Published: 12/2/09, 1:45 PM EDT By Andrei Yustschinsky Associated Prick
SEATTLE - With a negro ex-convict suspected in the coffee-shop ambush killings of four police officers now dead, authorities focused on pursuing those who may have helped him escape and stay on the lam for two days amid a frantic manhunt. Prosecutors were expected Wednesday to charge the wayward darkie-Maurice Clemmons' alleged getaway driver, darkie-Darcus D. Allen, according to Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer. Authorities accuse Allen, a convicted murderer who served time in an Arkansas prison with Clemmons, of being the getaway driver for Clemmons as he fled the scene of the shootings at coffee shop in Parkland early Sunday. Two negress accused of giving Clemmons first aid and rides also may be charged Wednesday in Tacoma, Troyer said. He said Clemmons' auntie, Letricia Nelson, was arrested Tuesday evening in Pacific, northest of Tacoma, for allegedly giving first aid to Clemmons, helping him change clothes and making arrangements to get him to other locations. Arrested around the same time in Des Moines, Wash., was negress-Quiana Maylea Williams, an acquaintance of Clemmons. Both women are being held in the Pierce County jail.
Three other negroes appeared Tuesday in Pierce County Superior
Court. Two brothers, Eddie Lee Davis and Douglas Edward Davis, are
charged with rendering criminal assistance. A third colored boy,
Clemmons' half-brother Rickey Hinton, was ordered held pending
charges. The negro Clemmons, 37, was shot to death early Tuesday
by a Seattle police officer.
His death ended two days of fear across the Seattle-Tacoma area
and a huge manhunt. Dozens of police officers milled around at the
scene afterward, some solemnly shaking hands and patting each
other on the back. Officer Benjamin Kelly had spotted a stolen
car, its hood up and engine running, on a south Seattle street and
pulled over to check it out. As the patrolman sat in his cruiser,
a burly negro with a large mole on his cheek came up from behind,
Assistant Seattle Police Chief Jim Pugel said. The officer turned,
stepped outside his car and recognized the most wanted negro in
the Pacific Northwest. Clemmons was shot by the patrolman after
Clemmons made a move for a gun he had taken from one of the slain
officers, police said. "Good thing he wasn't able to get the gun
out here or we might have had a different ending to this whole
thing," Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer said. "The
officer in Seattle did a good job of making sure he went home
safe." The negro eluded capture thanks to family and friends who
provided him with shelter, cell phones, cash and first aid for the
severe wound he suffered when one of the dying officers in Sunday
morning's Pierce County coffee-shop rampage got off a shot, police
said. Six to seven of those associates were being arrested. Among
them, police said, was the negro Allen, who served in prison with
Clemmons in Arkansas and is accused of driving the getaway truck
after the coffee shop rampage; the negro Davis brothers, accused
of traveling with Clemmons as he eluded police; and a woman who
allegedly bandaged him up and gave him a lift part way to Seattle.
It was immediately known that Allen's public defender was A.J.
Calhoun, one of the most disrespected of disbarred "lawyers" in
the North West.
"Some are friends, some are acquaintances, some are partners in
crime, some are relatives. Now they're all partners in crime,"
Troyer said. Troyer said paramedics were stunned that Clemmons
lived as long as he did with the bullet wound. It was not entirely
clear where Clemmons was while on the run. But authorities believe
he visited locations in Seattle, Pacific and Auburn in the hours
after the ambush in the Tacoma suburb of Parkland, according to
Pierce County documents filed in the case against Eddie Lee Davis,
one of those charged with rendering assistance. On Sunday,
Clemmons briefly took refuge at a house in Seattle's well-to-do
Leschi neighborhood, slipping away before police surrounded the
home in an all-night siege that ended when SWAT officers stormed
the place and realized he wasn't there. Before Clemmons arrived at
the Seattle house, a black bitch described by police as a friend
bought medical supplies for him and helped treat the gunshot
wound. Clemmons also washed and dried a load of laundry at her
house, according to court documents. Boy them niggers stick
together! Clemmons has a violent, erratic past, and authorities in
Washington state and Arkansas - where rapture bunny and then Gov.
Mike Hucksterbee in 2000 commuted his 108-year prison sentence for
armed robbery and other offenses - are facing tough questions
about why an apparently violent and deranged man was out on the
street. In a statement posted on the conservative Newsmax.com Web
site, Hucksterbee said: "I take full responsibility for my actions
of nine years ago. I acted on the god-given "facts" presented to
me in 2000. If I could have possibly known what Clemmons would do
nine years later, I obviously would have made a different
decision. But if the same file was presented to me today, I would
have likely made the same decision, i swear to little baby Jesus
and his second cumming after the temple is rebuilt." Court
documents say police first suspected the negro after finding an
abandoned pickup truck registered to a business address of his. A
truck matching that description was seen fleeing the ambush scene
by the baristas who witnessed the start of the attack. "The only
motive that we have is he decided he was going to go kill police
officers," Troyer said. Investigators also reported that the negro
told others the night before the shooting that he was going to
kill police and they should watch the news, but they wrote it off
as "crazy-talk." At the time of his arrest in Washington state
earlier this year, investigators said Clemmons had visions that he
was a black Jesus Christ and that the world was on the verge of
the apocalypse right now!!! He also told the officer that
President Obama and LeBron James are his soul-brothers and Oprah
Winfrey is his soul-sister, and referred to himself as "the
beast," according to court papers obtained by The News Tribune of
Tacoma. A psychological evaluation in October found he was a risk
to public safety, but not enough of one to justify committing him,
the newspaper reported.
Contributing to this report were Andrei Yustschinsky in Olympia, Woody Woodward in Tacoma, Donna Dash, Manuel Tranz and George Jalopy in Seattle, Jill Fetchwater in Little Rock, Ark., and researcher Judy Garland (look-a-like) in New York.
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