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Tukwila Police on the hunt for 'Jean Lady' in fight against retail theft

Tukwila Police on the hunt for 'Jean Lady' in fight against retail theft

Yahoo29-01-2025

Tukwila Police wants help in finding a person suspected of retail theft.
On Jan. 21, around 7:30 p.m., a suspect entered an Old Navy store in Tukwila and left with a handful of jeans.
'As we've previously stated, if you're here to commit Organized Retail Crime (ORC) related thefts, you are going to be put on blast, you will be identified and you will be booked into jail,' Tukwila PD posted on Facebook. 'This photo is exactly what ORC looks like. Thieves that do not care or even try to conceal what they're doing.'
The suspect is wanted on suspicion of second-degree theft.
Police said the charges will be filed when they catch the thief.
'We are also working with our law enforcement partners to determine other locations that she likely has been stealing from in other jurisdictions.'
Police ask anyone with information or who recognizes the suspect to email Officer Gentile at c.gentile@tukwilawa.gov, call the non-emergency number at (206) 241-2121 or send a private message on social media.
Tukwila Police is not offering a reward but said, 'The reward is her being held accountable and hopefully deterring others who since COVID started have felt that they can commit crimes with reckless abandon and no consequences.'

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Lawmakers wanted to replace the penitentiary, but they couldn't agree on where to put the prison and how big it should be. A task force of state lawmakers assembled by Republican Gov. Larry Rhoden is expected to decide that in a plan for prison facilities this July. Many lawmakers have questioned the proposed cost, but few have called for criminal justice changes that would make such a large prison unnecessary. 'One thing I'm trying to do as the chairman of this task force is keep us very focused on our mission,' said Lieutenant Gov. Tony Venhuizen. 'There are people who want to talk about policies in the prisons or the administration or the criminal justice system more broadly, and that would be a much larger project than the fairly narrow scope that we have.' South Dakota's incarceration rate of 370 per 100,000 people is an outlier in the Upper Midwest. 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Former penitentiary warden Darin Young said the state needs to upgrade its prisons, but he also thinks it should spend up to $300 million on addiction and mental illness treatment. 'Until we fix the reasons why people come to prison and address that issue, the numbers are not going to stop,' he said. Without policy changes, the new prisons are sure to fill up, criminal justice experts agreed. 'We might be good for a few years, now that we've got more capacity, but in a couple years it'll be full again,' Kolbeck said. 'Under our policies, you're going to reach capacity again soon.'

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