AltWeeklies Wire

Washington State's Prison System Starts Shrinkagenew

The main factors driving the projected drop in inmates are bills that will put offenders in home detention and drug-treatment programs rather than prison, and offer them housing vouchers as part of an approved release plan that will allow them to leave prison before their maximum sentence is served.
Seattle Weekly  |  Nina Shapiro  |  08-17-2009  |  Crime & Justice

A New Effort Seeks to Stop Washington's Prison System from Releasing Inmates Into Homelessnessnew

Housing advocates are lobbying for a bill by Washington Rep. Mark Miloscia that would require the Department of Corrections to come up with a plan to eliminate homelessness among former prisoners by the year 2015.
Seattle Weekly  |  Nina Shapiro  |  03-02-2009  |  Crime & Justice

Allan Parmelee, the Inmate Who Won't Shut Upnew

Parmelee spends his days in a cell, carefully hand-printing lawsuits, motions, records requests, and legal appeals on a pad of lined paper. Known to fellow inmates as the "jailhouse attorney," he's filed dozens of lawsuits in state and federal courts.
Seattle Weekly  |  Laura Onstot  |  07-07-2008  |  Crime & Justice

D.C.'s Repealed Firearms Ban Presents a Chance for Some to Cash Innew

Firearms dealers, instructors set their sights on D.C.
Washington City Paper  |  Ruth Samuelson  |  05-09-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Ari Kohn is The Patron Saint of Ex-Consnew

For three years he's been running, and funding, the Post-Prison Education Program, which takes former prisoners on in entirety -- paying for whatever food, housing, and clothing they and their families need. Now Kohn is trying to drum up money from outside sources, mainly from Washington's state Legislature, but his chances are iffy.
Seattle Weekly  |  Nina Shapiro  |  04-28-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Workers' Reports Lead to Record Medicare-Fraud Settlementnew

The full story of the University of Washington Medicare-fraud case, settled for a record $35 million, has not been told, says a whistleblower. For starters, clerks were ordered to forge doctor signatures and re-create old records. Fear of firing, meanwhile, kept everyone quiet. Almost.
Seattle Weekly  |  Rick Anderson  |  06-08-2004  |  Crime & Justice

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