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Eastern Washington wildfire forces evacuations and destroys homes

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Eastern Washington wildfire forces evacuations and destroys homes


SPOKANE, Wash. — High winds drove a wildfire into a Spokane neighborhood, forcing the evacuation of about 1,200 people and potentially damaging or destroying up to 15 structures, according to fire officials.

The Upriver Fire started at 12:17 p.m. Tuesday near Upriver Drive in northeast Spokane, said Fire District 9 spokesman Robert Gray.

“It moved rapidly up the hill and once it reach the top the wind shifted and it went right into the Northwoods neighborhood,” Gray said. Fire crews from Washington state and Idaho attacked the fire from the ground and air, but it quickly grew to 225 acres (.35 square miles) in an area called Beacon Hill.

The blaze was 10 percent contained by Wednesday morning, according to a report by the National Interagency Fire Center. The wind had died down overnight, but the fire was still burning on the ground, so there was potential to expand on Wednesday, said Isabelle Hoygaard, a spokesperson with the Washington state Department of Natural Resources.

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Black bear injures teen hiker in Washington state mountain area

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Black bear injures teen hiker in Washington state mountain area


A black bear injured a teenage boy hiking in a mountainous recreation area outside Seattle on Tuesday, officials said, prompting a closure of the trail where it happened.

The boy was scratched when the bear charged and “swiped” at him in the early afternoon about 2.7 miles up Mount Si Trail, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife said.

He was one of three people hiking together along the trail in the the Mount Si Natural Resources Conservation Area, the department said in a statement.

“His injuries were very minor, but he was of course terrified,” King County Sheriff’s Office deputy Peter Linde told NBC affiliate KING of Seattle. “The bear tossed him around a little bit, but nothing serious. He’s on his way to the hospital right now to be checked out, get the wounds clean, and maybe get some antibiotics.”

King County Search and Rescue crews responded alongside the department’s own officers and transported the teen to a hospital for treatment, the fish and wildlife department said.

A separate group of hikers had another black bear encounter Tuesday when the animal followed them closely for “several miles,” the department said.

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No other injuries were reported.

Fish and wildlife officials ultimately closed the Mount Si Trail so officers could search for the bear, it said.

The Washington State Department of Natural Resources said other nearby trails, including the Little Si and Mount Teneriffe trails and trailheads, have been closed “until further notice due to bear activity.”

“Please stay out of the area,” it said.

The state has recorded one death from a black bear encounter, in 1974. Twenty encounters have resulted in injury since 1970, the latest before Tuesday’s incident taking place in 2022, the Department of Fish and Wildlife said.

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Mount Si Natural Resources Conservation Area, a scenic state landmark composed of four mountain peaks, is about 35 miles east-southeast of Seattle.



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Suspect in deadly shooting of National Guard troops pleads not guilty to new charges

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Suspect in deadly shooting of National Guard troops pleads not guilty to new charges


A man accused of shooting two National Guard troops near the White House, killing one of them, pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to charges in a new indictment that make him eligible for a possible death sentence if he is convicted.

Rahmanullah Lakanwal, an Afghan national, was arraigned on 17 counts, including first-degree murder, in the new indictment handed up by a federal grand jury in Washington. Lakanwal originally pleaded not guilty in January to nine charges in the November 2025 shooting that killed Spc. Sarah Beckstrom and critically wounded Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe.

Before the Justice Department announces whether it will seek the death penalty against Lakanwal, his defense attorneys can meet with prosecutors and present any evidence that they believe weighs against a death sentence.

Beckstrom, 20, and Wolfe, 24, were deployed with the West Virginia National Guard for the federal law-enforcement surge that began in August in Washington, D.C., at the direction of President Donald Trump.

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Lakanwal is accused of driving to the nation’s capital from Bellingham, Washington, while in possession of a stolen firearm and ambushing the two Guard members outside a subway station three blocks from the White House.

Another National Guard member heard gunshots and saw Beckstrom and Wolfe fall to the ground as Lakanwal fired a gun and screamed, “Allahu Akbar!” according to a police report.

Lakanwal, who was shot during the confrontation, was seated in a wheelchair during his arraignment on Tuesday. He didn’t speak during the hearing; one of his attorneys entered a not guilty plea on his behalf.

Lakanwal entered the U.S. in 2021 through a Biden administration program that evacuated and resettled tens of thousands of Afghans after the U.S. withdrawal from the country. Lakanwal worked with the American government, including the CIA, “as a member of a partner force” in Kandahar, Afghanistan, CIA Director John Ratcliffe has said.

Lakanwal is due back in court Sept. 16. A trial date for his case hasn’t been scheduled yet.

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Washington mayoral candidates outline how they would stand up to Trump

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Washington mayoral candidates outline how they would stand up to Trump


There’s a transplant from Mar-a-Lago at the center of DCs mayoral primary race on Tuesday, but his name is nowhere on the ballot.

For the first time in more than a decade, Washington DC will have a new mayor this year as the city faces concerns about how to address public safety, housing affordability, and increased federal immigration enforcement in the district. How the next mayor handles Donald Trump is also key question on residents’ minds, with many closely watching to see if any of the president’s supporters are pouring money into the race, as well as the primaries for the city’s congressional delegate.

