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HomeMy WebLinkAboutFinal Agenda Packet CITY OF RENTON AGENDA - City Council Regular Meeting 7:00 PM - Monday, August 11, 2025 Council Chambers, 7th Floor, City Hall – 1055 S. Grady Way Please note that this regular meeting of the Renton City Council is being offered as a hybrid meeting and can be attended in person at the Council Chambers, 7th floor of City Hall, 1055 S Grady Way, Renton, 98057 or remotely through Zoom. For those wishing to attend by Zoom: Please (1) click this link https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84938072917?pwd=TUNCcnppbjNjbjNRMWpZaXk2bjJnZz09 (or copy/paste the URL into a web browser) or (2) call-in to the Zoom meeting by dialing 253-215- 8782 and entering 849 3807 2917 Passcode 156708, or (3) call 425-430-6501 by 5 p.m. on the day of the meeting to request an invite with a link to the meeting. Registration for Audience Comment: Registration will be open at all times, but speakers must register by 5 p.m. on the day of a Council meeting in order to be called upon. Anyone who registers after 5 p.m. on the day of the Council meeting will not be called upon to speak and will be required to re-register for the next Council meeting if they wish to speak at that next meeting.  Request to Speak Registration Form: o Click the link or copy/paste the following URL into your browser: https://forms.rentonwa.gov/Forms/registertospeakform  You may also call 425-430-6501 or email counciladmin@rentonwa.gov to register. Please provide your full name, city of residence, email address and/or phone number, and topic in your message.  A sign-in sheet is also available for those who attend in person. Video on Demand: Please click the following link to stream Council meetings live as they occur, or to select previously recorded meetings: Renton Channel 21 Video on Demand 1. CALL TO ORDER AND PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE 2. ROLL CALL 3. SPECIAL PRESENTATION a) Association of Washington Cities Certificate of Municipal Leadership - Councilmember Carmen Rivera 4. ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT a) Administrative Report 5. AUDIENCE COMMENTS  All remarks must be addressed to the Council as a whole, if a response is requested please provide your name and address, including email address, to the City Clerk to allow for follow-up.  Speakers must sign-up prior to the Council meeting.  Each speaker is allowed three minutes.  When recognized, please state your name & city of residence for the record. NOTICE to all participants: Pursuant to state law, RCW 42.17A.555, campaigning for or against any ballot measure or candidate in City Hall and/or during any portion of the council meeting, including the audience comment portion of the meeting, is PROHIBITED. 6. CONSENT AGENDA The following items are distributed to Councilmembers in advance for study and review, and the recommended actions will be accepted in a single motion. Any item may be removed for further discussion if requested by a Councilmember. a) Approval of Council Meeting minutes of August 4, 2025. Council Concur b) AB - 3905 Community & Economic Development Department submits a petition for Release of Easement from Connor Homes at Maple Highlands, LLC, owner of King County Parcel No. 1463400021, and recommends adoption of a resolution setting a Public Hearing on September 8, 2025 to consider the matter. If the request is approved, an ordinance will be adopted releasing the easement. Refer to Utilities Committee; Set Public Hearing on 9/8/2025 c) AB - 3908 Executive Services Department recommends execution of a settlement agreement with Renton Hotel Investors, LLC, Onkaar Dhaliwal, and Dayabir Bath; execution of a settlement agreement with Safety National Casualty Corporation, execution of any related documents necessary to carry out the negotiated resolution and associated insurance coverage dispute for this matter; and approve the budget adjustment of an additional $600,000 for 2025. Council Concur d) AB - 3898 Executive Services Department recommends execution of an agreement with PCS Mobile/Route 1, in the amount of $115,077.68, for software migration services and associated hardware for the upgrade of license plate recognition units in parking enforcement vehicles. Refer to Finance Committee e) AB - 3904 Human Resources / Risk Management Department requests authorization to transfer Pharmacy Benefit Manager services from Costco Health Services (CHS) to MedImpact due to CHS exiting the pharmacy benefit market, at the cost of $108,322, and authorize execution of the agreement when it is ready; and approve additional appropriations in the amount of $50,000. Refer to Finance Committee f) AB - 3906 Municipal Court recommends execution of a one-year Interagency Agreement with the Administrative Office of the Courts, to accept $228,283 in funds to support expenses associated with the operation of the Renton Municipal Court. Refer to Finance Committee g) AB - 3907 Municipal Court recommends execution of an Interagency Agreement with the Administrative Office of the Courts to accept $5,000 in additional funds for the purpose of supporting the processing of cases impacted by the 2021 State v. Blake decision. Refer to Finance Committee h) AB - 3894 Public Works Utility Systems Division submits CAG-23-005, West Hill Booster Pump Station Improvements project, contractor Gary Harper Construction, Inc., and requests acceptance of the project and authorization to release the retainage bond 60 days after all required releases from the state are obtained and all liens have been legally cleared. Council Concur i) AB - 3897 Public Works Utility Systems Division reports bid opening on July 22, 2025, for the Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Project, Phase 4, and recommends awarding the contract to the lowest responsive and responsible bidder, Equity Builders, LLC, in the amount of $1,101,897. Council Concur 7. UNFINISHED BUSINESS Topics listed below were discussed in Council committees during the past week. Those topics marked with an asterisk (*) may include legislation. Committee reports on any topics may be held by the Chair if further review is necessary. a) Finance Committee: 1) Vouchers; 2) Agreement with Project Be Free for Alternative Response Services; 3) Interlocal Agreement (ILA) with the Renton School District for School Resource Officers; 4) New Lease Addendum with Amazing Grace Lutheran Church; 5) Memorandum of Understanding with the Washington State Opportunity Scholarship for Contribution to the Renton Promise Program; 6) Amendment #1 to CAG-25-097 with PND Engineers, for the Coulon Swim Beach Improvements Project; 7) Transfer of Fire Station 15 Property to the Renton Regional Fire Authority; 8) Local Agency Agreement with the Washington State Department of Transportation for the Oakesdale Avenue SW Pavement Preservation Project b) Planning & Development Committee: 1) 2025 Docket 20 Group A (D-239: Co-living & D- 240: Incentivizing Small Business) 8. LEGISLATION Resolutions: a) Resolution No. 4564: Interlocal Agreement for School Resource Officers with Renton School District b) Resolution No. 4565: Resolution setting Public Hearing to Consider Release of Easement 9. NEW BUSINESS (Includes Council Committee agenda topics; visit rentonwa.gov/cityclerk for more information.) 10. ADJOURNMENT COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE MEETING AGENDA (Preceding Council Meeting) 6:00 p.m. - 7th Floor - Conferencing Center Hearing assistance devices for use in the Council Chambers are available upon request to the City Clerk CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS ARE TELEVISED LIVE ON GOVERNMENT ACCESS CHANNEL 21 To view Council Meetings online, please visit rentonwa.gov/councilmeetings Councilmember Carmen Rivera City of Renton Presented: August 5, 2025 AG E N D A I T E M # 3 . a ) DATE: August 7, 2025 TO: James Alberson, Jr., Council President Members of the Renton City Council FROM: Armondo Pavone, Mayor Ed VanValey, Chief Administrative Officer SUBJECT: Administrative Report • Renton City Council meetings will be taking a summer break through September 1. Council meetings will resume Monday, September 8. • Information about preventative street maintenance, traffic impact projects, and road closures happening this week can be found at http://rentonwa.gov/traffic. All projects are weather permitting and unless otherwise noted, streets will always remain open.  Monday, August 11, 7:00am-4:00pm. Intermittent lane closure on N 8th St between Houser Way N and Park Ave N for crack sealing maintenance. Questions may be directed to Public Works Shops, 425-430-7400.  Monday, August 11 through Friday, August 15, 8:00am-3:00pm. Intermittent lane closure on NE 12th St from Union Ave NE to Pierce Pl NE for utility installation. Approved traffic control plans were issued for all work and will be followed. Questions may be directed to Casey Grant, 206-532-4380.  Monday, August 11 through Friday, August 15, 8:00am-3:00pm. Intermittent lane closure on Rainier Ave N between S 3rd St and Airport Way for construction work. Approved traffic control plans were issued for all work and will be followed. Questions may be directed to Joe Nerlfi, 425-757-9657.  Monday, August 11 through Friday, August 15, 8:00am-3:00pm. Intermittent lane closure at the intersection of NE Sunset Blvd and NE 12th Street for potholing. Approved traffic control plans were issued for all work and will be followed. Questions may be directed to Casey Grant, 206-532-438.  Monday, August 11 through Friday, August 15, 8:00am-3:00pm. Intermittent southbound lane closure on Union Ave NE south of 12th St for construction work. Approved traffic control plans were issued for all work and will be followed. Questions may be directed to Casey Grant, 206-532-4380. AGENDA ITEM #4. a) August 4, 2025 REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES CITY OF RENTON MINUTES - City Council Regular Meeting 7:00 PM - Monday, August 4, 2025 Council Chambers, 7th Floor, City Hall – 1055 S. Grady Way CALL TO ORDER AND PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE Mayor Pavone called the meeting of the Renton City Council to order at 7:00 PM and led the Pledge of Allegiance. ROLL CALL Councilmembers Present: James Alberson, Jr., Council President Carmen Rivera, Council Position No. 2 Valerie O'Halloran, Council Position No. 3 Ryan McIrvin, Council Position No. 4 Ed Prince, Council Position No. 5 Kim-Khánh Vǎn, Council Position No. 7 Councilmembers Absent: Ruth Pérez, Council Position No. 6 MOVED BY ALBERSON, SECONDED BY PRINCE, COUNCIL EXCUSE ABSENT COUNCILMEMBER PÉREZ. CARRIED. ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF PRESENT Armondo Pavone, Mayor Ed VanValey, Chief Administrative Officer Alex Tuttle, Senior Assistant City Attorney Jason Seth, City Clerk Maryjane Van Cleave, Parks & Recreation Department Administrator Manuel Cruz, Airport Director Young Yoon, IT Director Laura Pettit, Communications & Engagement Director Chief Jon Schuldt, Police Department Administrator Deputy Chief Jeffery Hardin, Police Department Attended Remotely: Judith Subia, Chief of Staff Ron Straka, Public Works Utility Systems Director AGENDA ITEM #6. a) August 4, 2025 REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES Georgia Ward-Collins, Administrative Secretary I ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT CAO Ed VanValey reviewed a written administrative report summarizing the City’s recent progress towards goals and work programs adopted as part of its business plan for 2025 and beyond. Items noted were: • Everything’s coming up fresh at the Renton Farmers Market. Stop by our new location on Williams Avenue South between South 2nd and South 3rd streets on Tuesdays from 3-7 p.m. for a bite to eat or pick up fresh vegetables, fabulous fruit, packaged treats, beautiful bouquets, and more. For more information visit https://rentonfarmersmarket.com. • Preventative street maintenance will continue to impact traffic and result in occasional street closures. AUDIENCE COMMENTS • Paul Quinn, Sammamish, spoke about a program called Smart Disposal that bills customers based on the weight of the items being disposed - not the size of the customer's cart. He encouraged city officials to pilot this program. CONSENT AGENDA The following items are distributed to Councilmembers in advance for study and review, and the recommended actions will be accepted in a single motion. Any item may be removed for further discussion if requested by a Councilmember. a) Approval of Council Meeting minutes of July 28, 2025. Council Concur. b) AB - 3870 Executive Services Department recommended execution of a Memorandum of Understanding with the Washington State Opportunity Scholarship (WSOS) and Renton Technical College (RTC) for the city's 2025 and 2026 contribution of $200,000 per year to the Renton Promise Program. Refer to Finance Committee. c) AB - 3895 Parks & Recreation Department recommended execution of Amendment #1 to CAG-25-097, agreement with PND Engineers, in the amount of $345,300 for additional design, permitting, community engagement, and bidding support for the Coulon Swim Beach Improvement project. Refer to Finance Committee. d) AB - 3903 Public Works Administration recommended rejecting all bids received and opened on May 14, 2025 for the Taxiway Alpha Rehabilitation and Associated Improvements Project and authorize staff to (1) revise the RFP and solicit new bids for the Taxiway Alpha Project, (2) administratively address any irregularities or protests that may arise out of the new bidding process, and (3) refer to the Finance Committee on September 8th the Award to the lowest responsive and responsible bidder for the revised Taxiway A Project. Council Concur to Reject All Bids; Refer to Finance Committee the Award of the Revised Taxiway A Project. e) AB - 3866 Public Works Facilities Division recommended approval of a one-year lease addendum with Amazing Grace Lutheran Church, for 20,677 square feet of space at the 200 Mill Building, expiring on June 30, 2026. Estimated annual lease revenue is $243,505. Refer to Finance Committee. AGENDA ITEM #6. a) August 4, 2025 REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES f) AB - 3899 Public Works Maintenance Services requested authorization to purchase eight (8) 2026 Ford F-250 4WD trucks from Bud Clary, in the amount of $428,761.02, utilizing Washington State contract #28423. Council Concur. g) AB - 3901 Public Works Maintenance Services requested authorization to purchase one (1) Toro Groundmaster 4000-D mower from Turf Star in the amount of $103,591 utilizing the Sourcewell contract #41637. The purchase price is $591 over the budgeted amount which will be covered by 501 fund balance. Council Concur. h) AB - 3900 Public Works Maintenance Services requested authorization to purchase of one (1) Terex LTM40 Bucket Truck from Terex Utilities in the amount of $272,485.12 utilizing Sourcewell contract #110421. Council Concur. i) AB - 3902 Public Works Transportation Systems Division recommended execution of the Local Agency Agreement and Prospectus with the Washington State Department of Transportation for the obligation of grant funding in the amount of $1,737,015, and all subsequent agreements necessary to accomplish construction of the Oakesdale Ave SW Pavement Preservation project. Refer to Finance Committee. j) AB - 3896 Public Works Utility Systems Division recommends execution of a quitclaim deed, easements and right-of-entry and use, along with all other documents necessary for the required transfer of Fire Station 15 to the Renton Regional Fire Authority (RRFA) per contract CAG-18-233 with the RRFA. Refer to Finance Committee. MOVED BY ALBERSON, SECONDED BY PRINCE, COUNCIL ADOPT THE CONSENT AGENDA AS PUBLISHED CARRIED. UNFINISHED BUSINESS Topics listed below were discussed in Council committees during the past week. Those topics marked with an asterisk (*) may include legislation. Committee reports on any topics may be held by the Chair if further review is necessary. a) Transportation Committee: Chair McIrvin presented a report recommending concurrence in the staff recommendation to approve Supplement No. 2 to CAG-20-003 with Sargent Engineers, Inc., in the amount of $224,790 for additional design services for Phase 3 of the Houser Way Bridge – Seismic Retrofit and Painting Project. MOVED BY MCIRVIN, SECONDED BY PRINCE, COUNCIL CONCUR IN THE COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION. CARRIED. b) Transportation Committee: Chair McIrvin presented a report recommending concurrence in the staff recommendation to approve Supplement No. 2 to CAG-20-004 with Sargent Engineers, Inc., in the amount of $224,790 for additional design services for Phase 3 of the Houser Way Bridge – Seismic Retrofit and Painting Project. MOVED BY MCIRVIN, SECONDED BY PRINCE, COUNCIL CONCUR IN THE COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION. CARRIED. AGENDA ITEM #6. a) August 4, 2025 REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES c) Utilities Committee: Chair Văn presented a report recommending concurrence in the staff recommendation to authorize the Mayor and City Clerk to execute the contract with RH2 Engineering, Inc. in the amount of $139,925 for services during construction for the Lift Station and Force Main Rehabilitation, Phase 4 project. MOVED BY VǍN, SECONDED BY RIVERA, COUNCIL CONCUR IN THE COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION. CARRIED. d) Utilities Committee: Chair Văn presented a report recommending concurrence in the staff recommendation to authorize the Mayor and City Clerk to execute the 2026-2035 interlocal agreements with all member jurisdictions of WRIA 8 and WRIA 9 to continue the implementation of the WRIA 8 Chinook Salmon Conservation Plan and WRIA 9 Salmon Habitat Plan. The Committee further recommends that the resolutions related to these agreements be presented for adoption at tonight’s council meeting. MOVED BY VǍN, SECONDED BY RIVERA, COUNCIL CONCUR IN THE COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION. CARRIED. LEGISLATION Resolutions: a) Resolution No. 4562: A resolution of the City of Renton, Washington, authorizing the Mayor and City Clerk to enter into an interlocal agreement with King County and Snohomish County, and the Cities of Bellevue, Bothell, Clyde Hill, Edmonds, Everett, Issaquah, Kenmore, Kent, Kirkland, Lake Forest Park, Maple Valley, Medina, Mercer Island, Mill Creek, Mountlake Terrace, Mukilteo, Newcastle, Redmond, Sammamish, Seattle, Shoreline, and Woodinville, and the Towns of Beaux Arts Village, Hunts Point, Woodway, and Yarrow Point regarding the Watershed Basins within the geographical planning area of Water Resource Inventory 8. MOVED BY VǍN, SECONDED BY RIVERA, COUNCIL ADOPT THE RESOLUTION AS READ. CARRIED. b) Resolution No. 4563: A resolution of the City of Renton, Washington, authorizing the Mayor and City Clerk to enter into an interlocal agreement with King County and the Cities of Algona, Auburn, Black Diamond, Burien, Covington, Des Moines, Enumclaw, Federal Way, Kent, Maple Valley, Normandy Park, Seatac, Seattle, Tacoma and Tukwila, regarding the Green River, Duwamish River and Central Puget Sound Watersheds within the geographical planning area of Water Resource Inventory 9. MOVED BY VǍN, SECONDED BY RIVERA, COUNCIL ADOPT THE RESOLUTION AS READ. CARRIED. NEW BUSINESS (Includes Council Committee agenda topics; visit rentonwa.gov/cityclerk for more information.) AGENDA ITEM #6. a) August 4, 2025 REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES ADJOURNMENT MOVED BY PRINCE, SECONDED BY ALBERSON, COUNCIL ADJOURN. CARRIED. TIME: 7:17 PM Jason A. Seth, MMC, City Clerk Jason Seth, Recorder 04 Aug 2025 AGENDA ITEM #6. a) Council Committee Meeting Calendar August 4, 2025 August 11, 2025 Monday 2:00 p.m. Community Services Committee, Chair O’Halloran Location: Council Conference Room/Videoconference 1. Parks Capital Projects Update 2. Emerging Issues in Parks & Recreation 3:00 p.m. Public Safety Committee, Chair Rivera Location: Council Conference Room/Videoconference 1. Crime Statistics and Crime Rates Update 2. 5th/6th Streets and Park Avenue Update 3. RRFA Briefing 4. Emerging Issues in Public Safety 4:00 p.m. Finance Committee, Chair Pérez Location: Council Conference Room/Videoconference 1. Agreement with Project Be Free for Alternative Response Services 2. Interlocal Agreement (ILA) with the Renton School District for School Resource Officers 3. New Lease Addendum with Amazing Grace Lutheran Church 4. Memorandum of Understanding with the Washington State Opportunity Scholarship for Contribution to the Renton Promise Program 5. Amendment #1 to CAG-25-097 with PND Engineers, for the Coulon Swim Beach Improvements Project 6. Transfer of Fire Station 15 Property to the Renton Regional Fire Authority 7. Local Agency Agreement with the Washington State Department of Transportation for the Oakesdale Avenue SW Pavement Preservation Project 8. Vouchers 9. Emerging Issues in Finance 5:00 p.m. Planning & Development Committee, Chair Prince Location: Council Conference Room/Videoconference 1. Comprehensive Plan – Transportation Element Work Plan 2. 2025 Docket 20 Group A • D-239: Co-living • D-240: Incentivizing Small Business 3. Emerging Issues in CED 6:00 p.m. Committee of the Whole, Chair Alberson Location: Conferencing Center 1. 2025 Community Survey Results 7:00 p.m. Council Meeting Location: Council Chambers/Videoconference AGENDA ITEM #6. a) AB - 3905 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Ordinance Declaring Sanitary Sewer Easement Surplus and Authorizing its Release, and Resolution Setting Public Hearing RECOMMENDED ACTION: Refer to Utilities Committee DEPARTMENT: Community & Economic Development Department STAFF CONTACT: Amanda Free, Economic Development Director EXT.: x7369 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: N/A SUMMARY OF ACTION: As part of the Maple Highlands (Chambers) plat project, current property owner of King County Parcel No. 1463400021, Connor Homes at Maple Highlands, LLC, has filed a petition requesting release of the original sewer easement granted by former owner Ruth Bill, recorded under King County Recording No. 20171208000184. The original sewer easement will need to be released to allow for the sewer to be relocated for the overall development of the property. Upon recording of the plat, a new sanitary sewer easement will be dedicated to the City at no cost, for the operation and maintenance of the sanitary sewer within the subject property. Pursuant to review by the Utilities Division, there is no future need for the use of the easement being requested for release. EXHIBITS: A. Ordinance Declaring Existing Sanitary Sewer Easement Surplus and Authorizing its Release B. Resolution Setting Public Hearing C. Petition for Release of Easement D. Sanitary Sewer Easement, Recording No. 20171208000184 STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Staff recommends adoption of an ordinance declaring the easement surplus to the city's needs and authorizing its release, and adoption of a resolution setting a public hearing on September 8, 2025, to consider the matter. AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) 1 CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON ORDINANCE NO. ________ AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, DECLARING AN EXISTING SANITARY SEWER EASEMENT CONTAINED AND DESCRIBED UNDER KING COUNTY RECORDING NO. 20171208000184 SURPLUS TO THE CITY’S NEEDS, AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR AND CITY CLERK TO EXECUTE AND RECORD WITH KING COUNTY A REALEASE OF SAID EASEMENT, PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY, AND ESTABLISHING AN EFFECTIVE DATE. WHEREAS, in December 2017, Ruth Bill, the property owner of King County Tax Parcel ID 1463400021 (“Parcel”), granted the City a sanitary sewer easement described in King County Recording No. 20171208000184 (“Easement”), attached hereto and incorporated by this reference as Exhibit A; and WHEREAS, Ruth Bill subsequently sold the Parcel subject to the Easement, and the current owner of the Parcel is Connor Homes at Maple Highlands, LLC (“Petitioner-Owner”); and WHEREAS, Petitioner-Owner is constructing the Maple Highlands (Chambers) plat project (“Project”) on the Parcel in such a way the existing Easement is ineffective; and WHEREAS, Petitioner-Owner has proposed an alternative sanitary sewer easement that will better serve the Project as shown on Exhibit B, attached hereto and incorporated by reference, which will be dedicated to the City at no cost upon recording of the Project plat for the operation and maintenance of the utilities within the Parcel; and WHEREAS, pursuant to requirements of Chapter 9-1 of the Renton Municipal Code (“RMC”), on June 9, 2025, Petitioner-Owner filed a petition for release of the easement (“Petition”) which was signed by owners of more than two-thirds (2/3) of the property affected by the Easement; and AGENDA ITEM #6. b) ORDINANCE NO. ________ 2 WHEREAS, the Community and Economic Development Department (“CED”), in coordination with other City Departments and in compliance with the City’s Policy & Procedure #100-12 related to Surplus Real Property, has identified the Easement as surplus to the City’s needs; and, WHEREAS CED has reviewed all relevant documentation related to the Petition to determine ownership, and that no public funds were expended in its acquisition, improvement, or maintenance and therefore is considered a “Class B” easement for which no compensation is required aside from the processing fee required under the Fee Schedule; and, WHEREAS the City, after a news release and publication of a public notice for public hearing, did hold on September 8, 2025, a public hearing in accordance with RCW 35.94.040 to consider declaring the Easement surplus to the City’s needs, and those members of the public who wished to testify were duly allowed to testify and the testimony was considered by the City Council. NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, DO ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS: SECTION I. The facts and background of the Recitals are found to be accurate and true for the purposes of this Ordinance. SECTION II. The City Council finds that the Easement is a Class B easement, and that therefore no compensation for its release, aside from the processing fee identified in the City Fee Schedule, is required. SECTION III. The Easement is hereby declared surplus to the needs of the City, and it is in the best interests of the public to release the Easement. AGENDA ITEM #6. b) ORDINANCE NO. ________ 3 SECTION IV. The Mayor and City Clerk are authorized to execute and record with King County a release of easement in a form the same or similar to that in Exhibit C, herein incorporated by this reference, along with a copy of this Ordinance. SECTION V. If any section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase, or word of this ordinance should be held to be invalid or unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction, such invalidity or unconstitutionality thereof shall not affect the constitutionality of any other section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase, or word of this ordinance. SECTION VI. This ordinance shall be in full force and effect five (5) days after publication of a summary of this ordinance in the City's official newspaper. The summary shall consist of this ordinance's title. PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL this day of , 2025. ______________________________ Jason A. Seth, City Clerk APPROVED BY THE MAYOR this day of , 2025. ______________________________ Armondo Pavone, Mayor Approved as to form: Shane Moloney, City Attorney Date of Publication: ORD-CED: 25ORD014: 8.4.25 AGENDA ITEM #6. b) ORDINANCE NO. ________ 4 EXHIBIT A – EASEMENT, RECORDING NO. 20171208000184 AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AGENDA ITEM #6. b) ORDINANCE NO. ________ 5 EXHIBIT B – MAPLE HIGHLANDS UTILITY PLAN SHEET AGENDA ITEM #6. b) 0. 1 ' 5. 1 ' 14 ' 4' FND IRON PIPE SHED(TYP.) PROP LINE 15 2 N D A V E S E 15 4 T H A V E S E 1234 5 6 7 10 9 8 12 11 TRACT A STORM SE 138TH PL SE 5TH PL 15 3 R D A V E S E 10+00 11+00 12+00 13+00 14+00 15+00 16+00 17+00 28 + 0 0 29 + 0 0 30 + 0 0 31 + 0 0 32 + 0 0 33 + 0 0 51 + 0 0 52 + 0 0 53 + 0 0 53 + 0 5 68 + 0 0 69 + 0 0 70 + 0 0 71 + 0 0 72 + 0 0 73 + 0 0 74 + 0 0 38 5 38 6 38 6 38 6 3 8 7 38 7 385386387 385 38 4 3 8 5 386 38 7 387 375 380 385 374 376 377 378 379 381 382 383 384 386 381 382 383 38 538 4 38 6 38 7 38 8 384384 388 3 9 0 3 9 5 3 8 9 39 1 3 9 2 3 9 3 3 9 4 3 8 5 3 9 0 3903 9 0 395 38 4 38 6 387 3 8 8 388 3 8 8 3 8 9 3 9 1 392 393 394 TRACT B 380 385 378 379 381 382 383 384 CITY OF RENTON IN COMPLIANCE WITH CITY OF RENTON STANDARDS T A C O M A 2215 North 30th Street, Suite 300 Tacoma, WA 98403 253.383.2422TEL 253.383.2572FAX www.ahbl.comWEB S E A T T L E S P O K A N E T R I - C I T I E S MAPLE HIGHLANDS AHBL JOB #2221005.10 39 Know what's below. before you dig.Call R C2 3 0 0 4 6 3 6 LU A 2 2 - 0 0 0 1 2 2 PR 2 2 - 0 0 0 1 0 9 R-____ N GRAPHIC SCALE 0 40 80 1" = 40 FEET 20 C5.0COMPOSITE UTILITY PLAN C5.0 C5.0 29 UTILITY NOTE 1.WATER DESIGN UNDER SEPARATE PERMIT WITH KING COUNTY WATER DISTRICT 90. 2.ALL UTILITIES DESIGNED TO SERVE THE PLAT SHALL BE PLACED UNDERGROUND. SE 5TH PL Q: \ 2 0 2 2 \ 2 2 2 1 0 0 5 \ 1 0 _ C I V \ C A D \ _ S i t e D e v e l o p m e n t \ 2 2 2 1 0 0 5 - S H - U T I L . d w g TE D - 4 0 - 4 2 7 8 R-427829 WW P - 2 7 - 4 2 7 8 S-427802 EXISTING SEWER SYSTEM SHALL BE OPERATIONAL UNTIL PROPOSED SEWER SYSTEM IS INSTALLED, APPROVED FOR CONNECTION, AND CONNECTED PRIOR TO DEMOLITION AND REMOVAL. 09/10/2024 WASTEWATER UTILITY jstowell 11/26/2024 DEVELOPMENT ENGINEERING HHuynh 12/04/2024 AG E N D A I T E M # 6 . b ) ORDINANCE NO. ________ 6 EXHIBIT C – DRAFT RELEASE OF EASEMENT AGENDA ITEM #6. b) Page 1 of 1 Return Address: City Clerk’s Office City of Renton 1055 South Grady Way Renton, WA 98057 Release of Easement Property Tax Parcel Number: Project File #: Street Intersection: Reference Number(s) of Documents assigned or released: Additional reference numbers are on page _____. Grantor(s): Grantee(s): 1.City of Renton, a Municipal Corporation 1. 2. The Grantor, as the owner of an easement acquired from _________ _______ dated on ____________________ , recorded under King County Recording Number ____________________of King County, State of Washington, over real property described below: A _____________________________ easement encumbering the following described property: The CITY OF RENTON does hereby abandon and release the above described easement and all rights acquired under it. