Seattle, WA
50 northeast Seattle businesses ask Mayor Harrell to address violent crime
Northeast Seattle businesses complain to mayor about crime
Businesses in several northeast Seattle neighborhoods have signed on to a letter to Mayor Bruce Harrell pleading for public safety.
SEATTLE – Dozens of local business owners in northeast Seattle joined in calling for help from Mayor Bruce Harrell following repeat instances of burglary and vandalism against their storefronts.
“We are small business owners and operators in the Wedgwood, Bryant, Laurelhurst, View Ridge, and Sand Point neighborhoods in northeast Seattle and District 4. We write to express concern about the spike in devastating crimes against our businesses and neighbors in this part of town,” read the letter, in part.
The letter closes with requests, reading, in part, “Please deploy additional police resources and otherwise restore public safety to our part of town. Please do more to end the reported gang and gun violence from our neighborhoods. Please help our community.”
Read the full letter from the business owners:
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Seattle, WA
Seattle Kraken voice details key to team’s surprising start
The Seattle Kraken have been one of NHL’s biggest surprises at the quarter poll of the 2025-26 season.
Seattle Kraken get top goalie back from IR, but lose another to injury
After a disappointing 2024-25 campaign led to the firing of head coach Dan Bylsma following his first season, the Kraken have turned things around early on under new bench boss Lane Lambert.
Seattle entered Saturday in fourth place in the Pacific Division with a 10-5-5 and 25 points, just two points behind first-place Anaheim in a crowded race.
Kraken play-by-play voice John Forslund shared his insight on how the team has taken a step forward this year when he joined Seattle Sports’ Bump and Stacy on Friday.
“Lane Lambert has done a remarkable job from day one of training camp just coming in and letting everybody know I’m the new sheriff, this is how we need to play, it’s not that complicated, I need a buy-in from the players,” Forslund said. “And as you know, that’s the most important thing in pro sports. You have to have a buy-in no matter what the game is, and they have (bought in).”
An identity that fits
One look at the stat sheet gives a pretty clear indicator as to why the Kraken have taken a step forward early on. Seattle’s 56 goals allowed are tied for the lowest mark in the Pacific Division and the fourth-lowest across the NHL. It’s held opponents to two goals or fewer nine times.
Last year the Kraken allowed the 10th-most goals (265) in the league.
“It gets back to where they were last year. So last season, for me – and I said it over and over again, wasn’t afraid to say it – but it was their lack of defensive recognition, their lack of awareness in the defensive zone, the (lack of) trust they had in each other as a five-man group in front of the goalie,” Forslund said. “That’s hockey. That’s how you play the game. And Lane had to come in and lay down a system that would get to those basics. (It’s) like building a house. You don’t start with the roof. You start with the foundation and you work up.
“So if you do that, you can awaken a team. You can provide more energy.”
While their defense has been among the league’s best, the Kraken have struggled to score this year. Their 54 goals are tied for the third-lowest mark in the league, and they’ve been held to two or fewer goals in eight games.
The lack of firepower on offense has been a troubling sign for Seattle, but it also illustrates why a shift to a more defensive identity under Lambert is a better fit for this group, according to Forslund.
“The Kraken do not have high-end offensive talent. That’s the one thing they need,” Forslund said. “… They don’t have guys who can break the game open on their own talent. Other teams do. (Other teams) can get away with playing a game that maybe isn’t as based in a work ethic but more or less based on talent, and they can win and they can outscore their chances or outscore their problems. The Kraken don’t have that.
“So you had to get back to that (defensive identity) and he did it, and he did it in short order. And because he did, they started to gain momentum, and momentum leads to energy, leads to a new way of playing.”
Forslund highlighted how Seattle’s attempt to get more scoring out of its group a year ago ultimately led to exposing its defense.
“If you stretch out your game, take risks, try to do what they attempted to do last year and score, you’re gonna get victimized,” Forslund said. “So for me, I think this is a great starting point (this year). And I think if they just continue to play this way, it’ll get better and better and better. And who knows as you get into the second half of the year? The league is asleep on them, no one expected them to be very good. So that’s where they’re at right now, but people will become more aware of their style as we move forward with the season. It’ll get tougher and we’ll see where it goes.”
