Last month I described how legislative inaction after the “Blake Decision” has been tragically killing more King County residents every day, as the rate of fentanyl overdoses grows exponentially, and drug trafficking has become harder to control. This week Renton Police Chief Jon Schuldt made an appeal to Renton residents to encourage our legislators to take action on this life-and-death issue.
Below is Chief Schuldt’s statement:
A police department’s purpose is to ensure the safety and health of our community. Seems like an easy enough objective, but the reality is that we are struggling, not as a police department, but as a community to reach this goal. Our opposition: current legislation and the negative effect it has had on our ability to disrupt the cycle of drug addiction.
To provide background, in February 2021, Washington’s existing felony drug possession statute was ruled unconstitutional by a Washington State Supreme Court Decision: State v. Blake – commonly referred to as the ‘Blake Decision’. In response, Senate Bill (SB) 5476 was created and became effective on July 1, 2021. This bill established specific criteria for officers to be able to charge a person in possession of drugs for personal use. This was an extensive modification of the existing statute.
SB 5476 reduced drug possession from a felony to a misdemeanor crime and added a requirement that an officer must have proof that the person was knowingly in possession of drugs. Under this law, officers are also required to offer a referral to treatment if they come across a person in possession of drugs. In fact, it takes being referred to treatment twice. If they are found to be knowingly in possession a third time, that person can be cited or booked in jail (and there is no statewide system in place to track these referrals between jurisdictions). The intent of this bill, however compassionate, from a practical standpoint has legalized narcotic possession due to the complexities of enforcement.
What we see in the day-to-day application of this practice is that drug users have become emboldened as they experience first-hand contacts with officers and understand there are only very minimal actions officers can take. The intention of the law is not being met through the current process. In fact, I believe it has worsened the narcotic crisis in our State. It is a social experiment that has failed those suffering from substance use disorder. The expectation that someone suffering in the thralls of addiction will make the rational choice to seek treatment is illogical. In line with the provisions of the law we implemented emphasis patrols providing outreach to those experiencing homelessness and drug addiction in the downtown core. Out of 350 people contacted by officers, fewer than 10 agreed to a referral, and it is unknown how many went on to meet with a provider. To show the prevalence of what law enforcement is facing; last month in a single seizure our detectives recovered: 1.3 pounds of heroin, 13.5 pounds of methamphetamine, 41 pounds of cocaine, 31,600 fentanyl pills, 85 grams of fentanyl powder and 4 guns. Just last week our patrol officers located 293 grams of methamphetamine, 18 grams of cocaine, 139 grams of heroin, 25 grams of fentanyl powder, 891 fentanyl pills, 6.17 grams of amphetamine and $360,000, from a single traffic stop. We continue to combat the dealers, being more creative in our resolve, but as long as the demand goes unchecked, we will always be fighting an uphill battle. There is no doubt that the work of the officers in these cases saved the lives of community members.
Never lost in this conversation should be the impact that this health crisis is having on the community at large. The infringements of rights, the decreasing quality of life and expense that is burdened by way of associated crimes by those suspects suffering addiction. This unintended consequence has put an unfair weight the community has had to shoulder due to current restrictions in the law.
As the 2023 Legislator is in session, it is vital that our community be aware as new laws are created, and others are amended. We share the State goal to direct people to treatment over incarceration; however, there is a need to retool and strengthen the current law to be more effective in the intervention of drug offenses, and getting support, treatment, and services for those who need them. Removing the voluntary nature of referrals and enabling law enforcement to intervene and take enforcement action will help restore accountability to the system and the much-needed assistance that our community members that are suffering from addiction deserve. Currently being debated in the House of Representative is Senate Bill 5536 (SB 5536); this bill restores those badly needed measures to ensure those suffering from substance use disorders have access to the resources they so badly need. Police are currently dealing with the symptoms; we need the tools to deal with the root cause. I believe that SB 5536 is the balanced, thoughtful, and effective legislation that will bring about positive change.
The Renton Police Department is committed to educating our community members. We encourage the community to seek information and engage your elected representatives with your questions, comments, or concerns. Now more than ever the decisions they make and the laws they pass will have significant impact for all of us.
But if we legalize drugs, the super-high people will flock to treatment on their own!
This message has been brought to you by people with poor observational skills.
Thank you, Randy for reporting on this. Our local ‘paper’ isn’t touching anything remotely worth talking about, and if we’re not careful, we’ll wind up like Seattle where nothing gets fixed.
I understand the sort of well-meaning reasoning behind letting everybody take as many drugs as they want, but it’s not working and it’s hurting our most vulnerable.
As I understand it, the chief is being a bit bold, as what he’s saying goes against what a few council members want.
From far-far-left-wing Winter Cashman’s letter about all this:
“Elected mayors from South King County, including Renton’s Mayor Armondo Pavone, signed onto a divisive letter condemning the criminal justice reforms for a rise a crime being seen. This month, several city councilmembers from these cities issued their own statement countering their mayors, supporting the reforms and demanding a data-driven approach to solving crime-related issues (including Renton’s councilmembers Ed Prince, Ryan McIrvin, and Carmen Rivera).”
My opinion:
There really is a split in Renton governance. Some want our city to function properly, and some like and tolerate all the destruction and misery around us. Carmen Rivera has stated that she wants to defund the police. I say we ‘defund’ her and her buddies on the city council.
There really is a split! People who want a functioning, diverse government, and people blinded by far-right conspiracy theories they support police brutality and a criminal justice system that isn’t working
We need to make sure that our City Council is supporting the interests of Renton residents and not those of other areas. The State (and King County) seem to be working to serve only the vocal and not paying attention to what is going on within, not just their boundaries but also forcing the Cities to follow in their footprints even if the laws are not supporting the majority.
I know that the annexation of the Benson Hill area had a high interest in the improved Police enforcement compared to King County. It’s sad that 2 of the Council members that have been mentioned previously in the comments of this blog are from the Benson Hill area.
We need to elect Council members who are interested in Renton and its public safety.