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BUTCHER 206

FREE BUTCHER206
Aug 22, 2003
12,316
109,201
113
Seattle, WA
lol @ Russell Wilson releasing a clothing line

>"For the 25 something man out of college, looking for that first job, not a lot of money"
>releases to Nordstrom's
>$198 button up shirts
>$228 weird skinny chinos
>$98 tshirts $128 polos
>$298 suede slip-ons

wtf russell you goddamned idjet
 

BUTCHER 206

FREE BUTCHER206
Aug 22, 2003
12,316
109,201
113
Seattle, WA
16-year-old Federal Way boy was charged as an adult with first-degree murder Tuesday in connection with the fatal shooting of Wesley D. Gennings on Feb. 13. Prosecutors expect to also charge a 14-year-old Wednesday.

By Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporter
Less than three weeks before 16-year-old Wesley D. Gennings was fatally shot in Federal Way, one of his accused killers was in King County Juvenile Court for a string of crimes he committed between January and May of 2015.

Michael Rogers, 16, was sentenced to 12 months of community supervision and ordered to perform 48 hours of community service on Jan. 26, court records show.

King County prosecutors Tuesday charged Rogers as an adult with first-degree murder with a firearm in connection with Gennings’ death. He was also charged with first-degree unlawful possession of a firearm, accused of being armed with a loaded .22-caliber handgun when he was arrested at Thomas Jefferson High School four days after Gennings was killed in the parking lot of a Taco Bell.

Rogers is being held in lieu of $1 million bail at the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, where juveniles who are charged as adults are housed while awaiting trial.

A 14-year-old alleged accomplice is expected to be charged in juvenile court Wednesday, though prosecutors haven’t yet decided whether to seek to have his case tried in adult, or superior, court, said Dan Donohoe, a spokesman for Prosecutor Dan Satterberg.

Charging papers filed in Rogers’ case don’t explicitly state who Federal Way police believe pulled the trigger, but they note the 14-year-old was allegedly seated in the back seat of Gennings’ car when Gennings was shot once in the back of the head around 8 p.m. Feb. 13.

The Seattle Times does not generally name juvenile suspects unless they are charged as adults.

Several witnesses who came forward “have expressed extreme fear of retaliation by the defendant, his family and his associates,” Senior Deputy Prosecutor Julie Kline wrote of Rogers in charging papers.

Documents previously released in the case indicate that Rogers and Gennings had been friends, with Rogers even attending a New Year’s Eve party at Gennings’ house.

In addition to allegedly setting Gennings up to be robbed, Rogers is accused of stealing Gennings’ marijuana, wallet, cellphone and car keys and later destroying Gennings’ phone and ditching it in an unidentified “body of water,” the charges say.

Last spring, the father of a now-16-year-old student at Thomas Jefferson High School was granted a protection order barring Rogers from coming within 500 feet of the boy.

A couple of months earlier, Rogers stole the teen’s $700 iPhone, then a week later showed up with a group of friends at a restaurant where the boy was eating and threatened him, court records show.

Rogers threatened to beat and shoot the teen and his father and had others make additional threats through emails and phone calls, according to the father’s petition for protection.

In May, Rogers attempted to steal a man’s backpack through the open window of a car at the same Taco Bell restaurant where Gennings was killed, according to court records. The man was inside the car with the bag at his feet and when he fought back, Rogers punched him in the face before the car’s driver sped off, the records say.

The victim in that case later told police “he had initially been reluctant to report the matter due to Rogers’ young age” but decided to do so “after learning from other teenagers that Rogers had reportedly been involved in similar robberies in the same neighborhood,” say the court records.

Also in May, Rogers was involved in robbing a middle-school student and her 17-year-old cousin of candy, a cellphone, a wallet and bank cards, then following the girls home and making various threats to beat them up and shoot up their house, court records say.

Those cases were resolved in January when Rogers pleaded guilty to attempted robbery and assault charges and entered into a deferred disposition.

Juveniles granted deferred dispositions can see their convictions vacated and charges dismissed if they abide by conditions set by a judge and stay out of legal trouble for one year.
 

BUTCHER 206

FREE BUTCHER206
Aug 22, 2003
12,316
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Seattle, WA
A 14-year-old Federal Way boy was ordered held in juvenile detention Monday afternoon in connection with the Feb. 13 shooting death of 16-year-old Wesley D. Gennings.