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, said City has caused this instrument to be executed by the Mayor and attested to by the City Clerk this ____ day of ____________________, 20____. MAYOR CITY CLERK Notary Seal must be within box STATE OF WASHINGTON ) SS COUNTY OF KING ) _____________________ I certify that I know or have satisfactory evidence that ___________________________________________________________signed this instrument and acknowledged it to be his/her/their free and voluntary act for the uses and purposes mentioned in the instrument _________________________________________________________________ Notary Public in and for the State of Washington Notary (Print)____________________________________ My appointment expires:___________________________ Dated: _________________________________________ 20171208000184 AGENDA ITEM #6. b) EXHIBIT “A” (SANITARY SEWER EASEMENT) THAT PORTION OF LAND LYING WITHIN THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 14, TOWNSHIP 23 NORTH, RANGE 5 EAST, W.M. SITUATED IN THE CITY OF RENTON, COUNTY OF KING, STATE OF WASHINGTON; SAID PORTION BEING PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: NORTH 15 FEET OF THE NORTH HALF OF LOT 4, ALL IN BLOCK 1, CEDAR RIVER FIVE ACRE TRACTS, AS RECORDED IN VOLUME 16 OF PLATS, PAGE 52, RECORDS OF KING COUNTY, WASHINGTON. ALSO KNOWN AS LOT B OF KING COUNTY LOT LINE ADJUSTMENT NO. 8908008 APPROVED NOVEMBER 30, 1989. CONTAINING 8,914 SQUARE FEET OR 0.20 ACRES, MORE OR LESS. 01/11/2024 AGENDA ITEM #6. b) 1 5 4 T H A V E S E 1 5 2 N D A V E S E N 2215 North 30th Street, Suite 200, Tacoma, WA 98403 253.383.2422 TEL 253.383.2572 FAX EXHIBIT "B" 01/11/2024 AGENDA ITEM #6. b) 1 CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON RESOLUTION NO. _______ A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, SETTING A PUBLIC HEARING DATE REGARDING DECLARING AN EXISTING SANITARY SEWER EASEMENT SURPLUS TO THE CITY’S NEEDS AND AUTHORIZING RELEASE OF SAID EASEMENT. WHEREAS, on November 30, 2017, Ruth Bill granted the City a sanitary sewer easement contained and described under King County Recording No. 20171208000184 (the “Easement”), located within parcel number 1463400021; and WHEREAS, a petition was filed by the current owner of the property, Connor Homes at Maple Highlands, LLC, with the City Clerk on or about June 9, 2025, pursuant to the requirements of RMC 9-1-1, petitioning for the release of the Easement. The petition was signed by the owners of more than two-thirds (2/3) of the property affected by the Easement; NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, DO RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS: SECTION I. That the 8th day of September, 2025, at the hour of 7:00 P.M., is hereby fixed as the date and time for a public hearing to consider the above-mentioned petition. SECTION II. The City Clerk is hereby authorized and directed to give notice of the time and date of the public hearing as provided in RCW 35.94.040, including instructions on accessing the hearing via Zoom, if applicable, and/or providing comment, and any and/or all persons interested therein or objecting to release of the Easement may then appear and be heard, or they may file their written objections with the City Clerk at or prior to the time of public hearing. AGENDA ITEM #6. b) RESOLUTION NO. ________ 2 SECTION III. After the close of the public hearing, the City Council shall determine whether the Easement is surplus to the City’s needs and if it is in the best interest of the public to be released. PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL this day of , 2025. ______________________________ Jason A. Seth, City Clerk APPROVED BY THE MAYOR this day of , 2025. ______________________________ Armondo Pavone, Mayor Approved as to form: Shane Moloney, City Attorney 25RES021: CED: 8.4.25 AGENDA ITEM #6. b) AB - 3908 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Settlement of Lawsuit Renton Hotel Investors, LLC, et al. v. City of Renton, King County Superior Court Cause No. 20-2-15681-7 KNT RECOMMENDED ACTION: Council Concur DEPARTMENT: Executive Services Department STAFF CONTACT: Ed VanValey, Chief Administrative Officer EXT.: 6520 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: The unreimbursed portion of the settlement, $600,000, will be paid from the Insurance Fund , which has sufficient fund balance. Authorization is requested for additional budget appropriations for the insurance fund in the amount of $600,000 and will be included on the mid-biennial budget adjustment. SUMMARY OF ACTION: City Council is asked to authorize the Mayor to execute two settlement agreements and any necessary related documents resolving all claims in the lawsuit Renton Hotel Investors, LLC, et al. v. City of Renton, King County Superior Court Cause No. 20-2-15681-7 KNT. The lawsuit arose from the City’s code enforcement actions related to King County’s use of the former Red Lion site as a shelter. The total settlement amount is $1,500,000. As part of a mediated global resolution, the City reached agreement with its insurance provider, Safety National Casualty Corporation, to contribute $900,000 toward the settlement, while the City will pay the remaining $600,000 from its Insurance Fund. The City does not admit liability and has resolved the matter to avoid the risk and cost of continued litigation. The attached draft agreements are subject to minor revisions subject to the discretion of the Mayor and legal approval as to form by the City Attorney. EXHIBITS: A. Settlement and Release Agreement - City of Renton and Safety National B. Release and Hold Harmless - RHI STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Authorize the Mayor to execute (1) a settlement agreement with plaintiffs Renton Hotel Investors, LLC, Onkaar Dhaliwal, and Dayabir Bath; (2) a settlement agreement with Safety National Casualty Corporation; (3) any related documents necessary to carry out the negotiated resolution of the above-referenced litigation and associated insurance coverage dispute and (4) approve the budget adjustment of an additional $600,000 for 2025. AGENDA ITEM #6. c) SETTLEMENT AND RELEASE AGREEMENT Parties to the Settlement 1. This Settlement and Release Agreement (“Agreement”) is entered into by Safety National Casualty Corporation and Safety Specialty Insurance Company (collectively “Safety National”) and City of Renton, Washington (“City of Renton”). City of Renton and Safety National shall be referred to herein collectively as the “Parties,” and, each on its own, a “Party.” Background and Purpose of the Settlement 2. Safety National issued to the City of Renton as an endorsed “Member” of Named Insured Washington Public Entity Group, a Public Officials and Employment Practices Liability insurance policy, bearing number SPO6675314, effective January 1, 2020, to January 1, 2021; a Commercial General Liability policy No. GLE4058201, effective January 1, 2020, to January 1, 2021; a Law Enforcement Liability policy No. SLE6675313 effective January 1, 2020, to January 1, 2021; and an Excess Liability policy No. XPE 4058203 effective January 1, 2020, to January 1, 2021 (collectively referred to as the “Safety National Policies”); 3. The City of Renton was sued in an underlying lawsuit captioned: Renton Hotel Investors, LLC, et al., v. City of Renton, Washington Superior Court, King County Case No. 20-2-15681-7 KNT (the “Underlying Lawsuit”); 4. The City of Renton tendered the Underlying Lawsuit to Safety National for defense and indemnification under one or more of the Safety National Policies; 5. Safety National agreed to defend the City of Renton under one or more of the Safety National Policies in the Underlying Lawsuit, subject to a reservation of rights to deny coverage; 6. The Underlying Lawsuit was mediated on March 17, 2025, with mediator (Ret.) Judge Ron B. Leighton; 7. At the conclusion of the March 17, 2025, mediation, the mediator made a proposal of $1,500,000 to the City of Renton to settle the Underlying Lawsuit (the “Settlement Amount”); 8. A good faith dispute arose between the City of Renton and Safety National regarding the existence of coverage under the Safety National Policies for the Settlement Amount in the Underlying Lawsuit; and 9. The City of Renton and Safety National now deem it to be in their best interests to fully and finally resolve their disputes concerning coverage for the Underlying Lawsuit and mutually pay the Settlement Amount according to the terms of this Agreement. AGENDA ITEM #6. c) -2- Payments Toward the Settlement Amount 10. The Settlement Amount in the Underlying Lawsuit will be paid for by the City of Renton and Safety National as follows: a. City of Renton shall pay $600,000 of the Settlement Amount, and b. Safety National shall pay $900,000 of the Settlement Amount to the City of Renton, within thirty (30) days of execution of both this Agreement and the Underlying Settlement Agreement (defined below). 11. The City of Renton shall pay the Settlement Amount in the time frame and according to the form of payment that is compliant with the terms of the full settlement agreement and release in the Underlying Lawsuit (the “Underlying Settlement Agreement”) completing the underlying July 23, 2025, “CR 2A Settlement Agreement.” The Underlying Settlement Agreement shall require a full and complete release of Safety National for all claims and causes of action that could have been asserted by any parties thereto based on the Underlying Lawsuit. City of Renton’s Release of Safety National 12. In consideration of Safety National’s payment of $900,000 toward the Settlement Amount in the Underlying Lawsuit and the promises contained herein, the City of Renton, to the fullest extent of its legal authority, fully and forever releases and discharges Safety National and its related entities, including all predecessors, successors, affiliates, subsidiaries, parents, and divisions, and their respective past, present, and future officers, directors, employees, agents, attorneys, insurers, reinsurers, assigns, and representatives, from any and all claims, known or unknown, arising out of or relating to the Underlying Lawsuit or Safety National’s handling of claims related to it. This release includes, without limitation, any claims for bad faith, violations of Washington’s Insurance Fair Conduct Act, Consumer Protection Act, Administrative Code provisions, or any similar legal theory allowing recovery beyond policy benefits. Safety National’s Waiver of Any Right to Recoupment from the City of Renton 13. Safety National waives any right to recoupment from the City of Renton for all the defense expenses it incurred with respect to the Underlying Lawsuit, or its $900,000 payment toward the Settlement Amount in the Underlying Lawsuit. No Precedential Effect 14. The Parties agree that this Agreement sets forth a compromise resolution of disputed matters and shall never at any time be considered an admission of liability, coverage, course of performance or responsibility on the part of either Party. The Parties agree that this Agreement shall not have any precedential effect with respect to any other matter. The Parties further agree that neither this Agreement nor any of its terms shall be admissible in any action, arbitration, AGENDA ITEM #6. c) -3- or proceeding other than one relating to any potentially applicable reinsurance, if any, or to enforce the terms of this Agreement. Contingencies 15. This Agreement is voidable by either party if the City of Renton City Council rejects ratification of the Agreement, without recourse or opportunity to redraft this Agreement’s provisions frustrating ratification, within thirty (30) days of Safety National signing it. 16. This Agreement is void if the City of Renton City Council does not ratify or approve the Underlying Settlement Agreement within thirty (30) days of its execution. General Terms 17. This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Washington. 18. Each signatory to this Settlement represents and warrants that they are authorized to execute this document for the purposes set forth herein. 19. This Agreement contains the entire agreement between the Parties regarding the matters set forth herein. 20. This Agreement shall become effective on the date on which the last Party executes this Agreement. SIGNED AND AGREED TO BY: SAFETY NATIONAL CASUALTY CORPORATION By: Printed Name: Title: Dated: SIGNED AND AGREED TO BY: SAFETY SPECIALTY INSURANCE COMPANY By: Printed Name: Title: Dated: /// AGENDA ITEM #6. c) -4- SIGNED, AGREED TO, AND RATIFIED BY: CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON By: Printed Name: Title: Dated: AGENDA ITEM #6. c) 1248-00047 / Release and Hold Harmless - Draft (003).docx - 1 - RELEASE OF ALL CLAIMS AND HOLD HARMLESS AGREEMENT KNOW ALL BY THESE PRESENTS: That the Undersigned, on behalf of RENTON HOTEL INVESTORS, LLC., ONKAAR DHALIWAL (individually) and DAYABIR BATH (individually) as Plaintiffs (King County Superior Court Cause No. 20-2-15681-7 KNT), for the sole consideration of ONE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS ($1,500,000.00), as indicated herein below, do hereby and for their heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns release, acquit and forever discharge THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON and its agents, servants, successors, heirs, executors, administrators, liability insurance carriers and all other affiliated persons, firms, corporations, associations or partnerships of each of them from any and all claims, actions, expenses and compensation whatsoever, which the undersigned now have or which may hereafter accrue on account of or in any way growing out of any and all known and unknown damages, and the consequences thereof, resulting or to result from the events alleged in the Complaint filed under King County Superior Court Cause No. 20-2-15681-7 KNT. It is understood and agreed that this settlement is the compromise of a disputed claim, and that the payment made is not to be construed as an admission of liability on the part of the party or parties hereby released, and that said releasees deny liability therefor and intend merely to avoid litigation and buy their peace. The undersigned hereby declare that the undersigned rely wholly upon the undersigneds’ judgment, belief and knowledge of the nature, extent, effect and duration of said damages and liability therefor, and this release is made without reliance upon any statement or representation of the party or parties hereby released or their representatives. In consideration of payment of the above sum, the undersigned represent, warrant and agree that they or their legal representative will satisfy any and all lien claims against the above sum, or any settlement or recovery arising out of the incident, casualty or events which occurred as above- described. In further consideration of the payment of the above sum, the undersigned agree to indemnify the Defendant named in the above-referenced action, its attorneys of record, and its liability insurance carriers, and agrees to hold the same harmless against any claim, suit, action or demand asserting a lien against said sum, settlement or recovery, including the expenses of investigation, attorneys' fees, and other costs of litigation. In further consideration of payment of the above sum, the undersigned agree to pay the expenses of investigation, attorneys' fees and all other costs of any action brought by the Defendant named in the above action, its attorneys of record, and its liability insurance carriers against the undersigned to establish and\or enforce indemnification hereunder. The undersigned further declare and represent that no promise, inducement or agreement not herein expressed has been made to the undersigned, and that this Release contains the entire agreement between the parties, and that the terms of this Release are contractual and not a mere recital. AGENDA ITEM #6. c) 1248-00047 / Release and Hold Harmless - Draft (003).docx - 2 - The undersigned understand this agreement is subject to approval by the Renton City Council, and that the matter will be brought to the Council for approval at its regularly-scheduled meeting on August 11, 2025. Should the City Council not approve this agreement, it will be null and void. The undersigned agree that payment of the settlement amount will be made to the Frey Buck, P.S., Client Trust Account (“payee”) via check or electronic funds transfer within 45 days of (1) the undersigneds’ execution of this Release and Hold Harmless AND (2) payee’s provision of its W-9 form. THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE READ THE FOREGOING RELEASE AND FULLY UNDERSTAND IT. Signed, sealed and delivered this day of , 2025. CAUTION: READ BEFORE SIGNING BELOW Printed Name and Title Signature Agent/Representative on behalf of RENTON HOTEL INVESTORS, LLC ONKAAR DHALIWAL, individually DAYABIR BATH, individually AGENDA ITEM #6. c) AB - 3898 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Genetec AutoVu Software Migration Services and Associated Hardware RECOMMENDED ACTION: Refer to Finance Committee DEPARTMENT: Executive Services Department STAFF CONTACT: Julia Hesley, Enterprise Applications Manager EXT.: 6882 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: Funding for this agreement, in the amount of $115,077.68, is available from the 2025/2026 approved Applications Service Contract GL (503.000000.003.518.82.41.003). There is sufficient funding in the budget to cover this agreement. SUMMARY OF ACTION: This agreement entails upgrading two old license plate recognition (ALPR) units used on our parking enforcement vehicles and switching their software to AMS Cloud. These systems help us identify and track parking violations, which bring in important revenue for the city. The current hardware is outdated and no longer supported. Moving to AMS Cloud will improve vendor support and ensure we stay current with version releases. Route1, our current vendor, will replace the equipment and manage the transition. This update will help us continue working efficiently and avoid interruptions in enforcement. EXHIBITS: A. Agreement STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Authorize the Mayor and City Clerk to execute this agreement with PCS Mobile/Route 1, in the amount of $115,077.68, for software migration services and associated hardware. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) AGREEMENT FOR SOFTWARE MIGRATION SERVICES AND ASSOCIATED HARDWARE (SOFTWARE AS A SERVICES AGREEMENT) THIS AGREEMENT (“Agreement”), dated for reference purposes only as July 22, 2025, is by and between the City of Renton (the “City”), a Washington municipal corporation, and PCS Mobile/Route1 (“Vendor”). The City and the Vendor are referred to collectively in this Agreement as the “Parties.” Once fully executed by the Parties, this Agreement is effective as of the last date signed by both parties (the “Effective Date”). 1. Scope of Work: Vendor agrees to provide software migration services and associated hardware as further described in Exhibit A, B, and C which are attached and incorporated herein and may hereinafter be referred to as the “Work.” Vendor shall provide the Work consistent with the requirements of the Service Level Agreement as set forth in Exhibits A, B, and C. 2. Changes in Scope of Work: The City, without invalidating this Agreement, may order changes to the Work consisting of additions, deletions or modifications. Any such changes to the Work shall be ordered by the City in writing, and the Compensation shall be equitably adjusted consistent with the rates set forth in Exhibits A, B, and C, or as otherwise mutually agreed by the Parties. 3.Time of Performance: Vendor shall commence performance of the AMS migration within 30 days of the Agreement’s execution and commence performance of the hardware and software upgrades within 45 days of the Agreement’s execution. 4. Compensation: A. Amount. The amount of the Agreement is made up of two parts, “One-Time Costs” which apply to Phase 1 of the Work, and “Recurring Costs” which apply to Phase 2 of the Work. •One-Time Costs. The amount of the One Time Costs, including first year licensing, for this Agreement shall not exceed $115,077.68 which includes applicable state and local sales taxes. The City will pay $34,700 (approximately 50% of the SharpX hardware costs) upon execution of the contract. The remaining software and AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 2 OF 13 service costs shall be paid based upon Work actually performed according to the rate(s) or amounts specified in Exhibits A, B, and C. •Recurring Costs. The amount of the Recurring Costs shall be $13,804.00 ($6,358.00 for Genetec licensing included in this agreement plus $7,446.00 for Route1 support which is in addition to this agreement), plus any applicable state and local sales taxes, for the period starting one year from the AMS migration completion date. Recurring Costs are to be billed annually and are not to exceed an increase of 5% year over year unless otherwise agreed by both Parties. Except as specifically provided herein, the Vendor shall be solely responsible for payment of any taxes imposed as a result of the performance and payment of this Agreement. B. Method of Payment. On an annual basis during any year in which Work is performed, the Vendor shall submit a voucher or invoice in a form specified by the City, including a description of what Work has been performed, the name of the personnel performing such Work, and any hourly labor charge rate for such personnel. The Vendor shall also submit a final bill upon completion of all Work. Payment shall be made by the City for Work performed within sixty (60) calendar days after receipt and approval by the appropriate City representative of the voucher or invoice. If the Vendor’s performance does not meet the requirements of this Agreement, the Vendor will correct or modify its performance to comply with the Agreement. The City may withhold payment for work that does not meet the requirements of this Agreement. C. Effect of Payment. Payment for any part of the Work shall not constitute a waiver by the City of any remedies it may have against the Vendor for failure of the Vendor to perform the Work or for any breach of this Agreement by the Vendor. D. Non-Appropriation of Funds. If sufficient funds are not appropriated or allocated for payment under this Agreement for any future fiscal period, the City shall not be obligated to make payments for Work or amounts incurred after the end of the current fiscal period, and this Agreement will terminate upon the completion of all remaining Work for which funds are allocated. No penalty or expense shall accrue to the City in the event this provision applies. 5. Termination: A. The City reserves the right to terminate this Agreement at any time, with or without cause by giving ten (10) calendar days’ notice to the Vendor in writing. In the event of such termination or suspension, all finished or unfinished documents, data, studies, worksheets, models and reports, or other material prepared by the Vendor pursuant AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 3 OF 13 to this Agreement shall be submitted to the City, if any are required as part of the Work. B. In the event this Agreement is terminated by the City, the Vendor shall be entitled to payment for all hours worked to the effective date of termination, less all payments previously made. If the Agreement is terminated by the City after partial performance of Work for which the agreed compensation is a fixed fee, the City shall pay the Vendor an equitable share of the fixed fee. This provision shall not prevent the City from seeking any legal remedies it may have for the violation or nonperformance of any of the provisions of this Agreement and such charges due to the City shall be deducted from the final payment due the Vendor. No payment shall be made by the City for any expenses incurred or work done following the effective date of termination unless authorized in advance in writing by the City. C. Return of Information. Upon the written request of City, Consultant shall return any of the City’s Information in a usable format agreed to by the City at no additional cost to the City. 6. Warranties and Right to Use Work Product: Vendor represents and warrants that Vendor will perform all Work identified in this Agreement in a professional and workmanlike manner and in accordance with all reasonable and professional standards and laws. Vendor further represents and warrants that all final work product created for and delivered to the City pursuant to this Agreement shall be the original work of the Vendor and free from any intellectual property encumbrance which would restrict the City from using the work product. Vendor grants to the City a non-exclusive, perpetual right and license to use, reproduce, distribute, adapt, modify, and display all final work product produced pursuant to this Agreement. The City’s or other’s adaptation, modification or use of the final work products other than for the purposes of this Agreement shall be without liability to the Vendor. The provisions of this section shall survive the expiration or termination of this Agreement. 7. Record Maintenance: The Vendor shall maintain accounts and records, which properly reflect all direct and indirect costs expended and Work provided in the performance of this Agreement and retain such records for as long as may be required by applicable Washington State records retention laws, but in any event no less than six years after the termination of this Agreement. The Vendor agrees to provide access to and copies of any records related to this Agreement as required by the City to audit expenditures and charges and/or to comply with the Washington State Public Records Act (Chapter 42.56 RCW). The provisions of this section shall survive the expiration or termination of this Agreement. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 4 OF 13 8. Public Records Compliance: To the full extent the City determines necessary to comply with the Washington State Public Records Act, Vendor shall make a due diligent search of all records in its possession or control relating to this Agreement and the Work, including, but not limited to, e-mail, correspondence, notes, saved telephone messages, recordings, photos, or drawings and provide them to the City for production. In the event Vendor believes said records need to be protected from disclosure, it may, at Vendor’s own expense, seek judicial protection. Vendor shall indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the City for all costs, including attorneys’ fees, attendant to any claim or litigation related to a Public Records Act request for which Vendor has responsive records and for which Vendor has withheld records or information contained therein, or not provided them to the City in a timely manner. Vendor shall produce for distribution any and all records responsive to the Public Records Act request in a timely manner, unless those records are protected by court order. The provisions of this section shall survive the expiration or termination of this Agreement. 9. Independent Contractor Relationship: A. The Vendor is retained by the City only for the purposes and to the extent set forth in this Agreement. The nature of the relationship between the Vendor and the City during the period of the Work shall be that of an independent contractor, not employee. The Vendor, not the City, shall have the power to control and direct the details, manner or means of Work. Specifically, but not by means of limitation, the Vendor shall have no obligation to work any particular hours or particular schedule, unless otherwise indicated in the Scope of Work or where scheduling of attendance or performance is mutually arranged due to the nature of the Work. Vendor shall retain the right to designate the means of performing the Work covered by this agreement, and the Vendor shall be entitled to employ other workers at such compensation and such other conditions as it may deem proper, provided, however, that any contract so made by the Vendor is to be paid by it alone, and that employing such workers, it is acting individually and not as an agent for the City. B. The City shall not be responsible for withholding or otherwise deducting federal income tax or Social Security or contributing to the State Industrial Insurance Program, or otherwise assuming the duties of an employer with respect to Vendor or any employee of the Vendor. C. If the Vendor is a sole proprietorship or if this Agreement is with an individual, the Vendor agrees to notify the City and complete any required form if the Vendor retired under a State of Washington retirement system and agrees to indemnify any losses the City may sustain through the Vendor’s failure to do so. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 5 OF 13 10. Hold Harmless: The Vendor agrees to release, indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the City, elected officials, employees, officers, representatives, and volunteers from any and all claims, demands, actions, suits, causes of action, arbitrations, mediations, proceedings, judgments, awards, injuries, damages, liabilities, taxes, losses, fines, fees, penalties, expenses, attorney’s or attorneys’ fees, costs, and/or litigation expenses to or by any and all persons or entities, arising from, resulting from, or related to the negligent acts, errors or omissions of the Vendor in its performance of this Agreement or a breach of this Agreement by Vendor, except for that portion of the claims caused by the City’s sole negligence. Should a court of competent jurisdiction determine that this agreement is subject to RCW 4.24.115, (Validity of agreement to indemnify against liability for negligence relative to construction, alteration, improvement, etc., of structure or improvement attached to real estate…) then, in the event of liability for damages arising out of bodily injury to persons or damages to property caused by or resulting from the concurrent negligence of the Vendor and the City, its officers, officials, employees and volunteers, Vendor’s liability shall be only to the extent of Vendor’s negligence. It is further specifically and expressly understood that the indemnification provided in this Agreement constitute Vendor’s waiver of immunity under the Industrial Insurance Act, RCW Title 51, solely for the purposes of this indemnification. The Parties have mutually negotiated and agreed to this waiver. The provisions of this section shall survive the expiration or termination of this Agreement. 11. Gifts and Conflicts: The City’s Code of Ethics and Washington State law prohibit City employees from soliciting, accepting, or receiving any gift, gratuity or favor from any person, firm or corporation involved in a contract or transaction. To ensure compliance with the City’s Code of Ethics and state law, the Vendor shall not give a gift of any kind to City employees or officials. Vendor also confirms that Vendor does not have a business interest or a close family relationship with any City officer or employee who was, is, or will be involved in selecting the Vendor, negotiating or administering this Agreement, or evaluating the Vendor’s performance of the Work. 12. City of Renton Business License: Unless exempted by the Renton Municipal Code, Vendor shall obtain a City of Renton Business License prior to performing any Work and maintain the business license in good standing throughout the term of this agreement with the City. Information regarding acquiring a city business license can be found at: https://www.rentonwa.gov/Tax AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 6 OF 13 Information regarding State business licensing requirements can be found at: https://dor.wa.gov/doing-business/register-my-business 13. Insurance: Vendor shall secure and maintain: A. Commercial general liability insurance in the minimum amounts of $1,000,000 for each occurrence/$2,000,000 aggregate for the Term of this Agreement. B. In the event that Work delivered pursuant to this Agreement either directly or indirectly involve or require Professional Services, Professional Liability/ Errors and Omissions coverage shall be provided with minimum limits of $1,000,000 per occurrence. "Professional Services", for the purpose of this section, shall mean any Work provided by a licensed professional or Work that requires a professional standard of care. C. Workers’ Compensation Coverage, as required by the Industrial Insurance laws of the State of Washington, shall also be secured. D. Commercial Automobile Liability for owned, leased, hired or non-owned, leased, hired or non-owned, with minimum limits of $1,000,000 per occurrence combined single limit, if there will be any use of Vendor’s vehicles on the City’s Premises by or on behalf of the City, beyond normal commutes. E. Cyber Liability Insurance is required, with limits not less than $2,000,000 per occurrence or claim, with $2,000,000 aggregate minimum. Coverage shall be sufficiently broad to respond to the duties and obligations as is undertaken by Vendor in this agreement and shall include, but not be limited to, coverage, including defense, for the following losses or services: claims involving infringement of intellectual property, infringement of copyright, trademark, trade dress, invasion of privacy violations, information theft, damage to or destruction of electronic information, release of private information, alteration of electronic information, extortion and network security, coverage for unauthorized access and use, failure of security, breach of confidential information, or privacy perils. The policy shall provide coverage for breach response costs, to include but not limited to crisis management services, credit monitoring, public relations, legal service advice, notification of affected parties, independent information security forensics firm, and costs to re- secure, re-create and restore data or systems as well as regulatory fines and penalties with limits sufficient to respond to these obligations. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 7 OF 13 F. Vendor shall name the City as an Additional Insured on its commercial general liability policy on a non-contributory primary basis. The City’s insurance policies shall not be a source for payment of any Vendor liability, nor shall the maintenance of any insurance required by this Agreement be construed to limit the liability of Vendor to the coverage provided by such insurance or otherwise limit the City’s recourse to any remedy available at law or in equity. Additional Insured requirements do not apply to Cyber Liability nor Professional Liability insurance, if applicable. G. Subject to the City’s review and acceptance, a certificate of insurance showing the proper endorsements, shall be delivered to the City before performing the Work. H. Vendor shall provide the City with written notice of any policy cancellation, within two (2) business days of their receipt of such notice. 14. Safeguarding of Personal Information; Intellectual Property: A. Personal Information: Vendor shall not use or disclose Personal Information, as defined in chapter 19.255 RCW, in any manner that would constitute a violation of federal law or applicable provisions of Washington State law. Vendor agrees to comply with all federal and state laws and regulations, as currently enacted or revised, regarding data security and electronic data interchange of Personal Information. Vendor shall ensure its directors, officers, employees, subcontractors or agents use Personal Information solely for the purposes of accomplishing the services set forth in the Agreement. Vendor shall protect Personal Information collected, used, or acquired in connection with the Agreement, against unauthorized use, disclosure, modification or loss. Vendor and its sub-providers agree not to release, divulge, publish, transfer, sell or otherwise make Personal Information known to unauthorized persons without the express written consent of City or as otherwise authorized by law. Vendor agrees to implement physical, electronic, and managerial policies, procedures, and safeguards to prevent unauthorized access, use, or disclosure of Personal Information. Vendor shall make the Personal Information available to amend as directed by City and incorporate any amendments into all the copies maintained by the Vendor or its AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 8 OF 13 subcontractors. Vendor shall certify its return or destruction upon expiration or termination of the Agreement and the Vendor shall retain no copies. If Vendor and City mutually determine that return or destruction is not feasible, the Vendor shall not use the Personal Information in a manner other than those permitted or authorized by state and federal laws. Vendor shall notify City in writing immediately upon becoming aware of any unauthorized access, use or disclosure of Personal Information. Vendor shall take necessary steps to mitigate the harmful effects of such use or disclosure. Vendor is financially responsible for notification of any unauthorized access, use or disclosure. The details of the notification must be approved by City. Any breach of this clause may result in termination of the Agreement and the demand for return of all Personal Information. B. Intellectual Property: Each Party retains all right, title, and interest under applicable contractual, copyright and related laws to their respective Information, including the right to use such information for all purposes permissible by applicable laws, rules, and regulations. 