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Month: August 2021

Emett

 

Emmet

 

It seems like these things come in bunches.  It seems all I write lately are memorials.

In early 1980, Steve Sparby and I walked in the front door of the Georgetown Precinct of the Seattle Police Department.  We were in the police academy together and were given our permanent assignments after graduation and field training—Georgetown, 3rd Watch, (8 PM to 4 AM) working Robert Sector—Rainier Valley.

The Valley was a hotspot in the city, with high crime rates, including many violent crimes.  The Twenty-one-year old cop in me was thrilled.  I wanted to go where the action is.  Steve was seven or so years older, but he was also happy with the assignment.

As we walked into the front door, the front desk officer leered at us from his perch.

“Can I help you?” he asked, the scowl on his face a permanent fixture.

We flashed out new shiny badges.

“We start here tonight.”

He waved us through.  We made our way to the stairs in the decrepit old precinct, the inside décor was early Barney Miller, to the locker room. After changing into our spotless and well-pressed uniforms, (they were actually three months old since we’d worn them in our Field Training assignments, but we kept them immaculate as was drummed into us in the police academy–that wouldn’t last–we went to the roll-call room.  No one else was in the room when we sat down, ten minutes before it was scheduled to begin.

About a minute before the appointed time, the room filled with other officers, all of them a lot older and more experienced.

A moment later, a uniformed sergeant walked into the room and stood behind the podium.  He was a big, burly black man, reminding me of the quintessential supervisor on TV cop shows and movies. His name was Emett Kelsie.

He called out names, and when people answered, gave car assignments.

“James,” he said.  A senior officer with curly hair and glasses answered, “here.”

“Steiger,”

“Here,” I answered.

“3-Robert-3”

Sparby was paired with a senior officer as well.

The sergeant addressed the room.

“We have two new officers in the squad starting tonight.  Cloyd Steiger and Steve Sparby.”

I expected long looks and sneers at a couple of boots, but everyone was friendly, always happy to have help.

“Steiger and Sparby,” Sergeant Kelsie said. “I’d like to see you in my office before you go out on the street.”

Oh shit, I thought.  What’s this about?

When roll-call broke up, everyone filed downstairs to the main floor of the precinct.  The sergeant’s office was at the bottom of the stairs.

Steve and I went in.

“Have a seat,” sergeant Kelsie said, pointing to two chairs in front of his desk.

We sat.

“I just want to let you know what’s expected of you,” he said.  “Just because you’ve got those shiny new badges and a title that says Police Officer, you won’t be considered real cops to the other guys until you prove yourself worthy.  That means when the shit hits the fan, you’re running in, not running out.  When someone says they need help (a word only used on the police radio for serious trouble), your asses better be there.

“Now go out on the street.”

We both nodded and left his office, heading out to our patrol cars.

It was only a couple of weeks before “the shit hit the fan.”

After it did, Kelsie called us in again.

“You guys did good,” he said.  “You’ve proved yourself.”

I worked for Emett for another year.  During that time, he gave me excellent advice.

“If you don’t want to be a patrol officer in this station the rest of your career, you have to get noticed.  Do things, so people associate your name with good work.”

Emett left the precinct as was eventually promoted to lieutenant.

I worked the East Precinct a couple of years later, still on 3rd Watch, when Emett became the Watch Commander.  I was glad to be working for him again, though he supervised the entire Watch, not just a squad like sergeants do.

A couple of years later, I walked up to him.

“It was good working for you again,” I said.

“Are you going somewhere?” he asked.

“I assumed you knew,” I said.  “As of Monday, I’m a detective.

A big smile crossed his face.

“Well, congratulations.”

I did a couple of years as a precinct detective, two years in Sex Crimes, and then was assigned to Homicide.  I’d been there a couple of years when Emett became the lieutenant in the Gang Unit.

I ran into him downtown one day.  I hadn’t seen him in a while.

“There he is!” he said and shook my hand.  “I was talking to (a homicide supervisor) and asked who the up and coming star in that unit was.  He said it was you.”

I was taken aback.

A few years later, Emett came to Homicide as the lieutenant.  We spent a lot more time together, mostly in the middle of the night at a murder scene.

He always gave me a hard time about living in the suburbs.  Every time there was a violent crime anywhere near (or not near) my house, he’d say, “See what I mean?”

“Emett,” I said.  “You live in Rainer Valley!”

I was working the night shift in Homicide one weekend with my partner, Greg Mixsell.  The Chief Dispatcher came over the radio and asked us to call him on the phone. When I called, he told me there was a homicide scene in Rainier Valley and gave me the address. I called Emett on the phone.

“What’s up?” he asked.

“Look out your back window,” I said.  “What do you see?”

“I see police lights,” he said. “What’s going on?”

“It’s a murder,” I said.  “Man, that never happens in my neighborhood.”

Later I was working a notorious high-profile murder—one that the mayor got on television about and said we would spare no expense to solve.

I walked into Emett’s office.

“John, [Nordlund] and I need to go to Saipan.”

He stared at me a moment and then said, “Where the hell is Saipan.”

“It’s an island in the Pacific Ocean, about ten thousand miles from here.”

He stared again.

“When do you need to go?

“Tomorrow.”

Another long stare and then, “Okay.”

The next morning we were on a plane.

Not long after, Emett retired. I didn’t see him after that, though we were Facebook friends and he would send me jokes all the time.