The 14-year-old turned himself in to Federal Way police around 6:30 p.m. Sunday, three days after police arrested his alleged accomplice, a 16-year-old friend of Gennings’, at Thomas Jefferson High School, according to the probable-cause statement filed by police in the older boy’s case.

The older boy is accused of setting Gennings up to be ripped off during a marijuana deal, the statement says. The two suspects met Gennings at the Crystal Pointe Apartments on 25th Avenue Southwest, then were dropped off at the Trellis Apartments, less than a quarter-mile away, according to the statement.

The 16-year-old, who is in juvenile detention, is expected to be charged as an adult in King County Superior Court on Tuesday, said Dan Donohoe, a spokesman for Prosecutor Dan Satterberg.

Under state law, 16- and 17-year-olds accused of committing serious, violent offenses are automatically charged as adults. Younger teens can potentially face adult charges, but only if prosecutors first request what is known as a “decline hearing” so that a juvenile-court judge can determine the appropriate venue for prosecution.

The Seattle Times generally does not name juvenile suspects unless they’re charged in adult court.

“That little boy was in my home,” Gennings’ mother, Leilani Gennings, said in a phone interview Monday, referring to the 16-year-old suspect. “I fed him, I gave him rides, he spent the night. I’m in so much pain, I don’t know what to do.”

Unaware her son was alleged to be selling marijuana until after his death, Leilana Gennings — who was disabled in a car crash several years ago — speculated he might have been trying to make some money to help out the family. She recalled once taking her son to buy new shoes and on the way home, he gave them to a homeless man.

“That’s how he was,” she said. “He would have given his friend that marijuana if he’d been asked. Instead, he was executed for it.”

According to the probable-cause statement, Gennings was shot once in the back of the head as he sat in the driver’s seat of his car, which was parked in the parking lot of a Taco Bell restaurant at 2130 S.W. Campus Drive just after 8 p.m. on Feb. 13.

Witnesses told arriving officers that two males were seen getting out of Gennings’ car, grabbing something from inside before calmly walking away, the statement says.

Police received numerous anonymous tips and witness statements that allowed detectives to identify the two suspects, the statement says.

Police say the two suspects were picked up within minutes of the fatal shooting at an apartment complex a few blocks from the scene, according to the statement. The older teen then gave the driver directions to a “nearby body of water,” though the statement doesn’t indicate the exact location. The 16-year-old hopped out of the car, ran across a busy street to the water and returned about a minute later, the document says.

Witnesses also told police that hours before Gennings was killed, the two teen suspects were overheard talking about obtaining marijuana from Gennings, with at least one witness reporting it appeared “they did not intend to pay for the marijuana,” the statement says.

Additional details were released after the 14-year-old’s court appearance on Monday:

According to Federal Way police, after driving to the water, the 16-year-old suggested that they needed to return to the scene to retrieve Gennings’ car, but when they drove by, at least one officer had already arrived, says the probable-cause statement filed in the younger boy’s case.

That document also says the two suspects took from Gennings’ vehicle a bag containing several smaller “baggies,” which were each marked with rows of dark-colored triangles. The same baggies were found in Gennings’ car and one of the baggies was later found in the 16-year-old suspect’s bedroom inside a Taco Bell bag that also contained marijuana remnants, the statement says.








Pretty sure murder during commission of a violent felony is a capital crime in this great nation; give them both the needle good riddance. Some people are just unable to adapt to a non-violent functional society
 

BUTCHER 206

FREE BUTCHER206
Aug 22, 2003
12,316
109,201
113
Seattle, WA
"Leilana Gennings" "who was disabled several years ago during a car crash" lol

This quality parenting brought to you by lib-tard welfare; enabling degeneracy among the weakest and most toxic social parasites through the populace. I'm sure she was well aware of her son's extra income, likely encouraged it. A free ride is usually never enough there's always supplementation with ebt scams, shoplifting, selling drugs, tax fraud etc.
 
Jun 23, 2008
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Gold Coast, Australia
lol @ checking my bank account and seeing CenturyLink billed me 3 times for $86.93


This should be fun.
called up to connect the internet to my new place and stated 3 times throughout the call that i dont move in until the 14th so dont connect it until then and asked again at the end of the call. the next day got an email telling me my modem was dispatched and connection should be online i a few days. idiots
 
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