15. Delays: Vendor is not responsible for delays caused by factors beyond the Vendor’s reasonable control. When such delays beyond the Vendor’s reasonable control occur, the City agrees the Vendor is not responsible for damages, nor shall the Vendor be deemed to be in default of the Agreement. 16. Successors and Assigns: Neither the City nor the Vendor shall assign, transfer or encumber any rights, duties or interests accruing from this Agreement without the written consent of the other. 17. Notices: Any notice required under this Agreement will be in writing, addressed to the appropriate party at the address which appears below (as modified in writing from time to time by such party), and given personally, by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, by facsimile or by nationally recognized overnight courier service. Time period for notices shall be deemed to have commenced upon the date of receipt, EXCEPT facsimile delivery will be deemed to have commenced on the first business day following transmission. Email and telephone may be used for purposes of administering the Agreement, but should not be used to give any formal notice required by the Agreement. CITY OF RENTON VENDOR AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 9 OF 13 Debbie Scott 1055 South Grady Way Renton, WA 98057 Phone: (425) 430-6939 Email: dscott@rentonwa.gov For formal notifications, include: Email: CityClerk@Rentonwa.gov Elton Crawford 7300 Via Paseo Del Sur, Suite 202 Scottsdale, AZ 85258 Phone: 931-220-6225 Email: Elton.crawford@route1.com 18. Discrimination Prohibited: Except to the extent permitted by a bona fide occupational qualification, the Vendor agrees as follows: A. Vendor, and Vendor’s agents, employees, representatives, and volunteers with regard to the Work performed or to be performed under this Agreement, shall not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, religion, nationality, creed, marital status, sexual orientation or preference, age (except minimum age and retirement provisions), honorably discharged veteran or military status, or the presence of any sensory, mental or physical handicap, unless based upon a bona fide occupational qualification in relationship to hiring and employment, in employment or application for employment, the administration of the delivery of Work or any other benefits under this Agreement, or procurement of materials or supplies. B. The Vendor will take affirmative action to insure that applicants are employed and that employees are treated during employment without regard to their race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, sexual orientation, physical, sensory or mental handicaps, or marital status. Such action shall include, but not be limited to the following employment, upgrading, demotion or transfer, recruitment or recruitment advertising, layoff or termination, rates of pay or other forms of compensation and selection for training. C. If the Vendor fails to comply with any of this Agreement’s non-discrimination provisions, the City shall have the right, at its option, to cancel the Agreement in whole or in part. D. The Vendor is responsible to be aware of and in compliance with all federal, state and local laws and regulations that may affect the satisfactory completion of the project, which includes but is not limited to fair labor laws, worker's compensation, and Title VI of the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, and will comply with City of Renton Council Resolution Number 4085. 19. Miscellaneous: The parties hereby acknowledge: AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 10 OF 13 A. The City is not responsible to train or provide training for Vendor. B. Vendor will not be reimbursed for job related expenses except to the extent specifically agreed within the attached exhibits. C. Vendor shall furnish all tools and/or materials necessary to perform the Work except to the extent specifically agreed within the attached exhibits. D. In the event special training, licensing, or certification is required for Vendor to provide Work he/she will acquire or maintain such at his/her own expense and, if Vendor employs, sub-contracts, or otherwise assigns the responsibility to perform the Work, said employee/sub-contractor/assignee will acquire and or maintain such training, licensing, or certification. E. This is a non-exclusive agreement and Vendor is free to provide his/her Work to other entities, so long as there is no interruption or interference with the provision of Work called for in this Agreement. F. Vendor is responsible for his/her own insurance, including, but not limited to health insurance. G. Vendor is responsible for his/her own Worker’s Compensation coverage as well as that for any persons employed by the Vendor. 20. Other Provisions: A. Approval Authority. Each individual executing this Agreement on behalf of the City and Vendor represents and warrants that such individuals are duly authorized to execute and deliver this Agreement on behalf of the City or Vendor. B. General Administration and Management. The City’s project manager is Debbie Scott, Senior Business Systems Analyst, 425-430-6939. In providing Work, Vendor shall coordinate with the City’s contract manager or his/her designee. C. Amendment and Modification. This Agreement may be amended only by an instrument in writing, duly executed by both Parties. D. Conflicts. In the event of any inconsistencies between Vendor proposals and this Agreement, the terms of this Agreement shall prevail. Any exhibits/attachments to this Agreement are incorporated by reference only to the extent of the purpose for which they are referenced within this Agreement. To the extent a Vendor prepared exhibit conflicts with the terms in the body of this Agreement or contains terms that AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 11 OF 13 are extraneous to the purpose for which it is referenced, the terms in the body of this Agreement shall prevail and the extraneous terms shall not be incorporated herein. E. Governing Law. This Agreement shall be made in and shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of the State of Washington and the City of Renton. Vendor and all of the Vendor’s employees shall perform the Work in accordance with all applicable federal, state, county and city laws, codes and ordinances. F. Joint Drafting Effort. This Agreement shall be considered for all purposes as prepared by the joint efforts of the Parties and shall not be construed against one party or the other as a result of the preparation, substitution, submission or other event of negotiation, drafting or execution. G. Jurisdiction and Venue. Any lawsuit or legal action brought by any party to enforce or interpret this Agreement or any of its terms or covenants shall be brought in the King County Superior Court for the State of Washington at the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, King County, Washington, or its replacement or successor. Vendor hereby expressly consents to the personal and exclusive jurisdiction and venue of such court even if Vendor is a foreign corporation not registered with the State of Washington. H. Severability. A court of competent jurisdiction’s determination that any provision or part of this Agreement is illegal or unenforceable shall not cancel or invalidate the remainder of this Agreement, which shall remain in full force and effect. I. Sole and Entire Agreement. This Agreement contains the entire agreement of the Parties and any representations or understandings, whether oral or written, not incorporated are excluded. J. Time is of the Essence. Time is of the essence of this Agreement and each and all of its provisions in which performance is a factor. Adherence to completion dates set forth in the description of the Work is essential to the Vendor’s performance of this Agreement. K. Third-Party Beneficiaries. Nothing in this Agreement is intended to, nor shall be construed to give any rights or benefits in the Agreement to anyone other than the Parties, and all duties and responsibilities undertaken pursuant to this Agreement will be for the sole and exclusive benefit of the Parties and no one else. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 12 OF 13 L. Binding Effect. The Parties each bind themselves, their partners, successors, assigns, and legal representatives to the other party to this Agreement, and to the partners, successors, assigns, and legal representatives of such other party with respect to all covenants of the Agreement. M. Waivers. All waivers shall be in writing and signed by the waiving party. Either party’s failure to enforce any provision of this Agreement shall not be a waiver and shall not prevent either the City or Vendor from enforcing that provision or any other provision of this Agreement in the future. Waiver of breach of any provision of this Agreement shall not be deemed to be a waiver of any prior or subsequent breach unless it is expressly waived in writing. N. Counterparts. The Parties may execute this Agreement in any number of counterparts, each of which shall constitute an original, and all of which will together constitute this one Agreement. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have voluntarily entered into this Agreement as of the date last signed by the Parties below. CITY OF RENTON By:_____________________________ VENDOR By:____________________________ Armondo Pavone Mayor Daniel Fuccello Route1 Inc. President _____________________________ Date _____________________________ Date Attest _____________________________ Jason A. Seth City Clerk Approved as to Legal Form By: __________________________ Shane Moloney City Attorney AGENDA ITEM #6. d) PAGE 13 OF 13 IT-Contract Template 6/17/2021 Clb 7/23/25 3529 AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 Note: This Quote is good and valid for 15 days beyond the Quote Date. Bill To Ship To TOTAL City of Renton1055 S Grady WayRenton WA 98057United States City of Renton1055 S Grady WayRenton WA 98057United States $12,096.61 Expiration Date: 07/31/2025 Terms Expiration Date PO #Sales Rep Shipping Method Deposit - 50% (LPR)07/31/2025 Jason J Hardabura Project Description Renton- On Prem to AMS Migration leverage existing Comp SLA Engineering Services 1 Project management services for add on Mobile LPR project deployment, up to five mobile LPR vehicles. 1 (Covered Under Existing Comprehensive SLA) Initial setup/ base configuration of Genetec Security Center (AMS) and base Permit Zone configuration (up to 50 lots). Base configuration includes PaybyPlate Sync integrations (up to 5 providers), Hotlist/Permit List Updater and mapping of up to 50 locations. Also includes replicating current OnPrem setup and configuration on new AMS Cloud such as Hotlist, Data Import/Export, Permits and Zones. Subtotal:$2,550.00 Hardware and Software - Sensors and Data Acquisition 1 Genetec Fee for AutoVu™ Managed Services Setup of Security Center. Subtotal:$2,200.00 Support and Licenses 1 GSC AutoVu Managed Service 2.0 for one (1) year.Maximum of 1 year Hit retention (with images) and 1 year read retention (without images). See product description for limitations.Max five (5) concurrent Security Desk connections. Includes: AutoVu base, Security Center mapping, List Updater and Pay-by-Plate Single. Genetec Advantage. (Security Center Feature Matrix Provided for 5.13 current version for Genetec's AMS Cloud) 1 Subscription for AutoVu Managed Service. Upgrade to Pay-by-Plate Multi for 1 year. 1 AutoVu Third-Party Data Exporter allows for export of ALPR data to third-parties at up to 1 endpoint; including JSON data format. 2 GSC AutoVu Managed Service 1 Genetec Patroller Connection for one (1) year. 1 Subscription for Platelink for 1 year. Subtotal:$6,358.00 Tax (%)$988.61 Total $12,096.61 &YIJCJU" AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 The below Terms of Sale are an integral part of this quote. In order for this quote to be effective, the attached Terms of Sale must be agreed to. Customer Authorizing Party Signature: b ________________________________________ Date of Signature: b ________________________________________ AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 Terms of Sale Route1 Inc. (“Route1”) is the parent company of operating subsidiaries Route 1 Security Corporation, Portable Computer Systems, Inc. doing business as PCS Mobile, Spyrus Solutions Inc., Group Mobile Int’l, LLC, DataSource Mobility, LLC and VetSource Mobility, LLC. (collectively the “Seller”).b Each of these subsidiaries, as applicable, continue as valid parties to all agreements. The submittal of a purchase order to the Seller by the customer referred to in the attached quote (the “Customer”, “Client” or the “Buyer”) referencing the Quote No. and the specifics from that Quote or a Customer Authorizing Party signature on the Quote, indicates acceptance of the below terms and conditions. Please read these Terms of Sale (the “Terms of Sale”) carefully. Except where indicated otherwise, these terms and conditions shall supersede any subsequent terms or conditions included with any purchase order. The Seller reserves the right to make changes to these terms and conditions at any time. In the event that there is any conflict or inconsistency between these Terms of Sale and any other terms of sale or use, these Terms of Sale will govern. 1.Acceptance of Order Buyer’s placement of an order does not necessarily ensure that we will accept the Buyer’s order. We reserve the right to refuse any order in our sole discretion. In addition, before accepting Buyer’s order, we may require additional information if Buyer has not provided all of the information required by the Seller to complete Buyer’s order. Once a properly completed order is received, authorization of Buyer’s form of payment is received and we have accepted Buyer’s order, we will promptly place Buyer’s order in line for shipment. Once an order has been accepted by the Seller, it cannot typically be cancelled. If an order cancellation request is received and accepted by the Seller prior to product shipment, a 15% cancellation fee will apply. 2.Pricing and Availability All prices for products (and the associated costs of shipping and tax) are shown in U.S. dollars. All items are subject to availability and we reserve the right to impose quantity limits on any order, to reject all or part of an order, and to discontinue products without notice, even if Buyer has already placed an order. All prices are subject to change without notice, and Buyer agrees that taxes may be adjusted from the amount shown on this quote. Several factors may cause this, such as variances between processor programs and changes in tax rates. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 3.Buyer Credit, Form of Payment and Payment Terms If the Buyer requests credit from the Seller, the Buyer shall provide all financial information reasonably requested by the Seller from time to time for the sole purpose of establishing or continuing the Buyer’s credit limit. Buyer agrees that the Seller shall have the right to decline or extend credit to Buyer, and to require that the applicable purchase price be paid prior to shipment. The Seller shall have the right from time to time, without notice, to change or revoke Buyer’s credit limit on the basis of changes in the Seller’s credit policies or Buyer’s financial condition and/or payment record. If credit terms are not available to the Buyer, pre-payment may be made by ACH (EFT) or Wire Transfer. The Seller currently accepts Visa and MasterCard, as forms of credit card payment. By submitting Buyer’s order and selecting to use a credit card as a form of payment, Buyer represents and warrants that Buyer is authorized to use the designated credit card and authorizes the Seller to charge Buyer’s order (including taxes, shipping and handling) to that card. If the card cannot be verified, is invalid, or is otherwise not acceptable, Buyer’s order may be suspended or cancelled automatically. All credit card orders are subject to a 4% service charge. The Seller further reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to request partial payment from Buyer, prior to processing Buyer’s order. Form of Allowed Payment: The Seller does NOT accept cheques as a form of payment. The Buyer must make payment by ACH (EFT) or credit card. Payment Terms: Upon the Seller accepting the Buyer’s purchase order or signed quote, the Buyer shall immediately pay the Seller fifty-percent (50%) of the value of the Buyer’s order (the “First Payment”). The Seller will take no action to fulfill the Buyer’s order without completion of the First Payment. The installation of the hardware, included in the Buyer’s order, must be scheduled within 30 days of the hardware delivery date. The hardware delivery date is evidenced by the date received on the shipping receipt. The Buyer shall provide the Seller a second payment equal to forty percent (40%) of the value of the Buyer’s order (the “Second Payment”) within 30 days of the hardware delivery date. A final payment for the balance outstanding on the Buyer’s order will be made by the Buyer to the Seller within thirty (30) days of the installation date (the “Project’s Completion”). The Seller does NOT accept pay-when-paid terms. Deducting Amounts: The Buyer shall not deduct any amounts from any Seller invoice without the Seller’s express written approval, which approval shall be contingent upon Buyer providing all supporting documentation for such deduction as required by the Seller. Any authorized deductions for returned Products must include Buyer’s customer tracking number and the Seller’s Return Merchandise Authorization (“RMA”) number. Deductions received by the Seller without advance notice will be denied. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 4.Partial Billing by the Seller The Seller reserves the right to partially bill the Buyer for the portion of any line item or bundled price in an order if a material portion has been shipped, delivered or otherwise completed. 5.Shipping Terms and Policies Delivery shall be made in accordance with the Seller's shipping policy in effect on the date of shipment. Product title and risk of loss will transfer to Buyer upon the Seller tendering the Product for delivery to the carrier (F.O.B. Origin). If Buyer requests special shipping or handling, including expedited shipment, third-party billing, or freight collect, Buyer shall be responsible for filing claims with the carrier and all freight and handling costs. Buyer shall pay for any special routing, packing, handling or insurance requested by Buyer and agreed to by the Seller. Orders shipped under special routing instructions must be separately agreed upon and may be subject to additional charges. The Seller will not be subject to requirements of non-compliance programs of Buyer, including charges for product delays, missing/inaccurate shipping documents, labeling or product markings. Buyer shall promptly notify the Seller, no later than 30 days from invoice date, of any claimed shortages or rejection as to any delivery, with the exception of deliveries that reveal external shipping damage, which, in some instances, must be refused immediately upon delivery by the carrier. Such notice shall be in writing and shall be reasonably detailed stating the grounds for any such rejection. Failure to provide any such notice within such time shall be deemed an acceptance in full of any such delivery.b The Seller shall not be liable for any shipment delays that affect the Seller or any of the Seller's suppliers, including but not limited to delays caused by unavailability or shortages of Products from the Seller's suppliers, natural disasters, acts of war or terrorism, acts or omissions of Buyer, fire, strike, riot, or governmental interference, unavailability or shortage of materials, labor, fuel or power through normal commercial channels at customary and reasonable rates, failure or destruction of plant or equipment arising from any cause whatsoever, or transportation failures. 6.On-Site Agreement Policy Buyer has 24 hours from the date first agreed upon by both parties to cancel or reschedule without charge. Buyer agrees to pay the Seller a $2,500 cancellation fee if the service dates requested are cancelled for any reason other than the Seller issuing the cancellation or Force Majeure. A “Force Majeure” is defined as fire, explosion, accident, drought, storm, hail, earthquake, embargo, epidemic, act of God which has resulted in, or could reasonably be expected to result in the cancellation of the Seller’s field services representative travel request. 7.Back Orders If, for any reason, an item on Buyer’s order is temporarily out of stock, the Seller will endeavor to back order that item for Buyer. Items on back order will be charged when the items are actually shipped, along with applicable taxes and shipping charges. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 8.Return Policy – All Sales Final All sales are final, except where otherwise agreed upon by Buyer and the Seller. Should the Seller, in its sole discretion, allow Buyer to return an item, the following return policy applies for that return: i. In order for the Seller to approve any product return, the product must not be opened or damaged, and in its original undamaged packaging. the Seller will not accept "open box" returns. ii. As the Seller sells specific project based manufactured and configured computers, accessories and electronic devices, unopened box returns also may be denied. The Seller cannot re-sell or return a computer that has been built to a Buyer’s specifications. iii. Any and all product returns must be approved by the Seller, in the Seller’s sole discretion, and a Return Merchandise Authorization (“RMA”) number must be issued. iv. Approved returns must be made within 30 days of the delivery date. v. Approved returns will incur a 25% restocking fee. vi. Returns must be received within 15 days of the RMA number issuance. vii. The Buyer is responsible for all insurance and shipping charges associated with the return. viii. All returns must be sent via UPS, Federal Express, or any other professional courier that provides a tracking number and proof of delivery. ix. If the returned product does not meet the requirements stated above, the product will be sent back to the customer “freight collect”. x. Once the Seller has approved a return, Buyer’s refund will be issued within 7 days, and Buyer will receive an email confirmation that Buyer’s return is completed. Please note that, depending on Buyer’s financial institution, it may take an additional 2-10 business days for the credit to post to Buyer’s account. 9.Errors The Seller attempts to be as accurate as possible. However, the Seller does not warrant that all product descriptions, photographs, pricing, or other information provided is accurate, complete, current, or error-free. In addition, all weights and size dimensions are approximate. If a product offered by the Seller is not as described or pictured, Buyer’s sole remedy is to return it in an undamaged, unused condition for a refund, subject to the return policy herein. In the event of an error in an order confirmation, in processing an order, in delivering a product, or otherwise, we reserve the right to correct such error and revise Buyer’s order accordingly, or to cancel the order and refund any amount charged. Buyer’s sole remedy in the event of an error is, subject to the return policy herein, to cancel Buyer’s order and obtain a refund. 10.Disclaimer of Warranty SELLER PROVIDES NO WARRANTY TO ITS CUSTOMERS FOR ANY PRODUCTS SOLD. SELLER HEREBY DISCLAIMS AND EXCLUDES ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, STATUTORY, OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, ACCEPTABILITY, SATISFACTORY QUALITY, NON-INFRINGEMENT, TITLE, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, LOSS OF OR DAMAGE TO DATA, AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 LACK OF VIRUSES OR FREE FROM VIRUS OR MALWARE ATTACK, SECURITY, PERFORMANCE, LACK OF NEGLIGENCE, WORKMANLIKE EFFORT, QUIET ENJOYMENT, THAT THE FUNCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE PRODUCT WILL MEET BUYER’S REQUIREMENTS, OR THAT DEFECTS IN THE PRODUCT WILL BE CORRECTED, OR THAT BUYER’S USE OF THE PRODUCT WILL GENERATE ACCURATE, RELIABLE, TIMELY RESULTS , INFORMATION, OR DATA. NO ORAL OR WRITTEN INFORMATION OR ADVICE GIVEN BYb SELLER, A DEALER, AGENT, OR AFFILIATE SHALL CREATE A WARRANTY. TO THE EXTENT WARRANTIES CANNOT BE DISCLAIMED OR EXCLUDED, THEY ARE LIMITED TO THE DURATION OF THE RELEVANT EXPRESS WARRANTY PERIOD. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, IN NO EVENT SHALL SELLER, ITS AFFILIATES, DEALERS, AGENTS OR SUPPLIERS OR THEIR RESPECTIVE OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES, LICENSORS AND ASSIGNS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, EXEMPLARY, PUNITIVE, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES WHATSOEVER (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS OR REVENUE, FOR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, FOR PERSONAL INJURY, FOR LOSS OF PRIVACY, FOR LOSS OF ABILITY TO USE ANY THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS OR SERVICES, FOR FAILURE TO MEET ANY DUTY INCLUDING OF GOOD FAITH OR OF REASONABLE CARE, FOR NEGLIGENCE, AND FOR ANY OTHER PECUNIARY OR OTHER LOSS WHATSOEVER), REGARDLESS OF THE THEORY OF LIABILITY (CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE) ARISING OUT OF OR IN ANY WAY RELATED TO THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THE PRODUCT, EVEN IF PCS OR SUCH OTHER ENTITIES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE TOTAL AGGREGATE LIABILITY OF PCS, ITS AFFILIATES, ASSOCIATES, DEALERS, AGENTS OR SUPPLIERS TO BUYER FOR ALL DAMAGES EXCEED THE PRICE BUYER PAID FOR THE PRODUCT. THIS LIMITATION IS CUMULATIVE AND WILL NOT BE INCREASED BY THE EXISTENCE OF MORE THAN ONE INCIDENT OR CLAIM. THE FOREGOING LIMITATIONS WILL APPLY EVEN IF ANY WARRANTY OR REMEDY PROVIDED FAILS OF ITS ESSENTIAL PURPOSE. SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR OF LIABILITY FOR INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THE FOREGOING LIMITATIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO BUYER. IF ANY TERM IS HELD TO BE ILLEGAL OR UNENFORCEABLE, THE LEGALITY OR ENFORCEABILITY OF THE REMAINING TERMS SHALL NOT BE AFFECTED OR IMPAIRED. 11.Limitation of Liability SELLER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, PUNITIVE, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING LOST PROFITS) ARISING OUT OF THIS AGREEMENT (UNDER ANY THEORY INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, NEGLIGENCE, CONTRACT OR STRICT LIABILITY), EVEN IF SUCH PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO CASE WILL SELLER’S TOTAL CUMULATIVE LIABILITY TO BUYER RELATED TO THIS AGREEMENT EXCEED THIRTY PERCENT (30%) THE CONTRACT AMOUNT ACTUALLY RECEIVED BY SELLER. 12.Manufacturer's Warranty Warranties may be available directly from select manufacturers. Manufacturer information is subject to change without notice. Not all manufacturers for products which the Seller sells will offer manufacturers’ warranties. In the event Buyer attaches any third party product, software, or equipment to Seller’s product sold pursuant to this Agreement or the related quote, all warranties provided for under this Agreement, including manufacturer warranties, may become null and void. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 13.Confidentiality The Seller and the Buyer agree to keep confidential all the terms of the Agreement, and any proprietary, trade secret of other information which the Seller or Buyer receives from the other in the performance of the Services under the Agreement, however, this shall not apply to information which is: (i) necessary to be disclosed to a third party in order to perform an Agreement; (ii) already known free of any restriction at the time it is obtained; (iii) subsequently learned from an independent third party free of restriction; (iv) is publicly available or (v) is required by law or court order to be disclosed. 14.Intellectual Property Upon Seller’s receipt of full payment from Buyer, Seller grants to Buyer a limited, nonexclusive, nonsublicensable, and nontransferable license to use the Seller’s technology, equipment, software, information, copyrightable material, copyrights, trademarks, patents, data or other material (the “Intellectual Property”) provided by the Seller in delivery of the Services. The Seller owns or has a license or other right to use the Intellectual Property which is being distributed to the Buyer and the Seller reserves all rights to the Intellectual Property. Buyer hereby acknowledges that the Seller retains all right, title and interest in and to the copyrights, trademarks, patents and other intellectual property rights inherent or related in any way to the Intellectual Property provided. The Seller shall own all rights in any changes, enhancements, and modifications made by the Buyer to the Seller’s Intellectual Property. Buyer agrees that neither it nor any of its employees or agents will contest or challenge the Seller’s ownership or rights in its Intellectual Property, make or authorize any use of the Seller’s Intellectual Property that is not consistent with the Agreement or these terms and conditions or modify or reproduce the content or substance of the Intellectual Property.b See www.route1.com/terms-of-use/for notice of the Seller’s intellectual property. The license granted under this Agreement does not include any right to and Buyer agrees that it will not and will not cause a third party to: (i) modify, alter, enhance, change, supplement or otherwise create derivative works of or from the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof, (ii) sell, transfer, assign, rent, lend, lease, distribute or otherwise commercially exploit or make available to any third party the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof (and any attempt to do so will be void), (iii) sublicense any right with respect to the Intellectual Property granted to Buyer by this Agreement, (iv) make copies of the Intellectual Property, (v) use the Intellectual for any purpose other than the purpose contemplated in the Agreement, (vi) exercise any rights of a copyright holder with respect to the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof, other than those expressly granted by this Agreement, or (v) reverse engineer, disassemble, adapt, translate, decompile or otherwise make any attempt to ascertain, derive or obtain the source code for the Intellectual Property or any of the related features related thereto. Buyer agrees not to remove or alter any copyright legend, trademark, confidentiality or other proprietary notice appearing on the Intellectual Property, copies of the Intellectual Property or, to the extent applicable, Intellectual Property output. Buyer must obtain Seller’s prior written consent to any transfer or sale of the Equipment to a third party and pay any applicable transfer fee. Further, Buyer may not grant a security interest, lien or other interest or right in the Intellectual Property to any third party without Seller’s prior written consent. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 15.Indemnification (a)Indemnification by Seller. Seller agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Buyer and its directors, officers, employees and agents harmless from and against any and all losses, damages, liabilities, judgments, penalties, fines, costs, and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) (collectively “Damages”), arising out of or in connection with a third party claim (a “Claim”) that the Intellectual Property owned by Seller that is licensed to Buyer under this Agreement, when used by Buyer as directed by Seller, infringes a United States patent, copyright or trademark. In the event of such a Claim, Seller may, at its option and expense and as Buyer’s sole remedy, (i) replace the Intellectual Property without additional charge, with a functionally equivalent and non-infringing product, (ii) modify the Intellectual Property to avoid the infringement, or (iii) obtain a license for Buyer to continue use of the Intellectual Property at no additional charge to Buyer. