Sunday, April 16, 2017

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Homeless man sues Seattle over impound of truck

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In 2012, Regional Parking who has parking contracts approved all over Walnut Creek towed my truck from the parking garage at Broadway Pointe.  When I called B&D Towing they said there was no guitars, amps and gear but stated I had $3,000 in Parking Tickets.  One set of tickets is linked to my keys being stolen but those tickets were supposed to be waived by Cheif Bryden and City Manager Nordoff who resigned on December 31st, 2016.  The facts of why he resigned a closely guarded City of Walnut Creek secret 

June 14th, 2014 The Deadly Claims Gambit

To live another day as an intimidated witness with certain police officers

In another round with Walnut Creek I filed claims only to have my nephews murdered before the Statute expired on those claims.  Then somehow my friend Mike Sevenau was burned alive on Stone Valley Road. 

Hail the City of Walnut Creek and their powerful resources linked to developers like MaceRich, Plaza Escaula and Broadway Pointe linked the legacy of the Lesher Foundation.  What Lesher wants Lesher gets but we can’t ask Margaret Lesher who drowned in 1997 but sadly after the death of Dean Lesher’s she began dating.  One friend was former City Attorney John A. Nejedly whose son was found dead in New Orleans.  Via my Nejedly and Lesher connections page you’ll find additional insight about the tragic deaths near the Contra Costa Power Structure. 


SEATTLE (AP) -- A homeless man has filed a lawsuit against Seattle accusing police officers of violating his rights for impounding the vehicle he was living in.

The Seattle Times (http://bit.ly/2ogeXiq ) reports that police towed 57-year-old Steven Long's pickup in October. Long had been living in his 2000 GMC truck for three months after it broke down in a city parking lot. He was without his truck for 22 days.

Long's attorneys argue that Washington's homestead provision can be applied to protect nontraditional housing, which includes vehicles and tents. They want the citation tossed and towing fees returned to Long.

Columbia Legal Services attorney Yurij Rudensky says a favorable ruling would force the city to review its policies surrounding impounding vehicles that double as a primary residence for homeless people.

According to Assistant City Attorney Michael Ryan, police officers gave Long extended time to move his truck.

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Information from: The Seattle Times, http://www.seattletimes.com

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