA, a requester may file suit within one year of an agency's claim of an exemption or its last production of a record on an installment basis.

“When I ended up filing the lawsuit, it still hadn't started to run because I hadn't gotten the exemption log or the records,” Belenski told the court, adding that he could not be expected to bring suit sooner as he did not yet know whether the records he requested even existed.

“The agency is the one that has all the knowledge about the records," he said. "You're requiring the requester to be a mind reader. If you go to court, you need proof, and if somebody tells you ‘no responsive records,’ how do you know there actually are records?”

COUNTY'S ARGUMENT

Myers, arguing on behalf of the county, said it would be “an absurd consequence” to conclude the statute of limitations can only be triggered by one of the two prescribed agency responses, thus potentially allowing a requester to sue many years later upon discovering the agency failed to produce a record.

“There are lots of other kinds of public records responses,” Myers said. “I think it’s an absurd consequence to say that [the start of the statute] jumps around depending on how the agency chooses to respond. What if it was a single record, and it wasn’t done in installments? I think you have to clarify that. You could also read it to say the last production of a record is also the date that you determined there are no records to produce.”

Myers said generally a statute of limitations begins to run when a person has the right to sue and, in this case, he said Belenski had the right to sue when the county made its initial response.

“So you're recognizing somebody might be forced to bring a lawsuit while they're still negotiating back and forth with the county?” asked Justice Debra L. Stephens.

“I think that is a possibility,” Myers said.

“Wouldn’t that tell all requesters: ‘Always sue; As soon as you get that, always sue, just in case?” Justice McCloud asked.

“I think that is one strategy people might use,” Myers said.

CLOSING ARGUMENT

Earl-Hubbard said the PRA ensures the public's right to inspect public records and entitles requesters to an adequate response. Without an adequate response, she said, the requester does not know whether they have cause to sue.

“You said in numerous cases that the failure to give an adequate withholding explanation is a violation of the adequate response because the person doesn’t know what they’ve been denied,” she said. “If we’d been here on Wade’s Eastside Gun Shop involving lead contamination of people and we’d been told there’s no responsive records, I would have thought that meant there was not a lead contamination investigation by L&I of this particular place. In 20 years of seeing PRA denials that say that, I think it means there are no records.”

Earl-Hubbard said Myers' assertion that a requester should be prepared to sue within a year of receiving an initial response puts too much of the onus on the requester.

“You do not want to cut short this idea of negotiation, you don’t want to force people into court and then try to discover and negotiate later,” she said. “Yes, a person might be able to sue if they think the response is inadequate, but that puts a burden on our courts we don’t want to impose and puts a requirement on a requester that the law doesn’t allow.”

Earl-Hubbard said the county should have told Belenski in the first place why it would not provide the records.

“They knew they had records, they decided they weren’t public records and they could have, in their explanation, at least said that and then he would have had a choice: Do I go to court? Do I question this? Do I fight with them?”

RETAINING RECORDS

When Belenski made his 2010 request, the county's software was, by default, retaining the last 13 months of logs, automatically deleting the oldest day of logs with each new day.

The county stopped retaining records of employee computer use all together in January 2015, Alvarez said.

“Because of the potential cost to the county of having to maintain those records and redact for exemptions, we were forced to turn those things off so they wouldn't become a potential liability,” county Administrator Philip Morley said, noting that a single day of logs amounted to 2.7 million Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. “The primary reason is to be able to take out internal IP addresses so we don't compromise the security of the county network.”

The county still has the ability to turn on the log-retaining function, Morley said, but instead it relies on employees and department managers to monitor each other and report concerns for follow up.

“We try to minimize the risk of misuse by turning off access to a number of inappropriate sites,” he said. “But there is always the possibility that an employee could misuse something.”

Source
http://www.ptleader.com/news/jefferson-county-public-records-case-hits-state-supreme-court/article_ada58722-1c7c-11e6-94ca-0f62267b39bb.html

love this Comment on the Article;  "Simon J. May 18, 2016 11:38am
If they need any witnesses, I have asked the county for public records of which many have been ignored or refused, and this has been going on for decades. Maybe we should write a book 'The secrets of Jefferson County.'"

I want to request ALL emails, or phone correspondence with County Commissioners, City Officials, County Officials and the Port Townsend Paper Mill. Soon SOON.


Tuesday, May 17, 2016

You are the Media. REPORT THE NEWS TO YOU. Real News is News by the People for the People. YOU ARE MEDIA.

Corruption is Being EXPOSED. The Light is SHINING bright in dark rooms of Corruption that have been there since the beginning of time. ~  Keep it up Folks. YOU are the MEDIA. You are the ones in the know.

Start a Blog, Use Google Docs, Use Free PR sites, use iReport, upload videos of you talking / reporting, post court documents, post sworn statements, post proof and be the MEDIA.