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Seller will have no liability for, or any indemnification, defense, or hold harmless obligation under this Section 15(a) as a result of, any Claim of infringement that results from (i) Seller’s compliance with Buyer’s specifications, (ii) any modification of the Intellectual Property by or on behalf of Buyer without Seller’s prior written consent, (iii) infringement or alleged infringement by the a related manufacturer on the intellectual property rights of any third party, (iv) any failure by Buyer to implement updates to the Intellectual Property as supplied by Seller, or (v) the combination, operation, or use of the Intellectual Property with equipment, software, programs, or data not provided by Seller, if such infringement would have been avoided by the use of the Intellectual Property without such combination, operation or use. (b) Buyer agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Seller harmless from and against any and all Damages arising out of or in connection with any third party Claim (i) of bodily injury, death, or damage to real or tangible personal property caused by acts or omissions of Buyer, (ii) that any specification, process, design or other information provided by Buyer infringes a United States patent, copyright or trademark, (iii) arising out of or relating to Buyer’s or its agents’ or representatives’ negligence or intentional misconduct, or (iv) arising out of or relating to Buyer’s or its agents’ or representatives’ failure to (a) follow directions, instructions, warnings or recommendations furnished in writing by Seller regarding the Intellectual Property or other goods or services delivered pursuant to the quote, or (b) comply with applicable federal, state or local laws regarding the Intellectual Property or the facility at which the Intellectual Property is located. (c) For each of the indemnification obligations set forth in Section 15(a) and 15(b), the indemnified party will give the indemnifying party (i) prompt written notice of such Claims, provided that the failure or delay to notify the indemnifying party will not relieve the indemnifying party from any liability that it may have to an indemnified party under this Agreement so long as the failure or delay will not have materially prejudiced the defense of such Claim, (ii) reasonable assistance in defending the Claim, and (iii) sole authority to defend or settle such Claim, provided that the indemnified party will not be required to consent to a judgment against it or enter into a settlement that is prejudicial to it. 16.Waiver of Liability Relating to COVID-19 The installation of equipment, hardware or software by the Seller on the Buyer’s site pursuant to the Agreement may require employees or contractors of the Seller to be present and in physical proximity to Buyer’s employees, contractors, agents, customers, etc. Buyer understands that the Seller cannot prevent possible exposure to, contracting or spreading of COVID-19 by its employees or contractors. It is not possible to prevent the presence of COVID-19 and therefore if Buyer utilizes the Seller’s onsite installation services, Buyer understands that it may be exposing its employees and others onsite to AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 increased risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19. By engaging in onsite Services, Buyer acknowledges and accepts the risk to its employees and others onsite of exposure to, contracting and/or spreading of COVID-19. The Buyer indemnifies the Seller against any claims arising out of exposure to, contracting and/or spreading of COVID-19 by virtue of the Seller’s provision of onsite Services. The Buyer hereby forever releases and waives the right to bring suit against the Seller and its owners, officers, directors, managers, officials, agents, employees or other representatives in connection with the exposure, infection, and/or spread of COVID-19 related to the provision of onsite Services. 17.Support Contract as Applicable The Seller offers three levels of support plans for license plate recognition customers: Elemental, Comprehensive and Select. b The support plan’s scope and specific terms are appended to the Seller’s quote and or invoice. (a)Warranty Term for Onsite WorkmanshipThe Seller guarantees its workmanship post application. The warranty term is found in your quote. This warranty extends to hardware installations performed by the Seller personnel. The Seller does not warranty any third-party equipment or software. The Seller will pass along the warranty it receives from the original equipment manufacturer or owner of the software. In the event Buyer attaches any third party product, software, or equipment to Seller’s product sold pursuant to this Agreement or the related quote, all warranties provided for under this Agreement, including manufacturer warranties, may become null and void. (b)Server, Software, and Firmware UpdatesAs part of your support contract, the Seller may install critical software and firmware updates from manufacturers as required and when released. Critical updates will have priority, non-critical updates will be completed on an as needed basis and based on the terms of your support contract with the Seller. (c)Remote Support Rapid ResponseThe Seller provides remote support to all clients.b Depending on the plan, your authorized contacts are guaranteed a specified response time during the contracted support hours.b Support is not available on weekends and holidays for elemental and comprehensive support plan clients. (d)Number of CallsThe number incidents per month that your authorized contact(s) can make to our support team is defined in your quote. (e)Annual Site Maintenance VisitDefined in your quote. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 (f)RMA Processing and TrackingMost original equipment manufacturers, including Genetec, require a certification in order to request an RMA. If an original equipment manufacturer's repair is required and depending on your service contract, the Seller will work with the original equipment manufacturer to create an RMA. Any original equipment manufacturer’s costs related to the RMA such as damage or out of warranty repairs are the Buyer's responsibility. The Buyer requesting the RMA may also be responsible for shipping costs and processing fees, depending upon their service plan.b Based on your service plan, the Seller will track your RMA to ensure its timely completion and the return of your equipment. Any costs associated with an on-site visit related to an RMA are not included in our support plans. (g)Camera TypeMost organizations charge extra depending on the type of camera(s) you deploy.b We do not.b (h)Authorized ContactsThe Seller is a security-first organization that serves clients such as the U.S. Department of Defense. We want to validate that we’re only working with “authorized” personnel from your organization in order to protect our interests and yours.b Because of this, you are required to name specific people who are authorized to work with us on your behalf. (i)Annual Configuration TimeSome support plans include a certain number of configuration hours. Configuration time allows our experts to make changes to your system throughout the year for you so you don’t have to. This can also include creating reports. Configuration hours are not bankable so any unused hours expire at the end of each one-year term. (j)Price Per Additional Configuration HourAll additional configuration hours must be purchased in blocks of four (4) hours at the rate associated with your plan.b Your plan locks your costs in at a lower rate for the duration of your support agreement. (k)Client Support HoursOur support team is staffed to meet your needs during the hours stated in your plan.b (l)Emergency ResponsivenessEmergency responsiveness is our guarantee of how quickly we will schedule someone to come onsite when needed.b All days are business days and do not include weekends or holidays.b Costs associated with emergency onsite visits such as travel, meals, lodging and the Seller personnel charges are not bincluded in our support plans.b Emergency onsite visits will be performed on a time and material basis and will require a purchase order prior to scheduling.b However, you will always be entitled to have the visit scheduled within the maximum period prescribed by your support plan. An “Emergency” is any incident or problem that severely impacts your operation and has gone through our remote support protocols and that has been determined by the Seller that it cannot be fixed outside of an onsite visit. The actual countdown to onsite service cannot begin until all equipment required for the response is in hand including RMAs and other equipment that is that is not manufactured by the Seller. Our onsite visit is dependent on vendors and manufacturers’ response time, availability of hardware, and the client’s availability and ability to provide us with access to the location of the ALPR deployment at their site.b AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 (m)Hot-swap Inventory on HandFor our clients on Select Plans, the Seller will maintain materials on hand for emergency replacement.b The Buyer is responsible for purchasing the hot-swap inventory.b Additional installation fees may apply as required. 18.Privacy Please refer to the Seller’s Privacy Statement, available at www.route1.com/privacy-policy for information about how the Seller collects, uses, and discloses personal information from users of the site. 19.Dispute Resolution and Binding Arbitration BUYER AND SELLER AGREE TO GIVE UP ANY RIGHTS TO LITIGATE CLAIMS IN A COURT OR BEFORE A JURY, OR TO PARTICIPATE IN A CLASS ACTION OR REPRESENTATIVE ACTION WITH RESPECT TO A CLAIM. OTHER RIGHTS THAT BUYER WOULD HAVE IF BUYER WENT TO COURT MAY ALSO BE UNAVAILABLE OR MAY BE LIMITED IN ARBITRATION. Any claim, dispute, or controversy, whether in contract, tort or otherwise, whether pre-existing, present, or future, and including statutory, consumer protection, common law, intentional tort, injunctive, and equitable claims, between Buyer and either the Seller, its agents, employees, successors, assigns, direct and indirect subsidiaries, or any third party providing any products or services to Buyer in connection with Buyer’s purchase arising from or relating in any way to Buyer’s purchase of products, these Terms of Sale, their interpretation, or the breach, termination, or validity thereof, the relationships which result from these Terms of Sale (including relationships with third parties who are not signatories to these Terms of Sale), the Seller’s advertising, or any related purchase, shall be resolved exclusively and finally by binding arbitration. The arbitrator shall have exclusive authority to resolve any dispute relating to arbitrability and/or enforceability of this arbitration provision, including any unconscionability challenge or any other challenge that the arbitration provision of the Terms of Sale is void, voidable, or otherwise invalid. The arbitration shall be administered by the American Arbitration Association (AAA) or JAMS (or a substitute forum if both are unavailable). Arbitration proceedings shall be governed by this provision and the applicable procedures of the selected arbitration administrator, including any applicable procedures for consumer-related disputes, in effect at the time the claim is filed. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Buyer may assert claims in a small claims court if Buyer’s claims qualify. The Federal Arbitration Act and federal arbitration law apply to these Terms of Sale. Buyer agrees to an arbitration on an individual basis. In any dispute, NEITHER BUYER NOR SELLER SHALL BE ENTITLED TO JOIN OR CONSOLIDATE CLAIMS BY OR AGAINST OTHER CUSTOMERS, OR ARBITRATE OR OTHERWISE PARTICIPATE IN ANY CLAIM AS A CLASS REPRESENTATIVE, CLASS MEMBER, OR IN A PRIVATE ATTORNEY GENERAL CAPACITY. If any provision of this arbitration clause is found unenforceable, the unenforceable provision shall be severed and the remaining arbitration terms shall be enforced (but in no case shall there be a class arbitration). The arbitrator shall be empowered to grant whatever relief would be available in court under law or in equity. Any award of the arbitrator(s) shall be final and binding on each of the parties and may be entered as a judgment in any court of competent jurisdiction. Information on AAA or JAMS and their applicable rules are available at the following numbers and URLs: American Arbitration Association, (800) 778-7879, www.adr.org; JAMS, (800) 352-5267, www.jamsadr.com. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1835 07/11/2025 20.Applicable Law and Jurisdiction This Agreement will be governed by the substantive laws of the state of Arizona without giving effect to any choice of law rules. The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods will not apply to this Agreement. Buyer is responsible for compliance with local laws, if and to the extent local laws are applicable. Both parties to this Agreement specifically agree to submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of, and venue in, the courts in Maricopa County, Arizona in any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement. 21.Export Controls Certain the Seller products may be subject to export controls imposed by the United States of America, and may not be exported or re-exported: (a) into (or to a national or resident of) any country to which the United States of America has placed an embargo, including without limitation, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Syria, Sudan, or Venezuela; (b) to everyone on the U.S. Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals list, or (c) the U.S. Commerce Department’s Table of Denial Orders (collectively, the “Prohibited Countries”). By purchasing any the Seller product, Buyer represents and warrants that Buyer is not located in any Prohibited Country, that Buyer is not under the control of any Prohibited Country, or that Buyer is not a national or resident of any Prohibited Country. 22.Severability If any provision of these Terms of use shall be deemed unlawful, void, or for any reason unenforceable, then that provision shall be deemed severable from these Terms of Sale and shall not affect the validity and enforceability of any remaining provisions. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 Note: This Quote is good and valid for 15 days beyond the Quote Date. Bill To Ship To TOTAL City of Renton1055 S Grady WayRenton WA 98057United States City of Renton1055 S Grady WayRenton WA 98057United States $94,696.51 Expiration Date: 08/31/2025 Terms Expiration Date PO #Sales Rep Shipping Method Deposit - 50% (LPR)08/31/2025 Jason J Hardabura Project Description Renton- SharpX Refresh for 2 Mobile Overtime Kits with CP Engineering Services 1 Project management services for add on Mobile LPR project deployment, up to five mobile LPR vehicles. 2 Removal of existing LPR solution including cameras, processing unit, mounting hardware, docking station, modem hardware. Installation services for one mobile LPR vehicle with wheel image cameras. 2 Configuration services for add on mobile LPR projects. Includes adding new units to existing server environment and configuring add on hardware to match existing hardware specifications. 1.5 Cost of technician to travel to provide on-site installation. This is a per trip charge; if technician is required to return to site for reasons outside of Route1's control, there will need to be additional trip charges. Subtotal:$17,550.00 Hardware and Software - Sensors and Data Acquisition 2 AutoVu™ SharpZ3 OVERTIME Single base KIT includes base unit, LPR module for up to 2 LPR cameras, hard mount brackets, advanced GPS navigation with dead reckoning, POE aux camera option, 2 Tire Cameras, 2 LPR units and in-vehicle license. 2 AU-K-OXX- advanced swap warranty service upgrade from return and repair for first year of sale. 2 Extended Warranty for AU-K-OXX kit with Advance Replacement coverage - 4 Years additional coverage. Does not Include update to advanced replacement for year 1 (warranty cannot extend past 5th year after purchase). This includes coverage of AutoVu vehicle hardware, Genetec Patroller software upgrades and Benomad updates. Does not cover in-vehicle PC. 2 Route1 Consumables 2 Shipping Subtotal:$69,407.32 Tax (%)$7,739.19 Total $94,696.51 &YIJCJU# AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 The below Terms of Sale are an integral part of this quote. In order for this quote to be effective, the attached Terms of Sale must be agreed to. Customer Authorizing Party Signature: b ________________________________________ Date of Signature: b ________________________________________ AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 Terms of Sale Route1 Inc. (“Route1”) is the parent company of operating subsidiaries Route 1 Security Corporation, Portable Computer Systems, Inc. doing business as PCS Mobile, Spyrus Solutions Inc., Group Mobile Int’l, LLC, DataSource Mobility, LLC and VetSource Mobility, LLC. (collectively the “Seller”).b Each of these subsidiaries, as applicable, continue as valid parties to all agreements. The submittal of a purchase order to the Seller by the customer referred to in the attached quote (the “Customer”, “Client” or the “Buyer”) referencing the Quote No. and the specifics from that Quote or a Customer Authorizing Party signature on the Quote, indicates acceptance of the below terms and conditions. Please read these Terms of Sale (the “Terms of Sale”) carefully. Except where indicated otherwise, these terms and conditions shall supersede any subsequent terms or conditions included with any purchase order. The Seller reserves the right to make changes to these terms and conditions at any time. In the event that there is any conflict or inconsistency between these Terms of Sale and any other terms of sale or use, these Terms of Sale will govern. 1.Acceptance of Order Buyer’s placement of an order does not necessarily ensure that we will accept the Buyer’s order. We reserve the right to refuse any order in our sole discretion. In addition, before accepting Buyer’s order, we may require additional information if Buyer has not provided all of the information required by the Seller to complete Buyer’s order. Once a properly completed order is received, authorization of Buyer’s form of payment is received and we have accepted Buyer’s order, we will promptly place Buyer’s order in line for shipment. Once an order has been accepted by the Seller, it cannot typically be cancelled. If an order cancellation request is received and accepted by the Seller prior to product shipment, a 15% cancellation fee will apply. 2.Pricing and Availability All prices for products (and the associated costs of shipping and tax) are shown in U.S. dollars. All items are subject to availability and we reserve the right to impose quantity limits on any order, to reject all or part of an order, and to discontinue products without notice, even if Buyer has already placed an order. All prices are subject to change without notice, and Buyer agrees that taxes may be adjusted from the amount shown on this quote. Several factors may cause this, such as variances between processor programs and changes in tax rates. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 3.Buyer Credit, Form of Payment and Payment Terms If the Buyer requests credit from the Seller, the Buyer shall provide all financial information reasonably requested by the Seller from time to time for the sole purpose of establishing or continuing the Buyer’s credit limit. Buyer agrees that the Seller shall have the right to decline or extend credit to Buyer, and to require that the applicable purchase price be paid prior to shipment. The Seller shall have the right from time to time, without notice, to change or revoke Buyer’s credit limit on the basis of changes in the Seller’s credit policies or Buyer’s financial condition and/or payment record. If credit terms are not available to the Buyer, pre-payment may be made by ACH (EFT) or Wire Transfer. The Seller currently accepts Visa and MasterCard, as forms of credit card payment. By submitting Buyer’s order and selecting to use a credit card as a form of payment, Buyer represents and warrants that Buyer is authorized to use the designated credit card and authorizes the Seller to charge Buyer’s order (including taxes, shipping and handling) to that card. If the card cannot be verified, is invalid, or is otherwise not acceptable, Buyer’s order may be suspended or cancelled automatically. All credit card orders are subject to a 4% service charge. The Seller further reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to request partial payment from Buyer, prior to processing Buyer’s order. Form of Allowed Payment: The Seller does NOT accept cheques as a form of payment. The Buyer must make payment by ACH (EFT) or credit card. Payment Terms: Upon the Seller accepting the Buyer’s purchase order or signed quote, the Buyer shall immediately pay the Seller fifty-percent (50%) of the value of the Buyer’s order (the “First Payment”). The Seller will take no action to fulfill the Buyer’s order without completion of the First Payment. The installation of the hardware, included in the Buyer’s order, must be scheduled within 30 days of the hardware delivery date. The hardware delivery date is evidenced by the date received on the shipping receipt. The Buyer shall provide the Seller a second payment equal to forty percent (40%) of the value of the Buyer’s order (the “Second Payment”) within 30 days of the hardware delivery date. A final payment for the balance outstanding on the Buyer’s order will be made by the Buyer to the Seller within thirty (30) days of the installation date (the “Project’s Completion”). The Seller does NOT accept pay-when-paid terms. Deducting Amounts: The Buyer shall not deduct any amounts from any Seller invoice without the Seller’s express written approval, which approval shall be contingent upon Buyer providing all supporting documentation for such deduction as required by the Seller. Any authorized deductions for returned Products must include Buyer’s customer tracking number and the Seller’s Return Merchandise Authorization (“RMA”) number. Deductions received by the Seller without advance notice will be denied. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 4.Partial Billing by the Seller The Seller reserves the right to partially bill the Buyer for the portion of any line item or bundled price in an order if a material portion has been shipped, delivered or otherwise completed. 5.Shipping Terms and Policies Delivery shall be made in accordance with the Seller's shipping policy in effect on the date of shipment. Product title and risk of loss will transfer to Buyer upon the Seller tendering the Product for delivery to the carrier (F.O.B. Origin). If Buyer requests special shipping or handling, including expedited shipment, third-party billing, or freight collect, Buyer shall be responsible for filing claims with the carrier and all freight and handling costs. Buyer shall pay for any special routing, packing, handling or insurance requested by Buyer and agreed to by the Seller. Orders shipped under special routing instructions must be separately agreed upon and may be subject to additional charges. The Seller will not be subject to requirements of non-compliance programs of Buyer, including charges for product delays, missing/inaccurate shipping documents, labeling or product markings. Buyer shall promptly notify the Seller, no later than 30 days from invoice date, of any claimed shortages or rejection as to any delivery, with the exception of deliveries that reveal external shipping damage, which, in some instances, must be refused immediately upon delivery by the carrier. Such notice shall be in writing and shall be reasonably detailed stating the grounds for any such rejection. Failure to provide any such notice within such time shall be deemed an acceptance in full of any such delivery.b The Seller shall not be liable for any shipment delays that affect the Seller or any of the Seller's suppliers, including but not limited to delays caused by unavailability or shortages of Products from the Seller's suppliers, natural disasters, acts of war or terrorism, acts or omissions of Buyer, fire, strike, riot, or governmental interference, unavailability or shortage of materials, labor, fuel or power through normal commercial channels at customary and reasonable rates, failure or destruction of plant or equipment arising from any cause whatsoever, or transportation failures. 6.On-Site Agreement Policy Buyer has 24 hours from the date first agreed upon by both parties to cancel or reschedule without charge. Buyer agrees to pay the Seller a $2,500 cancellation fee if the service dates requested are cancelled for any reason other than the Seller issuing the cancellation or Force Majeure. A “Force Majeure” is defined as fire, explosion, accident, drought, storm, hail, earthquake, embargo, epidemic, act of God which has resulted in, or could reasonably be expected to result in the cancellation of the Seller’s field services representative travel request. 7.Back Orders If, for any reason, an item on Buyer’s order is temporarily out of stock, the Seller will endeavor to back order that item for Buyer. Items on back order will be charged when the items are actually shipped, along with applicable taxes and shipping charges. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 8.Return Policy – All Sales Final All sales are final, except where otherwise agreed upon by Buyer and the Seller. Should the Seller, in its sole discretion, allow Buyer to return an item, the following return policy applies for that return: i. In order for the Seller to approve any product return, the product must not be opened or damaged, and in its original undamaged packaging. the Seller will not accept "open box" returns. ii. As the Seller sells specific project based manufactured and configured computers, accessories and electronic devices, unopened box returns also may be denied. The Seller cannot re-sell or return a computer that has been built to a Buyer’s specifications. iii. Any and all product returns must be approved by the Seller, in the Seller’s sole discretion, and a Return Merchandise Authorization (“RMA”) number must be issued. iv. Approved returns must be made within 30 days of the delivery date. v. Approved returns will incur a 25% restocking fee. vi. Returns must be received within 15 days of the RMA number issuance. vii. The Buyer is responsible for all insurance and shipping charges associated with the return. viii. All returns must be sent via UPS, Federal Express, or any other professional courier that provides a tracking number and proof of delivery. ix. If the returned product does not meet the requirements stated above, the product will be sent back to the customer “freight collect”. x. Once the Seller has approved a return, Buyer’s refund will be issued within 7 days, and Buyer will receive an email confirmation that Buyer’s return is completed. Please note that, depending on Buyer’s financial institution, it may take an additional 2-10 business days for the credit to post to Buyer’s account. 9.Errors The Seller attempts to be as accurate as possible. However, the Seller does not warrant that all product descriptions, photographs, pricing, or other information provided is accurate, complete, current, or error-free. In addition, all weights and size dimensions are approximate. If a product offered by the Seller is not as described or pictured, Buyer’s sole remedy is to return it in an undamaged, unused condition for a refund, subject to the return policy herein. In the event of an error in an order confirmation, in processing an order, in delivering a product, or otherwise, we reserve the right to correct such error and revise Buyer’s order accordingly, or to cancel the order and refund any amount charged. Buyer’s sole remedy in the event of an error is, subject to the return policy herein, to cancel Buyer’s order and obtain a refund. 10.Disclaimer of Warranty SELLER PROVIDES NO WARRANTY TO ITS CUSTOMERS FOR ANY PRODUCTS SOLD. SELLER HEREBY DISCLAIMS AND EXCLUDES ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, STATUTORY, OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, ACCEPTABILITY, SATISFACTORY QUALITY, NON-INFRINGEMENT, TITLE, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, LOSS OF OR DAMAGE TO DATA, AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 LACK OF VIRUSES OR FREE FROM VIRUS OR MALWARE ATTACK, SECURITY, PERFORMANCE, LACK OF NEGLIGENCE, WORKMANLIKE EFFORT, QUIET ENJOYMENT, THAT THE FUNCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE PRODUCT WILL MEET BUYER’S REQUIREMENTS, OR THAT DEFECTS IN THE PRODUCT WILL BE CORRECTED, OR THAT BUYER’S USE OF THE PRODUCT WILL GENERATE ACCURATE, RELIABLE, TIMELY RESULTS , INFORMATION, OR DATA. NO ORAL OR WRITTEN INFORMATION OR ADVICE GIVEN BYb SELLER, A DEALER, AGENT, OR AFFILIATE SHALL CREATE A WARRANTY. TO THE EXTENT WARRANTIES CANNOT BE DISCLAIMED OR EXCLUDED, THEY ARE LIMITED TO THE DURATION OF THE RELEVANT EXPRESS WARRANTY PERIOD. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, IN NO EVENT SHALL SELLER, ITS AFFILIATES, DEALERS, AGENTS OR SUPPLIERS OR THEIR RESPECTIVE OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES, LICENSORS AND ASSIGNS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, EXEMPLARY, PUNITIVE, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES WHATSOEVER (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS OR REVENUE, FOR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, FOR PERSONAL INJURY, FOR LOSS OF PRIVACY, FOR LOSS OF ABILITY TO USE ANY THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS OR SERVICES, FOR FAILURE TO MEET ANY DUTY INCLUDING OF GOOD FAITH OR OF REASONABLE CARE, FOR NEGLIGENCE, AND FOR ANY OTHER PECUNIARY OR OTHER LOSS WHATSOEVER), REGARDLESS OF THE THEORY OF LIABILITY (CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE) ARISING OUT OF OR IN ANY WAY RELATED TO THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THE PRODUCT, EVEN IF PCS OR SUCH OTHER ENTITIES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE TOTAL AGGREGATE LIABILITY OF PCS, ITS AFFILIATES, ASSOCIATES, DEALERS, AGENTS OR SUPPLIERS TO BUYER FOR ALL DAMAGES EXCEED THE PRICE BUYER PAID FOR THE PRODUCT. THIS LIMITATION IS CUMULATIVE AND WILL NOT BE INCREASED BY THE EXISTENCE OF MORE THAN ONE INCIDENT OR CLAIM. THE FOREGOING LIMITATIONS WILL APPLY EVEN IF ANY WARRANTY OR REMEDY PROVIDED FAILS OF ITS ESSENTIAL PURPOSE. SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR OF LIABILITY FOR INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THE FOREGOING LIMITATIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO BUYER. IF ANY TERM IS HELD TO BE ILLEGAL OR UNENFORCEABLE, THE LEGALITY OR ENFORCEABILITY OF THE REMAINING TERMS SHALL NOT BE AFFECTED OR IMPAIRED. 11.Limitation of Liability SELLER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, PUNITIVE, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING LOST PROFITS) ARISING OUT OF THIS AGREEMENT (UNDER ANY THEORY INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, NEGLIGENCE, CONTRACT OR STRICT LIABILITY), EVEN IF SUCH PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO CASE WILL SELLER’S TOTAL CUMULATIVE LIABILITY TO BUYER RELATED TO THIS AGREEMENT EXCEED THIRTY PERCENT (30%) THE CONTRACT AMOUNT ACTUALLY RECEIVED BY SELLER. 12.Manufacturer's Warranty Warranties may be available directly from select manufacturers. Manufacturer information is subject to change without notice. Not all manufacturers for products which the Seller sells will offer manufacturers’ warranties. In the event Buyer attaches any third party product, software, or equipment to Seller’s product sold pursuant to this Agreement or the related quote, all warranties provided for under this Agreement, including manufacturer warranties, may become null and void. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 13.Confidentiality The Seller and the Buyer agree to keep confidential all the terms of the Agreement, and any proprietary, trade secret of other information which the Seller or Buyer receives from the other in the performance of the Services under the Agreement, however, this shall not apply to information which is: (i) necessary to be disclosed to a third party in order to perform an Agreement; (ii) already known free of any restriction at the time it is obtained; (iii) subsequently learned from an independent third party free of restriction; (iv) is publicly available or (v) is required by law or court order to be disclosed. 