Why Forslund likes Seattle Kraken’s chances in Pacific
The race in the Pacific Division is very crowded early on with just four points separating its first- and sixth-place teams.
Forslund views Vegas, which is currently tied for second with 26 points, as the team to beat in the Pacific Division. He also highlighted a rising Anaheim squad as another contender.
But Forslund likes Seattle’s chances to continue surprising thanks the identity it’s taken on so far this season.
“I like the fact that they can compete with all of these teams, including Vegas, based on their style,” Forslund said. “And that’s gonna put them in a good position, because of all the teams that we talked about in the Pacific Division, the team that, to me, has the most grit and the ability to grind and make it tough to play against are the Kraken. They don’t have the talent level of Vegas, and they don’t have the talent level certainly of Edmonton and … even (Los Angeles), but they have the ability to grind games.”
Hear the full conversation at this link or in the audio player near the top of this story. Listen to Bump and Stacy weekdays form 10 a.m.-2 p.m. or find the podcast on the Seattle Sports app.
Thursday: Seattle Kraken score 3 in third in 3-2 comeback win over Chicago
Seattle, WA
Seattle weather: Cloudy Saturday with showers mainly north
SEATTLE – Mostly cloudy skies today with mostly dry skies around western Washington. Showers were spotty further north and along the coast through this evening.
Mostly cloudy skies today with mostly dry skies around Western Washington. Showers were spotty further north.
Temperatures will be mild again Saturday, with showers remaining to the north and along the coast.
Temperatures will be mild again Saturday, with showers remaining to the north and along the coast.
Showers will stay to the north during the day, but the stalled front will slowly sag southward Saturday night into Sunday.
Showers will stay to the north during the day, but the stalled front will slowly sag southward Saturday night into Sunday.
We will be watching the mountain passes closely through the holiday weekend. We will start to see snow levels dropping as we get closer to the holiday. No major impacts are expected through early Sunday, but Sunday evening into Monday we will see dropping snow levels increasing pass impacts.
We will be watching the mountain passes closely through the holiday weekend as we will start to see snow levels dropping as we get closer to the holiday.
It will be wet and gusty Sunday morning with drier skies into the afternoon. Sunday will also be gusty as our cold front sweeps through; gusts between 20–35 mph are possible. Showers and sunbreaks are expected Monday with more dry time into Tuesday. Another round of rain and mountain snow is expected midweek through the holiday weekend. Stay tuned for the latest conditions.
It will be wet and gusty Sunday morning with drier skies into the afternoon.
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The Source: Information in this story came from FOX 13 Seattle Meteorologist Claire Anderson and the National Weather Service.
Seattle, WA
Seattle man sentenced for scheme to abuse Vietnamese children
A 38-year-old Seattle man was sentenced for producing child sex abuse imagery in a scheme to get images of sexually abused children from a coconspirator in Vietnam, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Washington announced earlier this week.
Richard Stanley Maness Jr. will spend 30 years in prison for two federal felonies: conspiracy to produce child sexual abuse material and production of child sexual abuse material.
“In recommending this 30-year prison sentence, our office is doing everything it can to protect innocent children here and overseas. Mr. Maness remains a danger, unable to accept the harm he has done,” U.S. Attorney Neil Floyd said, according to the attorney’s office. “Instead, he insists he is the victim, but the jury and the judge saw through Maness’s fabricated claims of innocence.”
Law enforcement rescued two young children who had been kidnapped off the street in April 2024, according to records filed in the case.
“The mother of the two sisters was distraught when she could not find them,” the news release stated.
The girls were taken to an Airbnb by Maness’ female coconspirator.
Seattle man directed sexual abuse of young children
Messages Maness sent document him directing the sexual abuse of a young child.
“These victims were not candy in a dish for you to take out the one you liked,” U.S. District Judge Richard Jones said at the sentencing hearing, according to the attorney’s office. “In the mind of that 7-year-old, you were a monster directing the pain she suffered.”
Maness was arrested in a Seattle apartment after detectives in Vietnam contacted Homeland Security Investigations.
Along with 30 years behind bars, Maness was sentenced to 20 years of supervised release.
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