YOU are MEDIA.

REPORT on what you know, what you are passionate about, post documented facts, case law, videos, photos, and lot's of real proof. YOU are the REAL NEWS Folks.

You are the News by the People for the People. 

If you are in insider, a whistleblower, a witness to a criminal or corrupt activity, a witness to an accident or incident, have information special to your company or industry, know about specific judges, cops, politicians or attorneys, REPORT THE NEWS and post documents of proof, post photos, post video so that people can actually read the REAL NEWS. 

Report on Lobbyists, State Representatives, Mayors, Senators, Attorney Generals, Governors, Attorneys, Judges, Police, Sheriffs, Detectives, and any official, YOU are the NEWS. If you don't report what you see, find out or know then the REAL News does not get reported.


Not only do you have case precedent of a LEGAL Constitutional Right to Report the News that is EQUAL to any Institutional Press Journalist or Big Media Reporter but you also have case precedent to BREAK the NEWS. Another words you have free speech rights, as a matter of LAW, by case precedent to break a story, be the first person talking about the story. THIS is a VERY Big Deal. So use this case precedent to Break the News, Report the News, YOU are MEDIA.


Sunday, May 8, 2016

Joshua Larson CONVICTED of child sex crimes in Snohomish County Washington. Still faces charges in Port Townsend, Jefferson County Washington. Joshua David Larson sentenced to roughly five years.

"Convicted child molester gets maximum prison sentence"

"Joshua David Larson was sentenced to roughly five years in prison for child molestation Wednesday."

"EVERETT — Being accused of molesting little girls is nothing new for Joshua David Larson.
But getting sentenced to prison after being convicted of the allegations?

The Port Townsend man found out what that was like for the first time Wednesday.

Larson was sentenced to roughly five years behind bars — although there is a good chance he'll be locked up longer.

He was convicted of molesting a 3-year-old girl while his extended family gathered in Stanwood in 2013 for Thanksgiving dinner. There were no direct witnesses, and the case largely hinged on whom jurors believed.

Snohomish County Superior Court Judge Anita Farris said the sentence, the maximum under state guidelines, was warranted because Larson violated others' trust to prey on a victim whose young age made her particularly vulnerable.

Larson, 41, declined the judge's offer to address the court. He mostly stood silent through the hearing, sometimes closing his eyes and frowning.

Over the last 18 years, Larson has three times faced prosecution for allegations that he's committed sex crimes against young children.

He won acquittal twice in separate trials in King and Clallam counties, the first in 1998 when he was 24, the second last spring.

That came close to happening in Snohomish County, too. A jury here in November was unable to reach a verdict in the Stanwood case, leading to a mistrial.

Larson insisted the physical contact with the girl had been accidental and that his victim in the Stanwood case, now 6, may have made up the story to please her parents.

Deputy prosecutor Laura Twitchell took the case to trial again in January. The second jury needed just 90 minutes of weighing evidence from the week-long trial to find Larson guilty.

The defendant has demonstrated himself to be a liar and a remorseless manipulator, Twitchell said.  “He made a plan and he followed through on it,” she said.

Over the years, four other girls have accused Larson of molestation. At trial, Farris allowed Twitchell to present evidence from other Larson sex cases, but only for the limited purpose of challenging the defendant's claims that the touching was accidental. The prosecutor successfully argued that the defendant used a common plan in each incident.

The judge's decision about the other girls' testimony likely will figure large in Larson's appeal. On Wednesday, public defender Jennifer Rancourt successfully argued that Twitchell shouldn't be allowed to make reference to any other allegations against Larson except for the Thanksgiving incident that led to his conviction.

She also asked that limits be placed on photography, urging the judge to order no images of her client in handcuffs.

Farris resolved that issue by allowing Larson to participate during his sentencing without his hands restrained.

He remains charged in Jefferson County with molesting a 7-year-old girl in 2013.

Rancourt told the judge she wanted to limit the chance that potential jurors in that case may prejudge Larson should it proceed to trial.

Because he's been convicted of a sex offense, Larson won't see freedom again unless he can convince the state's Indeterminate Sentence Review Board that he is fit to be released. If that happens, he'll be required to abide by a long list of conditions prohibiting contact with children and also register as a sex offender."

Source
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20160330/NEWS01/160339906
"Joshua David Larson, 41, was convicted Wednesday of one count of first-degree child molestation and faces up to 5½ years in prison when he's sentenced March 30. He will be required to register as a sex offender. The Snohomish jury found Larson guilty of molesting a 3-year-old girl during a 2013 Thanksgiving dinner in Stanwood."

Source and Full Article
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20160129/NEWS/301299962

More Research Links
http://investigativeblogger.blogspot.com/2016/01/josh-larson-port-townsend-joshua-larson.html