14.Intellectual Property Upon Seller’s receipt of full payment from Buyer, Seller grants to Buyer a limited, nonexclusive, nonsublicensable, and nontransferable license to use the Seller’s technology, equipment, software, information, copyrightable material, copyrights, trademarks, patents, data or other material (the “Intellectual Property”) provided by the Seller in delivery of the Services. The Seller owns or has a license or other right to use the Intellectual Property which is being distributed to the Buyer and the Seller reserves all rights to the Intellectual Property. Buyer hereby acknowledges that the Seller retains all right, title and interest in and to the copyrights, trademarks, patents and other intellectual property rights inherent or related in any way to the Intellectual Property provided. The Seller shall own all rights in any changes, enhancements, and modifications made by the Buyer to the Seller’s Intellectual Property. Buyer agrees that neither it nor any of its employees or agents will contest or challenge the Seller’s ownership or rights in its Intellectual Property, make or authorize any use of the Seller’s Intellectual Property that is not consistent with the Agreement or these terms and conditions or modify or reproduce the content or substance of the Intellectual Property.b See www.route1.com/terms-of-use/for notice of the Seller’s intellectual property. The license granted under this Agreement does not include any right to and Buyer agrees that it will not and will not cause a third party to: (i) modify, alter, enhance, change, supplement or otherwise create derivative works of or from the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof, (ii) sell, transfer, assign, rent, lend, lease, distribute or otherwise commercially exploit or make available to any third party the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof (and any attempt to do so will be void), (iii) sublicense any right with respect to the Intellectual Property granted to Buyer by this Agreement, (iv) make copies of the Intellectual Property, (v) use the Intellectual for any purpose other than the purpose contemplated in the Agreement, (vi) exercise any rights of a copyright holder with respect to the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof, other than those expressly granted by this Agreement, or (v) reverse engineer, disassemble, adapt, translate, decompile or otherwise make any attempt to ascertain, derive or obtain the source code for the Intellectual Property or any of the related features related thereto. Buyer agrees not to remove or alter any copyright legend, trademark, confidentiality or other proprietary notice appearing on the Intellectual Property, copies of the Intellectual Property or, to the extent applicable, Intellectual Property output. Buyer must obtain Seller’s prior written consent to any transfer or sale of the Equipment to a third party and pay any applicable transfer fee. Further, Buyer may not grant a security interest, lien or other interest or right in the Intellectual Property to any third party without Seller’s prior written consent. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 15.Indemnification (a)Indemnification by Seller. Seller agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Buyer and its directors, officers, employees and agents harmless from and against any and all losses, damages, liabilities, judgments, penalties, fines, costs, and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) (collectively “Damages”), arising out of or in connection with a third party claim (a “Claim”) that the Intellectual Property owned by Seller that is licensed to Buyer under this Agreement, when used by Buyer as directed by Seller, infringes a United States patent, copyright or trademark. In the event of such a Claim, Seller may, at its option and expense and as Buyer’s sole remedy, (i) replace the Intellectual Property without additional charge, with a functionally equivalent and non-infringing product, (ii) modify the Intellectual Property to avoid the infringement, or (iii) obtain a license for Buyer to continue use of the Intellectual Property at no additional charge to Buyer. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Seller will have no liability for, or any indemnification, defense, or hold harmless obligation under this Section 15(a) as a result of, any Claim of infringement that results from (i) Seller’s compliance with Buyer’s specifications, (ii) any modification of the Intellectual Property by or on behalf of Buyer without Seller’s prior written consent, (iii) infringement or alleged infringement by the a related manufacturer on the intellectual property rights of any third party, (iv) any failure by Buyer to implement updates to the Intellectual Property as supplied by Seller, or (v) the combination, operation, or use of the Intellectual Property with equipment, software, programs, or data not provided by Seller, if such infringement would have been avoided by the use of the Intellectual Property without such combination, operation or use. (b) Buyer agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Seller harmless from and against any and all Damages arising out of or in connection with any third party Claim (i) of bodily injury, death, or damage to real or tangible personal property caused by acts or omissions of Buyer, (ii) that any specification, process, design or other information provided by Buyer infringes a United States patent, copyright or trademark, (iii) arising out of or relating to Buyer’s or its agents’ or representatives’ negligence or intentional misconduct, or (iv) arising out of or relating to Buyer’s or its agents’ or representatives’ failure to (a) follow directions, instructions, warnings or recommendations furnished in writing by Seller regarding the Intellectual Property or other goods or services delivered pursuant to the quote, or (b) comply with applicable federal, state or local laws regarding the Intellectual Property or the facility at which the Intellectual Property is located. (c) For each of the indemnification obligations set forth in Section 15(a) and 15(b), the indemnified party will give the indemnifying party (i) prompt written notice of such Claims, provided that the failure or delay to notify the indemnifying party will not relieve the indemnifying party from any liability that it may have to an indemnified party under this Agreement so long as the failure or delay will not have materially prejudiced the defense of such Claim, (ii) reasonable assistance in defending the Claim, and (iii) sole authority to defend or settle such Claim, provided that the indemnified party will not be required to consent to a judgment against it or enter into a settlement that is prejudicial to it. 16.Waiver of Liability Relating to COVID-19 The installation of equipment, hardware or software by the Seller on the Buyer’s site pursuant to the Agreement may require employees or contractors of the Seller to be present and in physical proximity to Buyer’s employees, contractors, agents, customers, etc. Buyer understands that the Seller cannot prevent possible exposure to, contracting or spreading of COVID-19 by its employees or contractors. It is not possible to prevent the presence of COVID-19 and therefore if Buyer utilizes the Seller’s onsite installation services, Buyer understands that it may be exposing its employees and others onsite to AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 increased risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19. By engaging in onsite Services, Buyer acknowledges and accepts the risk to its employees and others onsite of exposure to, contracting and/or spreading of COVID-19. The Buyer indemnifies the Seller against any claims arising out of exposure to, contracting and/or spreading of COVID-19 by virtue of the Seller’s provision of onsite Services. The Buyer hereby forever releases and waives the right to bring suit against the Seller and its owners, officers, directors, managers, officials, agents, employees or other representatives in connection with the exposure, infection, and/or spread of COVID-19 related to the provision of onsite Services. 17.Support Contract as Applicable The Seller offers three levels of support plans for license plate recognition customers: Elemental, Comprehensive and Select. b The support plan’s scope and specific terms are appended to the Seller’s quote and or invoice. (a)Warranty Term for Onsite WorkmanshipThe Seller guarantees its workmanship post application. The warranty term is found in your quote. This warranty extends to hardware installations performed by the Seller personnel. The Seller does not warranty any third-party equipment or software. The Seller will pass along the warranty it receives from the original equipment manufacturer or owner of the software. In the event Buyer attaches any third party product, software, or equipment to Seller’s product sold pursuant to this Agreement or the related quote, all warranties provided for under this Agreement, including manufacturer warranties, may become null and void. (b)Server, Software, and Firmware UpdatesAs part of your support contract, the Seller may install critical software and firmware updates from manufacturers as required and when released. Critical updates will have priority, non-critical updates will be completed on an as needed basis and based on the terms of your support contract with the Seller. (c)Remote Support Rapid ResponseThe Seller provides remote support to all clients.b Depending on the plan, your authorized contacts are guaranteed a specified response time during the contracted support hours.b Support is not available on weekends and holidays for elemental and comprehensive support plan clients. (d)Number of CallsThe number incidents per month that your authorized contact(s) can make to our support team is defined in your quote. (e)Annual Site Maintenance VisitDefined in your quote. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 (f)RMA Processing and TrackingMost original equipment manufacturers, including Genetec, require a certification in order to request an RMA. If an original equipment manufacturer's repair is required and depending on your service contract, the Seller will work with the original equipment manufacturer to create an RMA. Any original equipment manufacturer’s costs related to the RMA such as damage or out of warranty repairs are the Buyer's responsibility. The Buyer requesting the RMA may also be responsible for shipping costs and processing fees, depending upon their service plan.b Based on your service plan, the Seller will track your RMA to ensure its timely completion and the return of your equipment. Any costs associated with an on-site visit related to an RMA are not included in our support plans. (g)Camera TypeMost organizations charge extra depending on the type of camera(s) you deploy.b We do not.b (h)Authorized ContactsThe Seller is a security-first organization that serves clients such as the U.S. Department of Defense. We want to validate that we’re only working with “authorized” personnel from your organization in order to protect our interests and yours.b Because of this, you are required to name specific people who are authorized to work with us on your behalf. (i)Annual Configuration TimeSome support plans include a certain number of configuration hours. Configuration time allows our experts to make changes to your system throughout the year for you so you don’t have to. This can also include creating reports. Configuration hours are not bankable so any unused hours expire at the end of each one-year term. (j)Price Per Additional Configuration HourAll additional configuration hours must be purchased in blocks of four (4) hours at the rate associated with your plan.b Your plan locks your costs in at a lower rate for the duration of your support agreement. (k)Client Support HoursOur support team is staffed to meet your needs during the hours stated in your plan.b (l)Emergency ResponsivenessEmergency responsiveness is our guarantee of how quickly we will schedule someone to come onsite when needed.b All days are business days and do not include weekends or holidays.b Costs associated with emergency onsite visits such as travel, meals, lodging and the Seller personnel charges are not bincluded in our support plans.b Emergency onsite visits will be performed on a time and material basis and will require a purchase order prior to scheduling.b However, you will always be entitled to have the visit scheduled within the maximum period prescribed by your support plan. An “Emergency” is any incident or problem that severely impacts your operation and has gone through our remote support protocols and that has been determined by the Seller that it cannot be fixed outside of an onsite visit. The actual countdown to onsite service cannot begin until all equipment required for the response is in hand including RMAs and other equipment that is that is not manufactured by the Seller. Our onsite visit is dependent on vendors and manufacturers’ response time, availability of hardware, and the client’s availability and ability to provide us with access to the location of the ALPR deployment at their site.b AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 (m)Hot-swap Inventory on HandFor our clients on Select Plans, the Seller will maintain materials on hand for emergency replacement.b The Buyer is responsible for purchasing the hot-swap inventory.b Additional installation fees may apply as required. 18.Privacy Please refer to the Seller’s Privacy Statement, available at www.route1.com/privacy-policy for information about how the Seller collects, uses, and discloses personal information from users of the site. 19.Dispute Resolution and Binding Arbitration BUYER AND SELLER AGREE TO GIVE UP ANY RIGHTS TO LITIGATE CLAIMS IN A COURT OR BEFORE A JURY, OR TO PARTICIPATE IN A CLASS ACTION OR REPRESENTATIVE ACTION WITH RESPECT TO A CLAIM. OTHER RIGHTS THAT BUYER WOULD HAVE IF BUYER WENT TO COURT MAY ALSO BE UNAVAILABLE OR MAY BE LIMITED IN ARBITRATION. Any claim, dispute, or controversy, whether in contract, tort or otherwise, whether pre-existing, present, or future, and including statutory, consumer protection, common law, intentional tort, injunctive, and equitable claims, between Buyer and either the Seller, its agents, employees, successors, assigns, direct and indirect subsidiaries, or any third party providing any products or services to Buyer in connection with Buyer’s purchase arising from or relating in any way to Buyer’s purchase of products, these Terms of Sale, their interpretation, or the breach, termination, or validity thereof, the relationships which result from these Terms of Sale (including relationships with third parties who are not signatories to these Terms of Sale), the Seller’s advertising, or any related purchase, shall be resolved exclusively and finally by binding arbitration. The arbitrator shall have exclusive authority to resolve any dispute relating to arbitrability and/or enforceability of this arbitration provision, including any unconscionability challenge or any other challenge that the arbitration provision of the Terms of Sale is void, voidable, or otherwise invalid. The arbitration shall be administered by the American Arbitration Association (AAA) or JAMS (or a substitute forum if both are unavailable). Arbitration proceedings shall be governed by this provision and the applicable procedures of the selected arbitration administrator, including any applicable procedures for consumer-related disputes, in effect at the time the claim is filed. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Buyer may assert claims in a small claims court if Buyer’s claims qualify. The Federal Arbitration Act and federal arbitration law apply to these Terms of Sale. Buyer agrees to an arbitration on an individual basis. In any dispute, NEITHER BUYER NOR SELLER SHALL BE ENTITLED TO JOIN OR CONSOLIDATE CLAIMS BY OR AGAINST OTHER CUSTOMERS, OR ARBITRATE OR OTHERWISE PARTICIPATE IN ANY CLAIM AS A CLASS REPRESENTATIVE, CLASS MEMBER, OR IN A PRIVATE ATTORNEY GENERAL CAPACITY. If any provision of this arbitration clause is found unenforceable, the unenforceable provision shall be severed and the remaining arbitration terms shall be enforced (but in no case shall there be a class arbitration). The arbitrator shall be empowered to grant whatever relief would be available in court under law or in equity. Any award of the arbitrator(s) shall be final and binding on each of the parties and may be entered as a judgment in any court of competent jurisdiction. Information on AAA or JAMS and their applicable rules are available at the following numbers and URLs: American Arbitration Association, (800) 778-7879, www.adr.org; JAMS, (800) 352-5267, www.jamsadr.com. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #1942 07/01/2025 20.Applicable Law and Jurisdiction This Agreement will be governed by the substantive laws of the state of Arizona without giving effect to any choice of law rules. The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods will not apply to this Agreement. Buyer is responsible for compliance with local laws, if and to the extent local laws are applicable. Both parties to this Agreement specifically agree to submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of, and venue in, the courts in Maricopa County, Arizona in any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement. 21.Export Controls Certain the Seller products may be subject to export controls imposed by the United States of America, and may not be exported or re-exported: (a) into (or to a national or resident of) any country to which the United States of America has placed an embargo, including without limitation, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Syria, Sudan, or Venezuela; (b) to everyone on the U.S. Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals list, or (c) the U.S. Commerce Department’s Table of Denial Orders (collectively, the “Prohibited Countries”). By purchasing any the Seller product, Buyer represents and warrants that Buyer is not located in any Prohibited Country, that Buyer is not under the control of any Prohibited Country, or that Buyer is not a national or resident of any Prohibited Country. 22.Severability If any provision of these Terms of use shall be deemed unlawful, void, or for any reason unenforceable, then that provision shall be deemed severable from these Terms of Sale and shall not affect the validity and enforceability of any remaining provisions. Agreement. Buyer is responsible for compliance with local laws, if and to the extentpp y g y p p ,local laws are applicable. Both parties to this Agreement specifically agree to submit to the exclusiveppjurisdiction of, and venue in, AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 Note: This Quote is good and valid for 15 days beyond the Quote Date. Bill To Ship To TOTAL City of Renton1055 S Grady WayRenton WA 98057United States City of Renton1055 S Grady WayRenton WA 98057United States $8,284.56 Expiration Date: 08/09/2025 Terms Expiration Date PO #Sales Rep Shipping Method Deposit - 50% (LPR)08/09/2025 Jason J Hardabura Project Description City of Renton CradlePoint Purchase and Installation tied to: Ref Route1 Q# 1942 - dated 1 July 2025) Engineering Services 2 Installation Cradlepoint and Antenna services for one mobile LPR Vehicle (University/City/Law Unit). 1 Cost of technician to travel to provide on-site installation. This is a per trip charge; if technician is required to return to site for reasons outside of Route1's control, there will need to be additional trip charges. (At no cost if work done in conjunction with Overtime Patroller Installations - Ref Route1 Q# 1942 - dated 1 July 2025) Value: $3600 Subtotal:$1,000.00 Hardware and Software - Sensors and Data Acquisition : Hardware and Software - User Interface and Communications 2 5-yr NetCloud Mobile Performance Essentials Plan and R1900 router with WiFi (5G modem), no AC power supplyor antennas, Global 2 Parsec - Irish Setter PRO 7:1 low profile Antenna (mobile/fixed applications) rugged, omni-directiona, IP67, 5G, 600 MHz - 6 GHz; (7) 15ft. cables with SMA Male connectors; 4 CELL, 2 WIFI, GPS (Black radome) Short bolt .6 inches. Cradlepoint certified antenna 1 Shipping Subtotal:$6,607.50 Tax (%)$677.06 Total $8,284.56 &YIJCJU$ AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 The below Terms of Sale are an integral part of this quote. In order for this quote to be effective, the attached Terms of Sale must be agreed to. Customer Authorizing Party Signature: b ________________________________________ Date of Signature: b ________________________________________ AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 Terms of Sale Route1 Inc. (“Route1”) is the parent company of operating subsidiaries Route 1 Security Corporation, Portable Computer Systems, Inc. doing business as PCS Mobile, Spyrus Solutions Inc., Group Mobile Int’l, LLC, DataSource Mobility, LLC and VetSource Mobility, LLC. (collectively the “Seller”).b Each of these subsidiaries, as applicable, continue as valid parties to all agreements. The submittal of a purchase order to the Seller by the customer referred to in the attached quote (the “Customer”, “Client” or the “Buyer”) referencing the Quote No. and the specifics from that Quote or a Customer Authorizing Party signature on the Quote, indicates acceptance of the below terms and conditions. Please read these Terms of Sale (the “Terms of Sale”) carefully. Except where indicated otherwise, these terms and conditions shall supersede any subsequent terms or conditions included with any purchase order. The Seller reserves the right to make changes to these terms and conditions at any time. In the event that there is any conflict or inconsistency between these Terms of Sale and any other terms of sale or use, these Terms of Sale will govern. 1.Acceptance of Order Buyer’s placement of an order does not necessarily ensure that we will accept the Buyer’s order. We reserve the right to refuse any order in our sole discretion. In addition, before accepting Buyer’s order, we may require additional information if Buyer has not provided all of the information required by the Seller to complete Buyer’s order. Once a properly completed order is received, authorization of Buyer’s form of payment is received and we have accepted Buyer’s order, we will promptly place Buyer’s order in line for shipment. Once an order has been accepted by the Seller, it cannot typically be cancelled. If an order cancellation request is received and accepted by the Seller prior to product shipment, a 15% cancellation fee will apply. 2.Pricing and Availability All prices for products (and the associated costs of shipping and tax) are shown in U.S. dollars. All items are subject to availability and we reserve the right to impose quantity limits on any order, to reject all or part of an order, and to discontinue products without notice, even if Buyer has already placed an order. All prices are subject to change without notice, and Buyer agrees that taxes may be adjusted from the amount shown on this quote. Several factors may cause this, such as variances between processor programs and changes in tax rates. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 3.Buyer Credit, Form of Payment and Payment Terms If the Buyer requests credit from the Seller, the Buyer shall provide all financial information reasonably requested by the Seller from time to time for the sole purpose of establishing or continuing the Buyer’s credit limit. Buyer agrees that the Seller shall have the right to decline or extend credit to Buyer, and to require that the applicable purchase price be paid prior to shipment. The Seller shall have the right from time to time, without notice, to change or revoke Buyer’s credit limit on the basis of changes in the Seller’s credit policies or Buyer’s financial condition and/or payment record. If credit terms are not available to the Buyer, pre-payment may be made by ACH (EFT) or Wire Transfer. The Seller currently accepts Visa and MasterCard, as forms of credit card payment. By submitting Buyer’s order and selecting to use a credit card as a form of payment, Buyer represents and warrants that Buyer is authorized to use the designated credit card and authorizes the Seller to charge Buyer’s order (including taxes, shipping and handling) to that card. If the card cannot be verified, is invalid, or is otherwise not acceptable, Buyer’s order may be suspended or cancelled automatically. All credit card orders are subject to a 4% service charge. The Seller further reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to request partial payment from Buyer, prior to processing Buyer’s order. Form of Allowed Payment: The Seller does NOT accept cheques as a form of payment. The Buyer must make payment by ACH (EFT) or credit card. Payment Terms: Upon the Seller accepting the Buyer’s purchase order or signed quote, the Buyer shall immediately pay the Seller fifty-percent (50%) of the value of the Buyer’s order (the “First Payment”). The Seller will take no action to fulfill the Buyer’s order without completion of the First Payment. The installation of the hardware, included in the Buyer’s order, must be scheduled within 30 days of the hardware delivery date. The hardware delivery date is evidenced by the date received on the shipping receipt. The Buyer shall provide the Seller a second payment equal to forty percent (40%) of the value of the Buyer’s order (the “Second Payment”) within 30 days of the hardware delivery date. A final payment for the balance outstanding on the Buyer’s order will be made by the Buyer to the Seller within thirty (30) days of the installation date (the “Project’s Completion”). The Seller does NOT accept pay-when-paid terms. Deducting Amounts: The Buyer shall not deduct any amounts from any Seller invoice without the Seller’s express written approval, which approval shall be contingent upon Buyer providing all supporting documentation for such deduction as required by the Seller. Any authorized deductions for returned Products must include Buyer’s customer tracking number and the Seller’s Return Merchandise Authorization (“RMA”) number. Deductions received by the Seller without advance notice will be denied. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 4.Partial Billing by the Seller The Seller reserves the right to partially bill the Buyer for the portion of any line item or bundled price in an order if a material portion has been shipped, delivered or otherwise completed. 5.Shipping Terms and Policies Delivery shall be made in accordance with the Seller's shipping policy in effect on the date of shipment. Product title and risk of loss will transfer to Buyer upon the Seller tendering the Product for delivery to the carrier (F.O.B. Origin). If Buyer requests special shipping or handling, including expedited shipment, third-party billing, or freight collect, Buyer shall be responsible for filing claims with the carrier and all freight and handling costs. Buyer shall pay for any special routing, packing, handling or insurance requested by Buyer and agreed to by the Seller. Orders shipped under special routing instructions must be separately agreed upon and may be subject to additional charges. The Seller will not be subject to requirements of non-compliance programs of Buyer, including charges for product delays, missing/inaccurate shipping documents, labeling or product markings. Buyer shall promptly notify the Seller, no later than 30 days from invoice date, of any claimed shortages or rejection as to any delivery, with the exception of deliveries that reveal external shipping damage, which, in some instances, must be refused immediately upon delivery by the carrier. Such notice shall be in writing and shall be reasonably detailed stating the grounds for any such rejection. Failure to provide any such notice within such time shall be deemed an acceptance in full of any such delivery.b The Seller shall not be liable for any shipment delays that affect the Seller or any of the Seller's suppliers, including but not limited to delays caused by unavailability or shortages of Products from the Seller's suppliers, natural disasters, acts of war or terrorism, acts or omissions of Buyer, fire, strike, riot, or governmental interference, unavailability or shortage of materials, labor, fuel or power through normal commercial channels at customary and reasonable rates, failure or destruction of plant or equipment arising from any cause whatsoever, or transportation failures. 6.On-Site Agreement Policy Buyer has 24 hours from the date first agreed upon by both parties to cancel or reschedule without charge. Buyer agrees to pay the Seller a $2,500 cancellation fee if the service dates requested are cancelled for any reason other than the Seller issuing the cancellation or Force Majeure. A “Force Majeure” is defined as fire, explosion, accident, drought, storm, hail, earthquake, embargo, epidemic, act of God which has resulted in, or could reasonably be expected to result in the cancellation of the Seller’s field services representative travel request. 7.Back Orders If, for any reason, an item on Buyer’s order is temporarily out of stock, the Seller will endeavor to back order that item for Buyer. Items on back order will be charged when the items are actually shipped, along with applicable taxes and shipping charges. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 8.Return Policy – All Sales Final All sales are final, except where otherwise agreed upon by Buyer and the Seller. Should the Seller, in its sole discretion, allow Buyer to return an item, the following return policy applies for that return: i. In order for the Seller to approve any product return, the product must not be opened or damaged, and in its original undamaged packaging. the Seller will not accept "open box" returns. ii. As the Seller sells specific project based manufactured and configured computers, accessories and electronic devices, unopened box returns also may be denied. The Seller cannot re-sell or return a computer that has been built to a Buyer’s specifications. iii. Any and all product returns must be approved by the Seller, in the Seller’s sole discretion, and a Return Merchandise Authorization (“RMA”) number must be issued. iv. Approved returns must be made within 30 days of the delivery date. v. Approved returns will incur a 25% restocking fee. vi. Returns must be received within 15 days of the RMA number issuance. vii. The Buyer is responsible for all insurance and shipping charges associated with the return. viii. All returns must be sent via UPS, Federal Express, or any other professional courier that provides a tracking number and proof of delivery. ix. If the returned product does not meet the requirements stated above, the product will be sent back to the customer “freight collect”. x. Once the Seller has approved a return, Buyer’s refund will be issued within 7 days, and Buyer will receive an email confirmation that Buyer’s return is completed. Please note that, depending on Buyer’s financial institution, it may take an additional 2-10 business days for the credit to post to Buyer’s account. 9.Errors The Seller attempts to be as accurate as possible. However, the Seller does not warrant that all product descriptions, photographs, pricing, or other information provided is accurate, complete, current, or error-free. In addition, all weights and size dimensions are approximate. If a product offered by the Seller is not as described or pictured, Buyer’s sole remedy is to return it in an undamaged, unused condition for a refund, subject to the return policy herein. In the event of an error in an order confirmation, in processing an order, in delivering a product, or otherwise, we reserve the right to correct such error and revise Buyer’s order accordingly, or to cancel the order and refund any amount charged. Buyer’s sole remedy in the event of an error is, subject to the return policy herein, to cancel Buyer’s order and obtain a refund. 10.Disclaimer of Warranty SELLER PROVIDES NO WARRANTY TO ITS CUSTOMERS FOR ANY PRODUCTS SOLD. SELLER HEREBY DISCLAIMS AND EXCLUDES ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, STATUTORY, OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, ACCEPTABILITY, SATISFACTORY QUALITY, NON-INFRINGEMENT, TITLE, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, LOSS OF OR DAMAGE TO DATA, AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 LACK OF VIRUSES OR FREE FROM VIRUS OR MALWARE ATTACK, SECURITY, PERFORMANCE, LACK OF NEGLIGENCE, WORKMANLIKE EFFORT, QUIET ENJOYMENT, THAT THE FUNCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE PRODUCT WILL MEET BUYER’S REQUIREMENTS, OR THAT DEFECTS IN THE PRODUCT WILL BE CORRECTED, OR THAT BUYER’S USE OF THE PRODUCT WILL GENERATE ACCURATE, RELIABLE, TIMELY RESULTS , INFORMATION, OR DATA. NO ORAL OR WRITTEN INFORMATION OR ADVICE GIVEN BYb SELLER, A DEALER, AGENT, OR AFFILIATE SHALL CREATE A WARRANTY. TO THE EXTENT WARRANTIES CANNOT BE DISCLAIMED OR EXCLUDED, THEY ARE LIMITED TO THE DURATION OF THE RELEVANT EXPRESS WARRANTY PERIOD. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, IN NO EVENT SHALL SELLER, ITS AFFILIATES, DEALERS, AGENTS OR SUPPLIERS OR THEIR RESPECTIVE OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES, LICENSORS AND ASSIGNS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, EXEMPLARY, PUNITIVE, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES WHATSOEVER (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS OR REVENUE, FOR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, FOR PERSONAL INJURY, FOR LOSS OF PRIVACY, FOR LOSS OF ABILITY TO USE ANY THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS OR SERVICES, FOR FAILURE TO MEET ANY DUTY INCLUDING OF GOOD FAITH OR OF REASONABLE CARE, FOR NEGLIGENCE, AND FOR ANY OTHER PECUNIARY OR OTHER LOSS WHATSOEVER), REGARDLESS OF THE THEORY OF LIABILITY (CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE) ARISING OUT OF OR IN ANY WAY RELATED TO THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THE PRODUCT, EVEN IF PCS OR SUCH OTHER ENTITIES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE TOTAL AGGREGATE LIABILITY OF PCS, ITS AFFILIATES, ASSOCIATES, DEALERS, AGENTS OR SUPPLIERS TO BUYER FOR ALL DAMAGES EXCEED THE PRICE BUYER PAID FOR THE PRODUCT. THIS LIMITATION IS CUMULATIVE AND WILL NOT BE INCREASED BY THE EXISTENCE OF MORE THAN ONE INCIDENT OR CLAIM. THE FOREGOING LIMITATIONS WILL APPLY EVEN IF ANY WARRANTY OR REMEDY PROVIDED FAILS OF ITS ESSENTIAL PURPOSE. SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR OF LIABILITY FOR INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THE FOREGOING LIMITATIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO BUYER. IF ANY TERM IS HELD TO BE ILLEGAL OR UNENFORCEABLE, THE LEGALITY OR ENFORCEABILITY OF THE REMAINING TERMS SHALL NOT BE AFFECTED OR IMPAIRED. 