No Respect/West Seattle/Sat Nov 11/11:36 pm: "At that time," writes Officer Cook of the Seattle Police Department, "I looked to my right and observed a subject slumped over the wheel of a vehicle. At that time, I got out of the car and noticed that the vehicle was running. I recognized the victim, and knocked on her window to wake her up. I knocked several times, but I got no response. At that time, I observed a witness sitting in a car in front of the victim. I went to his car and asked him if he knew the victim. He stated, 'Yes.' I then asked him if he knew if she was okay. He stated, 'Yeah, she's just really tired.' I tried to wake the victim up again. I knocked very loudly on the window and the door, but she wouldn't move. I could see that she was breathing, but I couldn't get a response. I began shouting at her, but she didn't respond. I advised radio and had the SFD [Seattle Fire Department] respond." After approximately 10 minutes of banging on her window and shouting her name, the SFD decided to break the window. "When we broke the window," Officer Cook continued, "she still did not wake up. Once we gained entry, I had to shake her for approximately two to three minutes before she opened her eyes. SFD examined the victim, and found that she was fine. The victim then became hostile and belligerent toward us. I explained to her why we broke the window, but she refused to accept the reason. I told her that we had a duty to check her welfare, but she stated, 'You don't know me. I sleep hard!' The experience of dealing with the [awake] victim was not [as] pleasant [as dealing with the sleeping one]. She [was] rude and had no respect for authority."

South Carolina Tonight/West Seattle/Mon Nov 13/10:50 pm: The complainant, Aviva, called the cops because she wished an unwanted man removed from her property. When the cops arrived, the unwanted man was long gone. Aviva explained that she met the man a week ago, and now wanted him out of her life. He's a right nuisance! Later, the cops called the suspect, and told him that he was not welcome at Aviva's home anymore. Hurt, the suspect stated that he was on his way home to South Carolina tonight, and would never bother Aviva again.

Dead Man on the Ferry/The Sea/Tues Nov 14/11:53 am: A man was on the ferry Tacoma en route to Seattle when he exited his vehicle and went to the restroom. When he didn't return to the car after some time, his car companion went to look for him and found him on the bathroom floor, with no pulse in his wrists or breath on his lips. The ferry personnel attempted to shock him back to life with a portable defibrillator, but his brain, heart, and nervous system rejected the electric plea. When the Tacoma docked in Seattle, SFD personnel boarded the ferry and pronounced the man dead at 11:45 am. Because the death occurred on the ferry, the Washington State Patrol, who were notified of the incident, refused to respond to the call (anything that happened on the water was out of their jurisdiction). The Seattle Police Department, however, who deal with both land and water incidents, arrived at the ferry and filed a report.

A Blow Job/University District/Tues Nov 14/ 12:57 pm: In this report, the victim stated that on September 25, the suspect came to his place of business and took a glass blower. The victim also stated that the suspect called him and said he took the glass blower and was going to keep it. The victim then admitted that the suspect was upset with him because he had not finished some glass pieces that the suspect had ordered. The officer who wrote this report felt the victim "was not forthcoming with [the real] information."