A few months ago, the Facebook God’s told me it was his birthday.  I intended to send him a note but thought I hadn’t talked to him in a few years.

I called him.

“Hello,” he said.

“Happy Birthday, old man.”

Long pause.

“Who is this?”

“It’s Cloyd,” I said—I’m a one-name person, like Cher and Madonna.

I heard his familiar big belly laugh.

“How are you doing, man?”

We spoke for an hour.  It was great to catch up.

I’m really glad I made that call.

I heard this morning that Emett died.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2 Comments

Alki

In the summer of 2001, Mike Ciesynski and I were partners.  We were called to the scene of a body found on the side of the road in a wooded area, up the hill from Salty’s on Alki, a restaurant on the waterfront. That area of Seattle is across Elliot Bay from downtown and offers million-dollar views of the Seattle skyline. It’s definitely not the slums.

The victim, a Hispanic male in his twenties, was shot once in the head.

An anonymous call came into 911 reporting the body.  It came from a payphone at a Safeway store at the top of the hill.

A couple of days after we were at the scene, I got an anonymous call.  He saw one of the victim’s friends at three in the morning the night of the shooting at one of those self-service car washes, where you put quarters in the machine, and a pressure sprayer operates until the time runs out.  I told Mike about the call.

“That proves nothing,” Mike said. “Just because he washed his car at three in the morning.”

“He was spraying the inside of the car.”

“Oh,” Mike replied.

The guy we were looking for worked for a fish processing company at Fisherman’s Terminal, where the Alaska commercial fishing boats are based, including many featured on The Deadliest Catch.  Mike and I drove there and talked to the supervisor.

“We need to talk to Jose.”

He called Jose to the office.  When Jose came in, we introduced ourselves, showing him our badges.  He had that deer in the headlight stare.

This should be tough, I thought to myself.

“Jose, what do you know about Fernando’s death?”

“Nothing,” he said.

“Do you have a car here?”

“Yes. It’s in the parking lot.”

“Do you mind if we go have a look at it?”

“Okay.”

He led us to his car. I opened the driver’s door.  I didn’t see anything. I walked around to the passenger side and opened the back door.  There was a hunk of human brain between the door and the back seat.

I looked at the hunk of the brain and then at Jose’s ashen face. “Luuuuccccyy,” I said. “You’ve got some ‘splainin’ to do!”

 

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KT

 

KT

 

I was at the scene of a homicide in early 1998.  The body’s feet and hands were bound, a gag through the mouth.  The body was completely skeletonized.

When we have skeletonized remains at a scene, we always ask for Kathy Taylor.  KT, as we call her.  At that time, she was a Ph.D. Candidate in Forensic Anthropology but would later attain her doctorate. After officially becoming the Forensic Anthropologist for King County, she contracted with the rest of the state and worked bones cases everywhere.

At this scene–we didn’t know then it was a victim of a serial murderer–KT was on her knees in front of the body.  There was a cavity under the torso, and she put her hands under there to feel around.  She pulled them out and a moment later reach under again.   She did this several times.  Finally, the last time she pulled out her hand, a huge Norwegian rat ran out of the cavity.  I was standing next to her along with other detectives.  It ran across my feet as well as those of several others.  KT screamed and jumped back.

I laughed so hard I thought I would pee my pants.

“If that thing had bitten you,” I said to her, “you’d be getting shots for the next several weeks.”

Sergeant Don Cameron took her hand and made a point of counting all the fingers to make sure they were still there.

I worked with KT many times over the years.  When she had a case with an outside agency she thought was screwing it up, she’d call me.

“Cloyd!  Can you call and speak to these people?”

Kathy was an expert in buried remains and not only processed them but also taught detectives all over how to identify them,  secure them, and mostly what not to do at them.

She worked on many searches for bodies with me and many others.  She was still trying to identify the remains of victims from Ted Bundy and Green River cases.

She was passionate about unidentified remains and worked hard to get them identified.

She was never married but became a foster parent, mostly of children from neglectful or abusive families.  She was telling me about all the kids she’d fostered over the years.

“It takes a special kind of person to take in kids that you know will eventually leave,” I told her.

She was taken aback.

“Thanks,” she said.

One little boy touched her heart.  So much so, she ended up adopting him. He was her pride and joy. She would tell stories about him, her face beaming with pride.  When she got called to scenes, she’d say, “I have to drop him at my mom’s house before I can come.”

A couple of years ago, Kathy was found unconscious at her home.  She was hypoxic; doctors didn’t know how long she had been deprived of oxygen.  She was in a coma. We all feared the worst.

Miraculously, she came out of that, her mind entirely intact.  While treating her, they discovered cancer unrelated to her collapse.  She took the challenge head-on.  Mostly she missed work and wanted to get back.

I spoke to her about that when she was home.

“I’m afraid they’ll replace me,” she said.

“Kathy, you’re irreplaceable.  Not only that but [Dr. Richard Harruff, the Chief Medical Examiner in King County and a huge fan] would never do that.”

Eventually, she was able to work from home and then split time between home and the office.  She was thrilled.

A couple of days ago, I only found out after sending her an email and getting no response, which is very unusual, that she was back in the hospital. I heard today that she died overnight.

A tremendous loss to everyone who used her services, but more so, to everyone who loved her.

 

 

 

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