11.Limitation of Liability SELLER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, PUNITIVE, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING LOST PROFITS) ARISING OUT OF THIS AGREEMENT (UNDER ANY THEORY INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, NEGLIGENCE, CONTRACT OR STRICT LIABILITY), EVEN IF SUCH PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO CASE WILL SELLER’S TOTAL CUMULATIVE LIABILITY TO BUYER RELATED TO THIS AGREEMENT EXCEED THIRTY PERCENT (30%) THE CONTRACT AMOUNT ACTUALLY RECEIVED BY SELLER. 12.Manufacturer's Warranty Warranties may be available directly from select manufacturers. Manufacturer information is subject to change without notice. Not all manufacturers for products which the Seller sells will offer manufacturers’ warranties. In the event Buyer attaches any third party product, software, or equipment to Seller’s product sold pursuant to this Agreement or the related quote, all warranties provided for under this Agreement, including manufacturer warranties, may become null and void. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 13.Confidentiality The Seller and the Buyer agree to keep confidential all the terms of the Agreement, and any proprietary, trade secret of other information which the Seller or Buyer receives from the other in the performance of the Services under the Agreement, however, this shall not apply to information which is: (i) necessary to be disclosed to a third party in order to perform an Agreement; (ii) already known free of any restriction at the time it is obtained; (iii) subsequently learned from an independent third party free of restriction; (iv) is publicly available or (v) is required by law or court order to be disclosed. 14.Intellectual Property Upon Seller’s receipt of full payment from Buyer, Seller grants to Buyer a limited, nonexclusive, nonsublicensable, and nontransferable license to use the Seller’s technology, equipment, software, information, copyrightable material, copyrights, trademarks, patents, data or other material (the “Intellectual Property”) provided by the Seller in delivery of the Services. The Seller owns or has a license or other right to use the Intellectual Property which is being distributed to the Buyer and the Seller reserves all rights to the Intellectual Property. Buyer hereby acknowledges that the Seller retains all right, title and interest in and to the copyrights, trademarks, patents and other intellectual property rights inherent or related in any way to the Intellectual Property provided. The Seller shall own all rights in any changes, enhancements, and modifications made by the Buyer to the Seller’s Intellectual Property. Buyer agrees that neither it nor any of its employees or agents will contest or challenge the Seller’s ownership or rights in its Intellectual Property, make or authorize any use of the Seller’s Intellectual Property that is not consistent with the Agreement or these terms and conditions or modify or reproduce the content or substance of the Intellectual Property.b See www.route1.com/terms-of-use/for notice of the Seller’s intellectual property. The license granted under this Agreement does not include any right to and Buyer agrees that it will not and will not cause a third party to: (i) modify, alter, enhance, change, supplement or otherwise create derivative works of or from the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof, (ii) sell, transfer, assign, rent, lend, lease, distribute or otherwise commercially exploit or make available to any third party the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof (and any attempt to do so will be void), (iii) sublicense any right with respect to the Intellectual Property granted to Buyer by this Agreement, (iv) make copies of the Intellectual Property, (v) use the Intellectual for any purpose other than the purpose contemplated in the Agreement, (vi) exercise any rights of a copyright holder with respect to the Intellectual Property, or any portions thereof, other than those expressly granted by this Agreement, or (v) reverse engineer, disassemble, adapt, translate, decompile or otherwise make any attempt to ascertain, derive or obtain the source code for the Intellectual Property or any of the related features related thereto. Buyer agrees not to remove or alter any copyright legend, trademark, confidentiality or other proprietary notice appearing on the Intellectual Property, copies of the Intellectual Property or, to the extent applicable, Intellectual Property output. Buyer must obtain Seller’s prior written consent to any transfer or sale of the Equipment to a third party and pay any applicable transfer fee. Further, Buyer may not grant a security interest, lien or other interest or right in the Intellectual Property to any third party without Seller’s prior written consent. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 15.Indemnification (a)Indemnification by Seller. Seller agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Buyer and its directors, officers, employees and agents harmless from and against any and all losses, damages, liabilities, judgments, penalties, fines, costs, and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) (collectively “Damages”), arising out of or in connection with a third party claim (a “Claim”) that the Intellectual Property owned by Seller that is licensed to Buyer under this Agreement, when used by Buyer as directed by Seller, infringes a United States patent, copyright or trademark. In the event of such a Claim, Seller may, at its option and expense and as Buyer’s sole remedy, (i) replace the Intellectual Property without additional charge, with a functionally equivalent and non-infringing product, (ii) modify the Intellectual Property to avoid the infringement, or (iii) obtain a license for Buyer to continue use of the Intellectual Property at no additional charge to Buyer. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Seller will have no liability for, or any indemnification, defense, or hold harmless obligation under this Section 15(a) as a result of, any Claim of infringement that results from (i) Seller’s compliance with Buyer’s specifications, (ii) any modification of the Intellectual Property by or on behalf of Buyer without Seller’s prior written consent, (iii) infringement or alleged infringement by the a related manufacturer on the intellectual property rights of any third party, (iv) any failure by Buyer to implement updates to the Intellectual Property as supplied by Seller, or (v) the combination, operation, or use of the Intellectual Property with equipment, software, programs, or data not provided by Seller, if such infringement would have been avoided by the use of the Intellectual Property without such combination, operation or use. (b) Buyer agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Seller harmless from and against any and all Damages arising out of or in connection with any third party Claim (i) of bodily injury, death, or damage to real or tangible personal property caused by acts or omissions of Buyer, (ii) that any specification, process, design or other information provided by Buyer infringes a United States patent, copyright or trademark, (iii) arising out of or relating to Buyer’s or its agents’ or representatives’ negligence or intentional misconduct, or (iv) arising out of or relating to Buyer’s or its agents’ or representatives’ failure to (a) follow directions, instructions, warnings or recommendations furnished in writing by Seller regarding the Intellectual Property or other goods or services delivered pursuant to the quote, or (b) comply with applicable federal, state or local laws regarding the Intellectual Property or the facility at which the Intellectual Property is located. (c) For each of the indemnification obligations set forth in Section 15(a) and 15(b), the indemnified party will give the indemnifying party (i) prompt written notice of such Claims, provided that the failure or delay to notify the indemnifying party will not relieve the indemnifying party from any liability that it may have to an indemnified party under this Agreement so long as the failure or delay will not have materially prejudiced the defense of such Claim, (ii) reasonable assistance in defending the Claim, and (iii) sole authority to defend or settle such Claim, provided that the indemnified party will not be required to consent to a judgment against it or enter into a settlement that is prejudicial to it. 16.Waiver of Liability Relating to COVID-19 The installation of equipment, hardware or software by the Seller on the Buyer’s site pursuant to the Agreement may require employees or contractors of the Seller to be present and in physical proximity to Buyer’s employees, contractors, agents, customers, etc. Buyer understands that the Seller cannot prevent possible exposure to, contracting or spreading of COVID-19 by its employees or contractors. It is not possible to prevent the presence of COVID-19 and therefore if Buyer utilizes the Seller’s onsite installation services, Buyer understands that it may be exposing its employees and others onsite to AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 increased risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19. By engaging in onsite Services, Buyer acknowledges and accepts the risk to its employees and others onsite of exposure to, contracting and/or spreading of COVID-19. The Buyer indemnifies the Seller against any claims arising out of exposure to, contracting and/or spreading of COVID-19 by virtue of the Seller’s provision of onsite Services. The Buyer hereby forever releases and waives the right to bring suit against the Seller and its owners, officers, directors, managers, officials, agents, employees or other representatives in connection with the exposure, infection, and/or spread of COVID-19 related to the provision of onsite Services. 17.Support Contract as Applicable The Seller offers three levels of support plans for license plate recognition customers: Elemental, Comprehensive and Select. b The support plan’s scope and specific terms are appended to the Seller’s quote and or invoice. (a)Warranty Term for Onsite WorkmanshipThe Seller guarantees its workmanship post application. The warranty term is found in your quote. This warranty extends to hardware installations performed by the Seller personnel. The Seller does not warranty any third-party equipment or software. The Seller will pass along the warranty it receives from the original equipment manufacturer or owner of the software. In the event Buyer attaches any third party product, software, or equipment to Seller’s product sold pursuant to this Agreement or the related quote, all warranties provided for under this Agreement, including manufacturer warranties, may become null and void. (b)Server, Software, and Firmware UpdatesAs part of your support contract, the Seller may install critical software and firmware updates from manufacturers as required and when released. Critical updates will have priority, non-critical updates will be completed on an as needed basis and based on the terms of your support contract with the Seller. (c)Remote Support Rapid ResponseThe Seller provides remote support to all clients.b Depending on the plan, your authorized contacts are guaranteed a specified response time during the contracted support hours.b Support is not available on weekends and holidays for elemental and comprehensive support plan clients. (d)Number of CallsThe number incidents per month that your authorized contact(s) can make to our support team is defined in your quote. (e)Annual Site Maintenance VisitDefined in your quote. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 (f)RMA Processing and TrackingMost original equipment manufacturers, including Genetec, require a certification in order to request an RMA. If an original equipment manufacturer's repair is required and depending on your service contract, the Seller will work with the original equipment manufacturer to create an RMA. Any original equipment manufacturer’s costs related to the RMA such as damage or out of warranty repairs are the Buyer's responsibility. The Buyer requesting the RMA may also be responsible for shipping costs and processing fees, depending upon their service plan.b Based on your service plan, the Seller will track your RMA to ensure its timely completion and the return of your equipment. Any costs associated with an on-site visit related to an RMA are not included in our support plans. (g)Camera TypeMost organizations charge extra depending on the type of camera(s) you deploy.b We do not.b (h)Authorized ContactsThe Seller is a security-first organization that serves clients such as the U.S. Department of Defense. We want to validate that we’re only working with “authorized” personnel from your organization in order to protect our interests and yours.b Because of this, you are required to name specific people who are authorized to work with us on your behalf. (i)Annual Configuration TimeSome support plans include a certain number of configuration hours. Configuration time allows our experts to make changes to your system throughout the year for you so you don’t have to. This can also include creating reports. Configuration hours are not bankable so any unused hours expire at the end of each one-year term. (j)Price Per Additional Configuration HourAll additional configuration hours must be purchased in blocks of four (4) hours at the rate associated with your plan.b Your plan locks your costs in at a lower rate for the duration of your support agreement. (k)Client Support HoursOur support team is staffed to meet your needs during the hours stated in your plan.b (l)Emergency ResponsivenessEmergency responsiveness is our guarantee of how quickly we will schedule someone to come onsite when needed.b All days are business days and do not include weekends or holidays.b Costs associated with emergency onsite visits such as travel, meals, lodging and the Seller personnel charges are not bincluded in our support plans.b Emergency onsite visits will be performed on a time and material basis and will require a purchase order prior to scheduling.b However, you will always be entitled to have the visit scheduled within the maximum period prescribed by your support plan. An “Emergency” is any incident or problem that severely impacts your operation and has gone through our remote support protocols and that has been determined by the Seller that it cannot be fixed outside of an onsite visit. The actual countdown to onsite service cannot begin until all equipment required for the response is in hand including RMAs and other equipment that is that is not manufactured by the Seller. Our onsite visit is dependent on vendors and manufacturers’ response time, availability of hardware, and the client’s availability and ability to provide us with access to the location of the ALPR deployment at their site.b AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 (m)Hot-swap Inventory on HandFor our clients on Select Plans, the Seller will maintain materials on hand for emergency replacement.b The Buyer is responsible for purchasing the hot-swap inventory.b Additional installation fees may apply as required. 18.Privacy Please refer to the Seller’s Privacy Statement, available at www.route1.com/privacy-policy for information about how the Seller collects, uses, and discloses personal information from users of the site. 19.Dispute Resolution and Binding Arbitration BUYER AND SELLER AGREE TO GIVE UP ANY RIGHTS TO LITIGATE CLAIMS IN A COURT OR BEFORE A JURY, OR TO PARTICIPATE IN A CLASS ACTION OR REPRESENTATIVE ACTION WITH RESPECT TO A CLAIM. OTHER RIGHTS THAT BUYER WOULD HAVE IF BUYER WENT TO COURT MAY ALSO BE UNAVAILABLE OR MAY BE LIMITED IN ARBITRATION. Any claim, dispute, or controversy, whether in contract, tort or otherwise, whether pre-existing, present, or future, and including statutory, consumer protection, common law, intentional tort, injunctive, and equitable claims, between Buyer and either the Seller, its agents, employees, successors, assigns, direct and indirect subsidiaries, or any third party providing any products or services to Buyer in connection with Buyer’s purchase arising from or relating in any way to Buyer’s purchase of products, these Terms of Sale, their interpretation, or the breach, termination, or validity thereof, the relationships which result from these Terms of Sale (including relationships with third parties who are not signatories to these Terms of Sale), the Seller’s advertising, or any related purchase, shall be resolved exclusively and finally by binding arbitration. The arbitrator shall have exclusive authority to resolve any dispute relating to arbitrability and/or enforceability of this arbitration provision, including any unconscionability challenge or any other challenge that the arbitration provision of the Terms of Sale is void, voidable, or otherwise invalid. The arbitration shall be administered by the American Arbitration Association (AAA) or JAMS (or a substitute forum if both are unavailable). Arbitration proceedings shall be governed by this provision and the applicable procedures of the selected arbitration administrator, including any applicable procedures for consumer-related disputes, in effect at the time the claim is filed. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Buyer may assert claims in a small claims court if Buyer’s claims qualify. The Federal Arbitration Act and federal arbitration law apply to these Terms of Sale. Buyer agrees to an arbitration on an individual basis. In any dispute, NEITHER BUYER NOR SELLER SHALL BE ENTITLED TO JOIN OR CONSOLIDATE CLAIMS BY OR AGAINST OTHER CUSTOMERS, OR ARBITRATE OR OTHERWISE PARTICIPATE IN ANY CLAIM AS A CLASS REPRESENTATIVE, CLASS MEMBER, OR IN A PRIVATE ATTORNEY GENERAL CAPACITY. If any provision of this arbitration clause is found unenforceable, the unenforceable provision shall be severed and the remaining arbitration terms shall be enforced (but in no case shall there be a class arbitration). The arbitrator shall be empowered to grant whatever relief would be available in court under law or in equity. Any award of the arbitrator(s) shall be final and binding on each of the parties and may be entered as a judgment in any court of competent jurisdiction. Information on AAA or JAMS and their applicable rules are available at the following numbers and URLs: American Arbitration Association, (800) 778-7879, www.adr.org; JAMS, (800) 352-5267, www.jamsadr.com. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) Portable Computer Systems, Inc.7300 Via Paseo Del SurSuite 202Scottsdale AZ 85258United States Quote #2283 07/10/2025 20.Applicable Law and Jurisdiction This Agreement will be governed by the substantive laws of the state of Arizona without giving effect to any choice of law rules. The United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods will not apply to this Agreement. Buyer is responsible for compliance with local laws, if and to the extent local laws are applicable. Both parties to this Agreement specifically agree to submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of, and venue in, the courts in Maricopa County, Arizona in any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement. 21.Export Controls Certain the Seller products may be subject to export controls imposed by the United States of America, and may not be exported or re-exported: (a) into (or to a national or resident of) any country to which the United States of America has placed an embargo, including without limitation, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Syria, Sudan, or Venezuela; (b) to everyone on the U.S. Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals list, or (c) the U.S. Commerce Department’s Table of Denial Orders (collectively, the “Prohibited Countries”). By purchasing any the Seller product, Buyer represents and warrants that Buyer is not located in any Prohibited Country, that Buyer is not under the control of any Prohibited Country, or that Buyer is not a national or resident of any Prohibited Country. 22.Severability If any provision of these Terms of use shall be deemed unlawful, void, or for any reason unenforceable, then that provision shall be deemed severable from these Terms of Sale and shall not affect the validity and enforceability of any remaining provisions. AGENDA ITEM #6. d) AB - 3904 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Pharmacy Benefit Manager Change (January 1, 2026) RECOMMENDED ACTION: Refer to Finance Committee DEPARTMENT: Human Resources / Risk Management Department STAFF CONTACT: David Topaz, Administrator EXT.: X7657 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: The administrative fee is $108,322 which is slightly higher than current administration costs however we expect the increased costs will be offset by lower overall drug costs. This amount is budgeted within the healthcare funds for active employees and LEOFF 1 retirees. Additional budget of $50K will be needed to fund this contract for 2026. Authorization is requested for additional budget appropriations for the healthcare funds in the amount of $50K and will be included in the mid-biennial budget adjustment for 2026. SUMMARY OF ACTION: The current prescription benefit vendor, Costco Health Services (CHS), provided sufficient notice to the city that effective December 31, 2025, they are exiting the pharmacy benefit market and will no longer be in the business of providing prescription benefit services. To ensure continued prescription benefits in 2026, for our employees and LEOFF 1 retirees under our self- funded health plan, our health insurance broker conducted a request for proposals for pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) services. Four responses to the RFP were received and evaluated. Of the four vendor responses, MedImpact provides the greatest cost savings on prescription medications at 33.4%. They also offer the most flexibility to maintain current benefits and is the least disruptive option to our members. The expenditure required for this contract includes an annual administrative fee of $108,322. This amount is budgeted under administrative fees within the healthcare insurance fund for active employees and LEOFF 1 retirees. EXHIBITS: A. Financial summary for MedImpact STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Approve the transfer of Pharmacy Benefit Manager services to MedImpact, authorize the Human Resources & Risk Management Department to complete negotiations with MedImpact consistent with such transfer, and authorize the Mayor and City to Clerk to sign an agreement with MedImpact when it is ready and approve the additional budget appropriations of $50k for 2026. AGENDA ITEM #6. e) ©2025 ARTHUR J. GALLAGHER & CO. 12 Financial Summary: Year 1: 1/1/2026-12/31/2026 Baseline MedImpact Pass-Through Broad Network MedPerform Formulary Drug Costs Retail $765,489 $906,859 Retail 90 $796,862 $582,686 Mail $315,982 $285,338 Specialty Retail $38,331 $36,797 Specialty Mail $1,605,834 $1,197,382 Total Drug Costs $3,522,498 $3,009,061 Administrative Fee $51,652 $108,322 Total Administrative Fee $51,652 $108,322 Total Gross Cost before Rebates $3,574,150 $3,117,383 Gross Cost before Rebates Savings Over Baseline ($) ($456,767) Gross Cost before Rebates Savings Over Baseline (%) -12.8% Rebates Retail ($424,463) ($256,855) Retail 90 ($194,436) ($77,552) Mail ($114,939) ($160,200) Specialty Retail ($644) ($19,563) Specialty Mail ($12,722) ($719,434) Total Rebates ($747,203) ($1,233,604) Total Gross Cost $2,826,947 $1,883,780 Gross Cost Savings Over Baseline ($)($943,168) Gross Cost Savings Over Baseline (%)-33.4% Gross Cost Ranking (#)1 AGENDA ITEM #6. e) AB - 3906 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Renton Municipal Community Court Funding/Interagency Agreement with Administrative Office of Courts - FY26 RECOMMENDED ACTION: Refer to Finance Committee DEPARTMENT: Municipal Court STAFF CONTACT: Yanna Filippidis, Judicial Administrative Officer EXT.: 6531 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: 1-year interagency agreement between the Administrative Office of the Courts and Renton Municipal Court to support our Community Court efforts. Total financial allocation of $228,283 to be used for: 1. Personnel costs - $212,345.00 2. Staff equipment and technology - $500 3. Team training/travel - $7,033.00 4. Treatment services - $3,145.00 5. Recovery supports - $5,260.00 Authorization is requested for additional budget appropriations for the Municipal Court offset by additional grant revenues and will be included in the mid-biennial budget adjustment SUMMARY OF ACTION: Renton Municipal Court is requesting approval of the Therapeutic Courts Interagency Agreement from the Administrative Office of the Courts for fiscal year 2026. This funding allocation will help offset costs associated with the Renton Municipal Community Court program. EXHIBITS: A. Interagency Agreement between WA AOC and Renton Municipal Court (IAA26850) STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Approval of the 1-year Therapeutic Courts Interagency Agreement issued by the Administrative Office of the Courts, in the amount of $228,283 to assist with the expenses associated with the operation of the Renton Municipal Community Court. AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 1 of 15 INTERAGENCY AGREEMENT BETWEEN WASHINGTON STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS AGREEMENT # IAA26XXX AND FOR THERAPEUTIC COURTS 1.PARTIES TO THE AGREEMENT This Interagency Agreement is made and entered into by and between the State of Washington acting by and through the Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts, hereinafter referred to as “AOC or Procuring Agency,” and Okanogan County Therapeutic Court , referred to as “Court or Agency”. 2.PURPOSE The purpose of this Agreement is to provide reimbursements to Courts for assisting with costs related to Therapeutic Courts. THEREFORE, IT IS MUTUALLY AGREED THAT: 3.STATEMENT OF WORK The Court shall: a.Use funding to identify individuals before their Therapeutic Court, as defined by RCW 2.30.030, with behavioral health needs outlined in their application and engage those individuals with community-based therapeutic interventions within the Therapeutic Court’s jurisdiction in accordance with the Court’s funding application. Funds will be allocated using budget line items with the following categories: Personnel Costs, Staff Equipment & Technology, Team Training/Travel, Treatment Services and Recovery Supports. Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 Renton Municipal Court IAA26850 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT IAA26850 (;+,%,7$ AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 2 of 15 b. Submit reports to CLJ Therapeutic Court Program, following the following guidelines: i. Content of reports shall include:  Document the progress of their Therapeutic Court Program.  Identify the number of program participants (therapeutic court referrals, entries, opt in agreements, active participants, terminations and graduations).  The services provided to program participants for the corresponding quarter.  Challenges faced by the Court in operating their Therapeutic Court Program during the corresponding quarter.  Any questions CLJ Therapeutic Court staff include in the reporting portal ii. Reporting Schedule, reports shall be submitted quarterly observing the information provided below: Period Quarter Report Due 07/01/25-09/30/25 1 10/15/25 10/01/25-12/31/25 2 01/15/26 01/01/26-03/31/26 3 04/15/26 04/01/26-06/30/26 4 7/15/26 (final report for the year) * Failure to submit a report by the due date will adversely affect the Court’s eligibility for future funding. iii. Reporting shall be done in reporting portal, which will be provided via email prior to the quarterly report due date to Court by AOC Program Manager via email. c. Submit questions related to deliverables or the required applicability to Court to your CLJ Therapeutic Court Contract Manager via email. d. Other deliverables shall be required applicable to a specific Therapeutic Court may include the following: i. Planning: • Therapeutic Court staff shall complete applicable Best Practice Standards modules on-line courses/E-learning at https://allrise.org/trainings/online-courses/ • Identify Target Population (e.g. eligibility and exclusion criteria, utilize valid Risk-Needs-Responsivity tool – RNR). • Identify Team Roles and Responsibilities (judge, prosecutor, defense, coordinator, case manager, etc.). Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 3 of 15 • Equity and inclusion (e.g. staff training, equity monitoring, equitable treatment, equitable incentives, and sanctions). ii. Implementation • Develop guidelines, policies and procedures for therapeutic court structure, including drug testing practices, incentive and response policies, phase structure, and handbooks. • Hold community partner meetings (prosecution, defense, treatment, law enforcement, probation, etc.). • Create Memorandum of Understanding (MOU’s) with stakeholders. iii. Scale and Sustain • Begin evaluation of data to assess successes and areas of need by completing the Washington Therapeutic Court Evaluation and Review (WATER) on an annual basis, according to the period of performance of this award (Refer to section III of the agreement). Process review/evaluation (after WATER). • Employ continuous quality improvement methods to refine the model, updating model and adopted guidelines, policies and procedures as required, and as it relates to Best Practice standards. • Develop system to track and evaluate performance of therapeutic court programming. iv. Other • Engage in technical assistance with the CLJ Therapeutic Courts team. • Attend regular meetings with the Administrative Office of the Court CLJ Therapeutic Courts team. • Attend trainings identified and/or provided by the CLJ Therapeutic Courts team. 4. PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE Subject to its other provisions, the period of performance of this Agreement shall commence on July 1, 2025, and end on June 30, 2026, unless terminated sooner or extended, as provided herein. 5. COMPENSATION The amount awarded may not exceed $100,000.00 for payments made during the period from July 1, 2025, through June 30, 2026, related to the purpose of this agreement. The Court shall use these funds in the following cost categories: Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 $228,283.00 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 4 of 15 Cost Category Amount Personnel Costs Staff Equipment & Technology Team Training/Travel Treatment Services Recovery supports Total Amount Ten percent (10%) or less of these funds can be moved from one category to another without exceeding the total amount of the funds provided. Any adjustments beyond 10% require written approval of AOC CLJ Therapeutic Court Contract Manager. This can be an authorization provided by email. A list of allowable and unallowable expenses is provided to Court within attachment A of this agreement and should be referenced for adequate use of funds. Procuring Agency may extend the term of this Contract or increase funds by mutual written amendment. Such amendment shall be on the same terms and conditions as set forth in this Contract. 6. REVENUE SHARING a. The AOC will notify the Court no later than May 1, 2026 via unilateral amendment to the agreement that the AOC intends to redistribute funding among the courts participating in the program, pursuant to the program’s appropriation language. The AOC may increase the total value of the Agreement if additional funds are available or reduce the Agreement amount based on actual expenses incurred by the Court through submitted Invoices and supporting documentation. b. The Court must submit the final program Invoice to the AOC CLJ TC Therapeutic Court Contract Manager no later than July 12, 2026. The revenue sharing process must be completed by August 1, 2026. 7. INVOICES; BILLING; PAYMENT The Agency will submit properly prepared itemized invoices via email on an A19 form addressed to AOC Program Manager at CLJTherapeuticCourtsApplications@courts.wa.gov. Invoices shall be submitted no more than once a month. Incorrect or incomplete A19s shall be returned by AOC to the Agency for correction or reissuance. All A19s shall provide and itemize, at a minimum, the following: Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 $7,033.00 $212,345.00 $500.00 IAA26850 $228,283.00 $5,260.00 $3,145.00 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 5 of 15 • Agreement Number: • Agency name, address and phone number • Description of Reimbursement • Date(s) Services were provided • Receipt(s) if applicable • Total Reimbursement Payment will be considered timely if made by the AOC within thirty (30) calendar dates of receipt of a properly prepared A19. No A19 shall be submitted until after a deliverable has been accepted by the AOC CLJ Therapeutic Court Contract Manager. The AOC will not make any advanced payments or payments in anticipation of services or supplies under this Contract. 