Two frontrunners, DC councilmember Janeese Lewis George and former councilmember Kenyan McDuffie, both Democrats, are vying to succeed Mayor Muriel Bowser, who led the city during both of Trump’s terms in office. In a Democratic stronghold, whoever wins the primary is likely to win the election in November.

Lewis George, a democratic socialist and two-term city councilmember, has been campaigning on what she calls a “people-first platform”, promising to lower childcare costs and utility bills, stabilize rent for tenants, and prioritize downpayment assistance for homebuyers.

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McDuffie, a former at-large city councilmember and former prosecutor, has garnered support from much of Washington’s business community, including restaurants and realtors, while promising to expand affordable housing, improve public safety, and diversify the local economy.

Trump weighed in a week before the election – threatening DC home rule, which allows district residents to elect their own mayor and council, if Lewis George wins the mayoral primary. “I wouldn’t like it. Maybe we take back Washington and run it on the federal basis. We won’t put up with it,” he said.

Meanwhile, Bowser, who has had her own trying journey with the administration, expressed her support for McDuffie, but stopped short of a full endorsement. “I have always supported Kenyan McDuffie … [but] I’m not endorsing or making any endorsements for mayor because I’m stepping off the political stage,” said Bowser during an Axios event on 10 June.

During interviews with the Guardian, both leading candidates outlined how they would stand up to the current administration.

Lewis George said she plans to build relationships with members of Congress while also looking for areas of compromise with the Trump administration.

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“My approach to Donald Trump is one where I set a line that there is going to have to be [that] DC autonomy and DC statehood are non-negotiables, our immigrant community and neighbors, our Black youth are non-negotiables,” said Lewis George. “But if there are things you want to work with together, I’m happy to do that … I look at Union Station as an opportunity to build and create a regional transit hub and create jobs for our city.”

If elected, McDuffie said he would be a “fighter” for Washingtonians, working with the attorney general to preserve DC home rule.

“Washington DC residents deserve leaders who will never back down from Congress or the White House when they attempt to undermine our autonomy, and I have consistently opposed federal interference in DC’s local affairs and fought to protect our rights to govern ourselves,” he said. “We know as local officials what’s best for local Washington DC, and we are really working hard to make sure that we can protect our home rule.”

In response to increased federal immigration activity in the city, Lewis George said she would rescind former chief of police Pamela Smith’s executive order, which directs Metropolitan Police Department officers to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement for individuals not in police custody.

“Our officers need to be focused on getting guns off our streets and solving crimes. It is not their jobs to be alongside or babysitting or transporting federal immigration officers across the city to wreak havoc on our communities in our neighborhoods,” she said.

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McDuffie offered a different approach.

“On day one, I’m going to appoint a police chief and a chancellor of our school system, and to make sure that we have an interagency coordinated effort to tackle the biggest challenge facing Washington DC residents right now, which is affordability,” said McDuffie.

Throughout this election, Democratic candidates have pushed to distance themselves from Trump while attempting to connect him and Republicans to their opponents, and ramped up attacks on each others campaigns.

In a recent televised debate on NBC4 Washington, Lewis George accused McDuffie of accepting “tens of thousands of dollars from Trump’s supporters”, though it was actually a relatively small number of donors who have given to both Trump and McDuffie.

“My principal opponent has been running a disinformation campaign that rivals Trump in spreading rumors and innuendo about donors to my campaign,” McDuffie said. “The reality is I have largely 99.9% of my donations have come from Democrats and independents who agree that I am best qualified to lead Washington DC and make our city safer and more affordable.”

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Days before the election, the DC Office of Campaign Finance fined Lewis George $16,000 after it investigated her campaign for improperly coordinating with unions that also manage an independent political action committee.

The campaign said it will appeal the order, calling it a “reckless order … riddled with factual errors”. Lewis George’s team also raised concerns about the process. “Filing an order without legal merit just before an election follows a disturbing pattern of OCF’s conduct,” said the campaign in a written statement.

“I want [voters] to see through the political attacks and this political strategy to try to muddy the waters. It is clear that there is a candidate in this race who is accepting Trump donor dollars, big Trump donor dollars, and that is my opponent, Mr McDuffie, who has accepted those dollars and refused to return them,” said Lewis George before the OCF decision.

Conservative dollars have also appeared in the race to replace Eleanor Holmes Norton, the city’s non-voting House delegate for Congress. Five Democratic candidates are running to succeed Norton, and one of the more well-known candidates, Brooke Pinto, also a city councilmember, has reportedly received nearly $170,000 from donors who have also contributed to Trump and other Republican candidates in the past.

In a social media video response, Pinto said five of her donors out of nearly 2,000 have previously donated to Trump, adding that her opponent, Robert White, also has donors who have given to the president.

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“The difference, though, is that I understand what it means to build a broad tent coalition. I have support from Democratic socialists, and Democrats, and independents, and yes, even Republicans,” said Pinto in the video. “It’s time that we have someone in this seat who can work with a broad set of stakeholders to make sure that those values are carried out.”

Currently, Lewis George has an 11-point lead over McDuffie, according to a new poll released by the Washington Post and George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government. After the top frontrunners, these candidates are also on the ballot for DC mayor: Rini Sampath, Vincent Orange, Gary Goodweather, Ernest Johnson and Hope Solomon.

The 16 June primary also marks the first election using ranked choice voting in Washington DC.

This story was done in collaboration with URL Media





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