8. AGREEMENT MANAGEMENT The CLJ Therapeutic Court Contract Manager and Agency Program Manager noted below shall be responsible for and shall be the contact people for all communications and billings regarding the performance of this Contract. The parties may change administrators by written notice. AOC Program Manager Agency Program Manager Leah Niccolocci PO Box 41170 Olympia, WA 98504-1170 Leah.Niccolocci@courts.wa.gov 9. RECORDS, DOCUMENTS, AND REPORTS a. Records Retention. The Agency shall maintain books, records, documents and other evidence of accounting procedures and practices which sufficiently and properly reflect all direct and indirect costs of any nature expended in the performance of this contract. These records shall be subject at all reasonable times to inspection, review, or audit by personnel duly authorized by the AOC, the Office of the State Auditor, and federal officials so authorized by law, rule, regulation, or contract. The agency will retain all books, records, documents, and other material relevant to this contract as required, a minimum of six (6) years after end of period of performance (including all amendments to extend) or termination of the agreement or as otherwise specified and make them available for inspection by persons authorized under this provision. If any litigation, claim, or audit is Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 IAA26850 Sierra Simmons ssimmons@rentonwa.gov 1055 South Grady Way Renton, WA 98057 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 6 of 15 commenced prior to the expiration of the required retention period, such period shall extend until all such litigation, claims, or audits have been resolved. b. Public Records. It is the policy of the Administrative Office of the Courts to facilitate access to its administrative public records. This Agreement and related records are subject to disclosure under General Court Rule 31.1. For additional information, please contact the AOC Public Records Officer. 10. RIGHTS IN DATA Unless otherwise provided, data which originates from this Agreement shall be "works for hire" as defined by the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976 and shall be owned by the AOC. Data shall include, but not be limited to, reports, documents, pamphlets, advertisements, books magazines, surveys, studies, computer programs, films, tapes, and/or sound reproductions. Ownership includes the right to copyright, patent, register, and the ability to transfer these rights. 11. RESPONSIBILITY OF THE PARTIES Each party to this Agreement assumes responsibility for claims and/or damages to persons and/or property resulting from any act or omission on the part of itself, its employees, or its agents. Neither party assumes any responsibility to the other party for any third-party claims. 12. DISPUTE RESOLUTION To the extent practicable, the Parties shall use their best, good faith efforts cooperatively and collaboratively to resolve any dispute that may arise in connection with this Agreement as efficiently as practicable, and at the lowest possible level with authority to resolve such dispute. The Parties shall make a good faith effort to continue without delay to carry out their respective responsibilities under this Agreement while attempting to resolve any such dispute. If, however, a dispute persists and cannot reasonably be resolved, it may be escalated within each organization. In such circumstance, upon notice by either party, each party, within five (5) business days shall reduce its description of the dispute to writing and deliver it to the other party. The receiving party then shall have three (3) business days to review and respond in writing. In the event the parties cannot agree on a mutual resolution within fifteen (15) business days, the parties shall appoint a member of a dispute resolution board within Thurston County and those two appointed members will select a third. The Board shall employ dispute resolution measures and its result is binding. Both parties agree that, the existence of a dispute notwithstanding, the Parties will continue without delay to carry out all respective responsibilities under this Agreement that are not affected by the dispute. 13. GENERAL PROVISIONS a. Amendment or Modification. Except as set forth herein, this Agreement may not be amended or modified except in writing and signed by a duly authorized Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 7 of 15 representative of each party hereto. In revenue sharing procedures AOC will issue a unilateral amendment. a. Appendix. All appendices referred to herein are deemed to be incorporated in this Agreement in their entirety. b. Assignment. The work to be provided under this Agreement, and any claim arising thereunder, is not assignable or delegable by either party in whole or in part, without the express prior written consent of the other party, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld. c. Authority. Each party to this Agreement, and each individual signing on behalf of each party, hereby represents and warrants to the other that it has full power and authority to enter into this Agreement and that its execution, delivery, and performance of this Agreement has been fully authorized and approved, and that no further approvals or consents are required to bind such party. d. Captions & Headings. The captions and headings in this Agreement are for convenience only and are not intended to, and shall not be construed to, limit, enlarge, or affect the scope or intent of this Agreement nor the meaning of any provisions hereof. e. Conformance. If any provision of this Agreement violates any statute or rule of law of the State of Washington, it is considered modified to conform to that statute or rule of law. f. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original and all of which counterparts together shall constitute the same instrument which may be sufficiently evidenced by one counterpart. Execution of this Agreement at different times and places by the Parties shall not affect the validity thereof so long as all the Parties hereto execute a counterpart of this Agreement. g. Electronic Signatures. An electronic signature or electronic record of this Agreement or any other ancillary agreement shall be deemed to have the same legal effect as delivery of an original executed copy of this Agreement or such other ancillary agreement for all purposes. h. Entire Agreement. This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement and understanding of the Parties with respect to the subject matter and supersedes all prior negotiations, representations, and understandings between them. There are no representations or understandings of any kind not set forth herein. i. Governing Law. The validity, construction, performance, and enforcement of this Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Washington, without regard to its choice of law principles that would provide for the application of the laws of another jurisdiction. Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 8 of 15 j. Independent Capacity. The employees or agents of each party who are engaged in the performance of this Agreement shall continue to be employees or agents of that party and shall not be considered for any purpose to be employees or agents of the other party. k. Jurisdiction & Venue. In the event that any action is brought to enforce any provision of this Agreement, the parties agree to exclusive jurisdiction in Thurston County Superior Court for the State of Washington and agree that in any such action venue shall lie exclusively at Olympia, Washington. l. No Agency. The parties agree that no agency, partnership, or joint venture of any kind shall be or is intended to be created by or under this Agreement. Neither party is an agent of the other party nor authorized to obligate it. m. Right of Inspection. The Agency shall provide right of access to its facilities to the AOC, or any of its officers, or to any other authorized agent or official of the State of Washington at all reasonable times, in order to monitor and evaluate performance, compliance, and/or quality assurance under this agreement. n. Severability. If any provision of this Agreement or any provision of any document incorporated by reference shall be held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect the other provisions of this Agreement which can be given effect without the invalid provision, if such remainder conforms to the requirements of applicable law and the fundamental purpose of this agreement, and to this end the provisions of this Agreement are declared to be severable. o. Termination for Cause. If for any cause, either party does not fulfill in a timely and proper manner its obligations under this Agreement, or if either party violates any of these terms and conditions, the aggrieved party will give the other party written notice of such failure or violation. The responsible party will be given the opportunity to correct the violation or failure within 15 working days. If failure or violation is not corrected, this Agreement may be terminated immediately by written notice of the aggrieved party to the other. p. Termination for Convenience. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, either party may terminate this Agreement upon thirty (30) calendar days prior written notification. Upon such termination, the parties shall be liable only for performance rendered or costs incurred in accordance with the terms of this Agreement prior to the effective date of such termination. q. Termination for Non-Availability of Funds. AOC’s ability to make payments is contingent on availability of funding. In the event funding from state, federal, or other sources is withdrawn, reduced, or limited in any way after the effective date and prior to completion or expiration date of this Agreement, AOC, at its sole discretion, may Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) REV May2025 Page 9 of 15 elect to terminate the Agreement, in whole or part, for convenience or to renegotiate the Agreement subject to new funding limitations and conditions. AOC may also elect to suspend performance of the Agreement until AOC determines the funding insufficiency is resolved. AOC may exercise any of these options with no notification restrictions, although AOC will make a reasonable attempt to provide notice. In the event of termination or suspension, AOC will reimburse eligible costs incurred by the Agency through the effective date of termination or suspension. Reimbursed costs must be agreed to by AOC and the Agency. In no event shall AOC’s reimbursement exceed AOC’s total responsibility under the agreement and any amendments. r. Suspension for Convenience. AOC may suspend this Agreement or any portion thereof for a temporary period by providing written notice to the Agency a minimum of seven (7) calendar days before the suspension date. Agency shall resume performance on the first business day following the suspension period unless another day is specified in writing by AOC prior to the expiration of the suspension period. s. Waiver. A failure by either party to exercise its rights under this Agreement shall not preclude that party from subsequent exercise of such rights and shall not constitute a waiver of any other rights under this Agreement unless stated to be such in a writing signed by an authorized representative of the party and attached to the original Agreement. EXECUTED AND EFFECTIVE as of the day and date first above written. WASHINGTON STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS THERAPEUTIC COURTS ________________________________ Signature Date _______________________________ Signature Date ________________________________ Name ____________________________ Name ________________________________ Title ____________________________ Title Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 Yanna Filippidis Renton Municipal Court IAA26850 Judicial Administrative Officer Dawn Marie Rubio AGENDA ITEM #6. f) A-1 ATTACHMENT A: USE OF FUNDS FY2026 Use of Funds Allowable Expenses Common allowable expenses listed below. Supporting documents are required for all allowable expenses. See what’s required under each spending category. Unallowable Expenses Funds cannot be used for: •Replacing or supplanting the salary of current employees of the Court (employees must be taking on additional work or be a new employee to be eligible for funding). •Program incentives that constitute a gift or reward. •Items and activities outside of the cost categories listed in the Court’s contract. The list of unallowable expenses is not exhaustive. If you are unsure whether your expense is allowable, please contact CLJTherapeuticCourtsApplications@cou rts.wa.gov for clarification before making a purchase. Personnel Costs Personnel salaries and benefits for staff while working on therapeutic court duties or procedures Court Staff including: •Coordinator •Case Manager •Peer Support •Prosecution •Defense •Probation •Judicial Officers o Judges o Pro Tem Judges o Commissioners Personnel Costs Court Staff including: •Security Personnel •Supporting the salary/benefits of any staff member not related to the therapeutic court •Indirect Cost Page 10 of 15 Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) A-2 Supporting documents must list staff member name, staff member title, pay period •Payroll Ledgers •Pay Stubs Please highlight/write amount charged to AOC funding on supporting documentation and ensure it matches amount listed on A19. Staff Equipment & Technology •Includes equipment, supplies, software, and IT maintenance for staff that support the program. •Computers •Cell Phones •Printers/Fax Machines •Staff Desk equipment and supplies o Office Chairs for Staff o Office Desk for Staff o Desk Phone o Keyboard/Mouse o Monitor(s) o Headsets o Computer Webcams o Desk Organizers/Storage o Pens/Pencils o Paper/Notebooks o Paper Clips/Binders/Stapler o A/V equipment for courtroom o Other Office supplies o Translation Services (program materials) •IT Maintenance and Tech Support •Software Subscriptions •Supplies for community meetings and staff retreats Staff Equipment & Technology •Furniture o Couches o Beds o Armoire o Atelier o Chaise longue o Chifforobe o Dresser o TV Stands o Bookcases o Accent Chairs o Conference Table •Software o New subscriptions for case management software o OCourt Subscriptions •Other Technology o A/V equipment for conference rooms Page 11 of 15 Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) A-3 Supporting documents must list name of vendor, purchase date, amount paid, and method of payment •Receipts •Invoices Please highlight/write amount charged to AOC funding on supporting documentation and ensure it matches amount listed on A19. Team Training/Travel Training for program staff on the use of Risk-Needs-Responsivity (RNR) assessments and evidence-based treatment modalities. Exceptions to below list can be submitted for preapproval to CLJTherapeuticCourtsApplications@court s.wa.gov Prioritized Trainings •WSADCP trainings/conferences •All Rise trainings/conferences Other Eligible Training Suggestions upon approval of contract team •NADCP trainings/conferences •Center for Justice Innovation (CJI) trainings/conferences Travel expenses related to training •Meals (per diem rate) •Air travel – travel insurance/refundable tickets recommended •Lodging (per diem rate) – the AOC will not reimburse until after checkout •Transportation o Mileage o Car rental o Parking Team Training/Travel •Training and travel expenses not pre- approved by AOC staff •Staff mileage to/from work site •Purchase of vehicles Page 12 of 15 Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) A-4 o Other Transport Ferries Taxis Uber/Lyft Bus fare Shuttle fare Subway/Link/Railway fare *Tips cover transportation and must not be over 15% of purchase total. Supporting documents must list names and titles of therapeutic court staff attending, name of vendor, purchase date, amount paid, and method of payment •Receipts (receipts not required for meals, the AOC reimburses at the per diem rate) •Invoices Please highlight/write amount charged to AOC funding on supporting documentation and ensure it matches amount listed on A19. Treatment Services Treatment services not covered by participants’ insurance or co-insurance, costs that are deemed unaffordable to the participants, and compliance monitoring. Participants are encouraged to apply for Apple Care. •Participant Medical Insurance Deductibles and Spend Downs •Therapeutic Services not covered by participant insurance but recommended by treatment or therapeutic court staff (i.e. DV treatment) •Lab & Toxicology Testing Treatment Services •Professional Licensing Fees •Services that are eligible and covered via participants medical insurance (i.e. Ongoing treatment for a participant with Medicaid/private insurance in lieu of local BHA) Page 13 of 15 Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) A-5 •Treatment Staff/Peer Support contracted by the court o Mental Health Services o Peer Support Services o SUDP o Veteran’s Support Services Supporting documents must list name of vendor, purchase date, amount paid, and method of payment •Receipts •Invoices Please highlight/write amount charged to AOC funding on supporting documentation and ensure it matches amount listed on A19. Recovery Supports Other services for participants that are not accessible through other local, state, or federal programs, services meant to ensure participants’ success in program. *Not an exhaustive list •Participant Transportation o Bus Passes o Uber/Lyft Rides o Car Services o Other Transit Services •Food & Beverages - *Participants o Meals (*Graduation or other pre-approved event; must have agenda & sign in sheet, or other approved documentation – no more than $20.00 per person) o Snacks o Water o Non-alcoholic Beverages (*no mocktails allowed) •Food & Beverages *Staff Recovery Supports •Gas cards •Gift Cards •Gifts •Logoed apparel •Driver Educational Courses •License reinstatement fees (i.e. Tickets, fines, etc.) •Advertising on radio stations, newspapers, billboards, etc. Page 14 of 15 Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) A-6 o Meals (*Must follow your agency policy on meal purchases for meetings. Agenda and sign in sheet required.) o Non-alcoholic Beverages (*no mocktails allowed) •Cell Phones through a checkout program •Cell Minutes •Hygiene Products •Recovery Housing- when all other supports have been exhausted •Education o Parenting Classes o Financial Literacy •Graduation supplies •Driver’s license/ID replacement fee Supporting documents must list name of vendor, purchase date, amount paid, and method of payment •Receipts •Invoices Please highlight/write amount charged to AOC funding on supporting documentation and ensure it matches amount listed on A19. Other Direct Costs Miscellaneous expenses directly related to program delivery or participant recovery supports. Requires pre-approval. Submit toCLJTherapeuticCourtsApplications@cou rts.wa.gov Page 15 of 15 Docusign Envelope ID: 921F4166-EC01-4420-BC99-36417E2A89D9 IAA26850 AGENDA ITEM #6. f) AB - 3907 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Blake Funding Interagency Reimbursement Agreement Between Administrative Office of the Courts and Municipal Court RECOMMENDED ACTION: Refer to Finance Committee DEPARTMENT: Municipal Court STAFF CONTACT: Yanna Filippidis, Judicial Administrative Officer EXT.: 6531 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: Grant funding in amount of $5,000 via interagency agreement between the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) and Municipal Court to reimburse costs related to the administration, resentencing, or vacating convictions that are affected by the Blake decision. Total amount to be applied towards reimbursement of judicial, prosecutorial, clerk, court administration, and/or defense-related costs. Authorization is requested for additional budget appropriations for the Municipal Court in the amount of $5,000 offset by additional grant revenues of the same amount and will be included in the mid-biennial budget adjustment. SUMMARY OF ACTION: The Court was previously awarded Blake reimbursement funding (AB-3667) in the amount of $285,984, an interagency agreement that has since expired as of June 2025. Monies previously awarded and accepted were not used and additional funding is being allocated by AOC to WA courts to continue support of processing cases impacted by the 2021 State v. Blake decision. Future interagency agreements are expected as funds are used. EXHIBITS: A. Interagency Agreement between AOC and Renton Municipal Court B. AB-3667 STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Approve the Court's acceptance of Blake reimbursement funds from the Administrative Office of the Courts in the amount of $5,000 and approve the budget adjustment of $5,000. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REV May2025 Page 1 of 6 INTERAGENCY AGREEMENT BETWEEN WASHINGTON STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS AND FOR BLAKE 1.PARTIES TO THE AGREEMENT This Interagency Agreement is made and entered into by and between the State of Washington acting by and through the Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts, hereinafter referred to as “AOC or Procuring Agency,” and Mercer Island Municipal Court , referred to as “Court or Agency”. The AOC and the Agency may be referred to individually as a “Party” and collectively as the “Parties”. 2.PURPOSE The purpose of this Agreement is to reimburse extraordinary costs of resentencing and vacating sentences as required by State v. Blake (“Blake”) to Court. THEREFORE, IT IS MUTUALLY AGREED THAT: 3.STATEMENT OF WORK The Court shall: Submit A-19s to AOC for reimbursement of extraordinary judicial, prosecutorial, clerk, court administration and/or defense-related costs of resentencing and vacating the sentences of individuals who convictions or sentences are affected by the Blake decision. For Municipalities and Counties, this will include language Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill 5167, Section 114 (5 to 7) passed by the 2025 Legislature, which includes simple drug possession, to include cannabis and possession of paraphernalia. Docusign Envelope ID: 7B4CF3F3-C14F-4FFA-89E3-ACA038A4A2BD AOC2540 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT Renton Municipal Court AOC2540 ([KLELW$ AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REV May2025 Page 2 of 6 4. ACCEPTANCE Upon Court submission of A19, AOC Program Manager will review information contained within to ensure itemized invoice reflects costs as per language stated in sections 3 and 7 of this agreement. 5. PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE Subject to its other provisions, the period of performance of this Agreement shall commence on July 1, 2025, and end on June 30., 2026, unless terminated sooner or extended, as provided herein. 6. COMPENSATION AOC will reimburse the Court a total compensation not to exceed $100,000.00 for payments made during the period from July 1, 2025, through June 30. 2026, related to the purpose of this agreement. Procuring Agency may extend the term of this Contract or increase funds by mutual written amendment. Such amendment shall be on the same terms and conditions as set forth in this Contract. 7. INVOICES; BILLING; PAYMENT The Agency will submit properly prepared itemized invoices via email on an A19 form to AOC Program Manager. Invoices shall be submitted once per month. Incorrect or incomplete A19s shall be returned by AOC to the Agency for correction or reissuance. All A19s shall provide and itemize, at a minimum, the following: • Agreement Number: • Agency name, address and phone number • Description of Reimbursement: o Payment documents from Jurisdiction indicating the amounts expended, the recipients, and the date of expenditure; o A list of any case numbers associated with the services provided; o A breakdown of expenses by judicial, clerk/court administration, prosecutorial, and defense-related costs; o Any employee positions supported by Blake related funds, broken down by judicial, clerk/court administration, prosecutorial, and defense-related positions, including name of employee, title, hourly wage of the individual, time spent on Blake-related cases and a list of corresponding cause numbers; o The unique three-digit court code for the Jurisdiction the work was completed on behalf of must be provided on the A-19. If a Jurisdiction contracts with another jurisdiction to provide court services, then the unique court code for the jurisdiction for which the work was completed must be provided; and, Docusign Envelope ID: 7B4CF3F3-C14F-4FFA-89E3-ACA038A4A2BD AOC2540 $5,000.00 AOC2540 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REV May2025 Page 3 of 6 o Data, including case numbers and aggregate data on the number and type of cases:  Vacated under Blake;  Resentenced under Blake; and  Being worked on under Blake. • Date(s) Services were provided • Receipt(s) if applicable • Total Reimbursement Payment will be considered timely if made by the AOC within thirty (30) calendar dates of receipt of a properly prepared A19. No A19 shall be submitted until after a deliverable has been accepted by the AOC Program Manager. The AOC will not make any advanced payments or payments in anticipation of services or supplies under this Contract. 8. REVENUE SHARING a. AOC, in its sole discretion, may initiate revenue sharing. AOC will notify the Court via unilateral amendment to the agreement no later than May 1, 2026 that AOC intends to reallocate funding among courts in the program. If AOC determines the Court may not spend all funds available under the Agreement, then AOC may reduce the Agreement amount. If AOC determines the Court may spend more funds than available under the Agreement and for its scope, then AOC may increase the Agreement amount. b. If the AOC initiates revenue sharing, then the Court must submit the final revenue sharing A-19 to payables@courts.wa.gov between July 12, 2026 and August 1, 2026. 9. AGREEMENT MANAGEMENT The Program Manager and Agency Program Manager noted below shall be responsible for and shall be the contact people for all communications and billings regarding the performance of this Contract. The parties may change administrators by written notice. AOC Program Manager Agency Program Manager Sharon Fogo PO Box 41170 Olympia, WA 98504-1170 Sharon.Fogo@courts.wa.gov (360) 819-7305 10. RECORDS RETENTION & PUBLIC RECORDS a. Records Retention. The Agency shall maintain books, records, documents and other evidence of accounting procedures and practices which sufficiently and properly Docusign Envelope ID: 7B4CF3F3-C14F-4FFA-89E3-ACA038A4A2BD Renton Court Administrator (425) 430-6550 yfilippidis@rentonwa.gov Renton, WA 98057 AOC2540 1055 south grady way AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REV May2025 Page 4 of 6 reflect all direct and indirect costs of any nature expended in the performance of this contract. These records shall be subject at all reasonable times to inspection, review, or audit by personnel duly authorized by the AOC, the Office of the State Auditor, and federal officials so authorized by law, rule, regulation, or contract. The agency will retain all books, records, documents, and other material relevant to this contract as required, a minimum of ten (10) years after end of period of performance (including all amendments to extend) or termination of the agreement or as otherwise specified and make them available for inspection by persons authorized under this provision. If any litigation, claim, or audit is commenced prior to the expiration of the required retention period, such period shall extend until all such litigation, claims, or audits have been resolved. b. Public Records. It is the policy of the Administrative Office of the Courts to facilitate access to its administrative public records. This Agreement and related records are subject to disclosure under General Court Rule 31.1. For additional information, please contact the AOC Public Records Officer. 11. GENERAL PROVISIONS a. Amendment or Modification. Except as set forth herein, this Agreement may not be amended or modified except in writing and signed by a duly authorized representative of each party hereto. In revenue sharing procedures AOC will issue a unilateral amendment. b. Assignment. The work to be provided under this Agreement, and any claim arising thereunder, is not assignable or delegable by either party in whole or in part, without the express prior written consent of the other party, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld. c. Authority. Each party to this Agreement, and each individual signing on behalf of each party, hereby represents and warrants to the other that it has full power and authority to enter into this Agreement and that its execution, delivery, and performance of this Agreement has been fully authorized and approved, and that no further approvals or consents are required to bind such party. d. Captions & Headings. The captions and headings in this Agreement are for convenience only and are not intended to, and shall not be construed to, limit, enlarge, or affect the scope or intent of this Agreement nor the meaning of any provisions hereof. e. Conformance. If any provision of this Agreement violates any statute or rule of law of the State of Washington, it is considered modified to conform to that statute or rule of law. f. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original and all of which counterparts together shall constitute the same instrument which may be sufficiently evidenced by one counterpart. Execution of this Agreement at different times and places by the Parties shall not affect the validity thereof so long as all the Parties hereto execute a counterpart of this Agreement. Docusign Envelope ID: 7B4CF3F3-C14F-4FFA-89E3-ACA038A4A2BD AOC2540 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REV May2025 Page 5 of 6 g. Electronic Signatures. An electronic signature or electronic record of this Agreement or any other ancillary agreement shall be deemed to have the same legal effect as delivery of an original executed copy of this Agreement or such other ancillary agreement for all purposes. h. Entire Agreement. This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement and understanding of the Parties with respect to the subject matter and supersedes all prior negotiations, representations, and understandings between them. There are no representations or understandings of any kind not set forth herein. i. Governing Law. The validity, construction, performance, and enforcement of this Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Washington, without regard to its choice of law principles that would provide for the application of the laws of another jurisdiction. j. Independent Capacity. The employees or agents of each party who are engaged in the performance of this Agreement shall continue to be employees or agents of that party and shall not be considered for any purpose to be employees or agents of the other party. k. Jurisdiction & Venue. In the event that any action is brought to enforce any provision of this Agreement, the parties agree to exclusive jurisdiction in Thurston County Superior Court for the State of Washington and agree that in any such action venue shall lie exclusively at Olympia, Washington. l. Right of Inspection. The Agency shall provide right of access to its facilities to the AOC, or any of its officers, or to any other authorized agent or official of the State of Washington at all reasonable times, in order to monitor and evaluate performance, compliance, and/or quality assurance under this agreement. m. Severability. If any provision of this Agreement or any provision of any document incorporated by reference shall be held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect the other provisions of this Agreement which can be given effect without the invalid provision, if such remainder conforms to the requirements of applicable law and the fundamental purpose of this agreement, and to this end the provisions of this Agreement are declared to be severable. n. Termination for Non-Availability of Funds. AOC’s ability to make payments is contingent on availability of funding. In the event funding from state, federal, or other sources is withdrawn, reduced, or limited in any way after the effective date and prior to completion or expiration date of this Agreement, AOC, at its sole discretion, may elect to terminate the Agreement, in whole or part, for convenience or to renegotiate the Agreement subject to new funding limitations and conditions. AOC may also elect to suspend performance of the Agreement until AOC determines the funding insufficiency is resolved. AOC may exercise any of these options with no notification restrictions, although AOC will make a reasonable attempt to provide notice. Docusign Envelope ID: 7B4CF3F3-C14F-4FFA-89E3-ACA038A4A2BD AOC2540 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REV May2025 Page 6 of 6 In the event of termination or suspension, AOC will reimburse eligible costs incurred by the Agency through the effective date of termination or suspension. Reimbursed costs must be agreed to by AOC and the Agency. In no event shall AOC’s reimbursement exceed AOC’s total responsibility under the agreement and any amendments. o. Suspension for Convenience. AOC may suspend this Agreement or any portion thereof for a temporary period by providing written notice to the Agency a minimum of seven (7) calendar days before the suspension date. Agency shall resume performance on the first business day following the suspension period unless another day is specified in writing by AOC prior to the expiration of the suspension period. p. Waiver. A failure by either party to exercise its rights under this Agreement shall not preclude that party from subsequent exercise of such rights and shall not constitute a waiver of any other rights under this Agreement unless stated to be such in a writing signed by an authorized representative of the party and attached to the original Agreement. EXECUTED AND EFFECTIVE as of the day and date first above written. WASHINGTON STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS BLAKE Signature Date Signature Date Name Name Title Title Docusign Envelope ID: 7B4CF3F3-C14F-4FFA-89E3-ACA038A4A2BD AOC2540 Renton Municipal Court Kara M. Murphy Richards Chief Financial and Management Officer Christopher Stanley, CGFM AGENDA ITEM #6. g) AB - 3667 City Council Regular Meeting - 23 Sep 2024 SUBJECT/TITLE: Blake Funding Interagency Reimbursement Agreement Between Administrative Office of the Courts and Municipal Court RECOMMENDED ACTION: Refer to Finance Committee DEPARTMENT: Municipal Court STAFF CONTACT: Yanna Filippidis, Judicial Administrative Officer EXT.: 6531 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: Grant funding in amount of $285,984 via interagency agreement between the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) and Municipal Court to reimburse costs related to the administration, resentencing, or vacating convictions that are affected by the Blake decision. Total amount to be applied towards reimbursement of judicial, prosecutorial, clerk, court administration, and/or defense-related costs. SUMMARY OF ACTION: In 2021, the Washington State Supreme Court found a felony law criminalizing drug possession unconstitutional, known as State v. Blake. As a result of this decision, some misdemeanor convictions between 1971 and 2021 may qualify to be removed (vacated) from one’s criminal record, and any legal financial obligations (LFOs) paid. In order to have Blake-related convictions removed from one’s record, the case must be brought to the court for consideration. This body of work involves clerical time to process necessary paperwork and all courtroom proceedings, prosecutorial and defense time both in and out of court, judicial time, and administrative time to schedule all hearings amongst all other court calendars and functions. The state operated Administrative Office of the Courts has identified Renton Municipal Court has 1,331 cases that may qualify as being subject to vacation due to the Blake decision; however, no motion has been brought to vacate cases and whether cases are subject to vacation will require future judicial decisions. In order to support the Court’s efforts in complying with processing potential vacations, the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) announced the availability of reimbursement funding to support the extraordinary judicial, prosecutorial, clerk, court administration, and/or defense-related costs that come with this work and allocated a maximum of $285,984 to the City of Renton/Renton Municipal Court. To be eligible for reimbursement, costs must be incurred between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025. Additional funding may be available, if needed, upon mutual agreement between AOC and the City. Should the City not spend all monies available under this agreement, AOC may reduce the agreement amount. Separately, additional funding may be awarded should the Court require additional monies to complete all necessary work. EXHIBITS: A. Issue Paper B. List of Municipal Court cases impacted by State vs. Blake Exhibit B AGENDA ITEM #6. g) C. Interagency Reimbursement Agreement (IAA25281) between Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts and Renton Municipal Court D. State vs. Blake decision STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Approve the Court's acceptance of Blake reimbursement funds from the Administrative Office of the Courts in the amount of $285,984. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Renton Municipal Court Memorandum DATE: September 16, 2024 TO: Ed Prince, Council President Members of Renton City Council CC: Armondo Pavone, Mayor FROM: Yanna Filippidis, Judicial Administrative Officer SUBJECT: Blake Funding Interagency Reimbursement Agreement Between Administrative Office of the Courts and Municipal Court /City of Renton ISSUE Should the City approve a $285,984 Blake Funding Interagency Agreement between the Administrative Office of the Courts and the Renton Municipal Court/City of Renton? BACKGROUND In 2021, the Washington State Supreme Court found a felony law criminalizing drug possession unconstitutional, known as State v. Blake. As a result of this decision, some misdemeanor convictions between 1971 and 2021 may qualify to be removed (vacated) from one’s criminal record, and any legal financial obligations (LFOs) paid. In order to have Blake-related convictions removed from one’s record, the case must be brought to the court for consideration. This body of work involves clerical time to process necessary paperwork and all courtroom proceedings, prosecutorial and defense time both in and out of court, judicial time, and administrative time to schedule all hearings amongst all other court calendars and functions. The state operated Administrative Office of the Courts has identified Renton Municipal Court has 1,331 cases that may qualify as being subject to vacation due to the Blake decision; however, no motion has been brought to vacate cases and whether cases are subject to vacation will require future judicial decisions. In order to support the Court’s efforts in complying with processing potential vacations, the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) announced the availability of reimbursement funding to support the extraordinary judicial, prosecutorial, clerk, court administration, and/or defense-related costs that come with this work and allocated a maximum of $285,984 to the City of Renton/Renton Municipal Court. To be eligible for reimbursement, costs must be incurred between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025. Additional funding may be available, if needed, upon mutual agreement between AOC and the City. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Page 2 of 2 September 16, 2024 Should the City not spend all monies available under this agreement, AOC may reduce the agreement amount. Separately, additional funding may be awarded should the Court require additional monies to complete all necessary work. RECOMMENDED ACTION The Court recommends that the Council approve the Interagency Reimbursement Agreement IAA25281 between the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) and the Renton Municipal Court/City of Renton in the amount of $285,984 in support of complying with the State vs. Blake decision. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Court Code 1994 REM REM REM REM 1995 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT CLJ Cases with convicted Marijuana Possession/Paraphernalia Charges* (1971-2021) Renton Municipal Court - REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT Court Name RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON 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RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2002 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2003 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2004 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2005 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2006 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2007 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2008 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM 2009 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON 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COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2012 REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM 2013 REM REM 2015 REM REM 2016 REM REM 2017 REM REM 2018 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2019 REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0125418 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0101558 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0076870 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0076858 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 7Z0447551 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 6Z0916039 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 6Z0310279 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 5Z0208930 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM 2020 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0904337 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899457 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899451 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899450 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899447 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0853303 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0721611 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0454593 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1130496 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1104831 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1053976 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1015367 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0917460 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0917455 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0917453 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0917452 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0917447 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0904340 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0904335 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0904334 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0902160 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899458 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899455 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0899445 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0856094 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0856091 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0856090 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0850086 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0721609 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0640801 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0498254 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0232157 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0182560 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0761196 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0706417 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0655125 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0492157 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0453143 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0443469 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0438727 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0388514 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0388511 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0388499 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0388491 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0331571 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0301496 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0226072 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0198525 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0198524 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0127612 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0127610 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0126269 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0126267 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0126265 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0110596 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0056591 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0044686 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0044671 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT XZ0028199 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z917448A RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1150491 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1138668 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z1045781 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0955983 RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT 9Z0917456 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2021 REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM REM RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT RENTON MUNICIPAL COURT AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0001111 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/6/1995 CR0001096 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/20/1995 CR0001086 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/10/1995 CR0001061 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/25/1995 CR0001031 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/9/1995 CR0000895 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/20/1995 CR0000885 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/16/1995 CR0000737 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/17/1995 CR0000610 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/1995 CR0000593 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/21/1995 CR0000260 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/1995 CR0000167 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/23/1995 CR0000166 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/6/1995 CR0000153 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/3/1995 CR0000140 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/20/1995 CR0000134 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/10/1995 CR0000119 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/27/1995 CR0000098 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/19/1995 CR0000097 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/18/1995 CLJ Cases with convicted Marijuana Possession/Paraphernalia Charges* (1971-2021) Renton Municipal Court - REM J00118942 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/12/1994 Case Number Case Type Case Cause Case File Date Case Key J00119675 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/28/1994 J00119672 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/28/1994 J00119332 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/12/1994 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0003536 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/5/1995 CR0003426 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/22/1995 CR0003248 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/2/1995 CR0003225 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/25/1995 CR0003218 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/15/1995 CR0003205 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/14/1995 CR0003179 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/22/1995 CR0003129 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/25/1995 CR0003126 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/17/1995 CR0003011 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/31/1995 CR0002980 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/19/1995 CR0002750 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/4/1995 CR0002735 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/12/1995 CR0002731 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/16/1995 CR0002657 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/29/1995 CR0002324 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/21/1995 CR0002261 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/17/1995 CR0002133 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/3/1995 CR0002039 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/1995 CR0002011 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/17/1995 CR0001999 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/26/1995 CR0001976 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/24/1995 CR0001966 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/25/1995 CR0001884 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/10/1995 CR0001882 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/3/1995 CR0001603 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/6/1995 CR0001567 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/31/1995 CR0001561 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/1995 CR0001556 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/6/1995 CR0001472 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/27/1995 CR0001460 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/20/1995 CR0001429 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/16/1995 CR0001400 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/13/1995 CR0001270 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/1995 CR0001261 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/22/1995 CR0001201 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/3/1995 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0004411 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/29/1995 CR0004387 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/10/1996 CR0004386 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/10/1996 CR0004378 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/6/1995 CR0004255 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/16/1995 CR0004039 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/17/1995 CR0004038 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/17/1995 CR0003792 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/18/1996 CR0003771 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/12/1996 CR0003549 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/20/1995 CR0003047 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/31/1995 CR0002499 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/1995 CR0002264 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/25/1995 CR0002165 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/19/1995 CR0001448 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/21/1995 CR0001369 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/4/1995 CR0001345 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/12/1996 J00119664 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/28/1994 J00119337 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/30/1994 J00118879 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/4/1995 CR0004739 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1995 CR0004410 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/1995 CR0004410 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/1995 CR0004384 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/1995 CR0004260 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/30/1995 CR0004134 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/1/1995 CR0003892 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/27/1995 CR0003877 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/20/1995 CR0003799 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/21/1995 CR0003603 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/11/1995 CR0003601 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/5/1995 CR0003587 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/6/1995 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0006407 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/1/1996 CR0006395 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/6/1996 CR0006389 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/16/1996 CR0006159 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/21/1996 CR0006066 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/23/1996 CR0006056 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/19/1996 CR0006054 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/12/1996 CR0005989 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/21/1996 CR0005799 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/4/1996 CR0005799 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/4/1996 CR0005701 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/5/1996 CR0005690 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/15/1996 CR0005681 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/18/1996 CR0005680 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/18/1996 CR0005677 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/1996 CR0005550 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/1996 CR0005409 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/1996 CR0005343 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/18/1996 CR0005335 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/11/1996 CR0005282 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/19/1996 CR0005257 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/18/1996 CR0005242 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/22/1996 CR0005180 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/22/1996 CR0005153 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/27/1995 CR0005077 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/8/1996 CR0005057 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/8/1996 CR0005055 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/10/1996 CR0005013 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/2/1996 CR0004987 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/8/1996 CR0004938 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/12/1996 CR0004918 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/20/1996 CR0004686 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/12/1995 CR0004582 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/1995 CR0004582 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/1995 CR0004495 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/25/1996 CR0004422 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/16/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0008777 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/1/1996 CR0008639 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/4/1996 CR0008575 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/14/1996 CR0008561 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/27/1996 CR0008560 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/23/1996 CR0008553 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/9/1996 CR0008546 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/1996 CR0008546 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/1996 CR0008485 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/24/1996 CR0008437 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/1996 CR0008437 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/1996 CR0008397 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/1996 CR0008396 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/1996 CR0008391 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/4/1996 CR0008361 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/23/1996 CR0008325 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/16/1996 CR0008325 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/16/1996 CR0008292 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/3/1996 CR0008281 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/22/1996 CR0008212 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/23/1996 CR0008098 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/12/1996 CR0007980 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/14/1996 CR0007639 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/6/1996 CR0007553 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/27/1996 CR0007350 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/19/1996 CR0007350 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/19/1996 CR0007341 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/5/1996 CR0007317 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/22/1996 CR0007292 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/26/1996 CR0007232 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/7/1996 CR0006888 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/1996 CR0006831 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/1996 CR0006665 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/14/1996 CR0006583 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/10/1996 CR0006566 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/12/1996 CR0006428 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/5/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0008824 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/2/1997 CR0008798 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/4/1996 CR0008743 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/21/1997 CR0008732 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/12/1996 CR0008732 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/12/1996 CR0008720 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/8/1996 CR0008692 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/23/1996 CR0008664 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/21/1996 CR0008664 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/21/1996 CR0008642 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/12/1996 CR0008642 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/12/1996 CR0008431 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/18/1996 CR0008422 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/31/1996 CR0008412 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/31/1996 CR0008409 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/21/1996 CR0007942 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/6/1997 CR0007727 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/8/1996 CR0007202 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/24/1996 CR0006728 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/3/1997 CR0006590 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/1996 CR0006590 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/1996 CR0006555 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/6/1996 CR0005998 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/22/1996 CR0005980 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/6/1996 CR0005921 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/21/1997 CR0005921 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/21/1997 CR0004388 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/13/1996 CR0003291 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/16/1997 CR0002095 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/30/1996 CR0009280 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/1996 CR0009164 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/25/1996 CR0008881 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/25/1996 CR0008875 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/22/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0010835 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/25/1997 CR0010825 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/1997 CR0010809 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/12/1997 CR0010809 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/12/1997 CR0010807 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/12/1997 CR0010803 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/5/1997 CR0010781 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/29/1997 CR0010726 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/3/1997 CR0010581 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/8/1997 CR0010521 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/4/1997 CR0010511 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/9/1997 CR0010462 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/26/1997 CR0010462 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/26/1997 CR0010287 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/1/1997 CR0010287 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/1/1997 CR0010075 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/16/1997 CR0010051 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/7/1997 CR0009956 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/5/1997 CR0009956 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/5/1997 CR0009924 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/6/1997 CR0009903 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/20/1997 CR0009748 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/26/1997 CR0009520 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/28/1997 CR0009499 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/31/1997 CR0009427 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/13/1996 CR0009319 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/3/1997 CR0009293 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/9/1997 CR0009289 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/23/1996 CR0009287 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/10/1996 CR0009243 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/13/1997 CR0009032 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/15/1996 CR0009032 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/15/1996 CR0008940 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/1996 CR0008885 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/28/1996 CR0008884 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/28/1996 CR0008871 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/14/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0012730 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/1997 CR0012705 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/1997 CR0012508 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/30/1997 CR0012469 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/1/1997 CR0011960 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/25/1997 CR0011904 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/28/1997 CR0011895 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/2/1997 CR0011870 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/17/1997 CR0011862 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/6/1997 CR0011862 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/6/1997 CR0011860 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/6/1997 CR0011807 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/28/1997 CR0011807 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/28/1997 CR0011796 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/22/1997 CR0011789 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/28/1997 CR0011535 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/2/1997 CR0011531 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/9/1997 CR0011528 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/5/1997 CR0011513 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/26/1997 CR0011512 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/26/1997 CR0011506 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/16/1997 CR0011329 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/9/1997 CR0011302 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/30/1997 CR0011251 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/2/1997 CR0011201 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/4/1997 CR0011180 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/19/1997 CR0011179 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/19/1997 CR0011173 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/8/1997 CR0011107 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/1/1997 CR0011107 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/1/1997 CR0010958 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/1997 CR0010958 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/1997 CR0010951 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/23/1997 CR0010951 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/23/1997 CR0010887 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/1997 CR0010849 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/2/1997 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0011307 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/5/1997 CR0011269 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/29/1998 CR0011125 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/20/1997 CR0011125 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/20/1997 CR0011124 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/2/1997 CR0011067 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/11/1997 CR0010691 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/11/1997 CR0010599 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/28/1997 CR0010599 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/28/1997 CR0010577 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/7/1997 CR0010523 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/4/1997 CR0010469 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1997 CR0010387 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/1997 CR0010231 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/3/1997 CR0010199 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/30/1997 CR0010073 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/14/1997 CR0010059 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/3/1997 CR0010059 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/3/1997 CR0009907 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/26/1997 CR0009474 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/1997 CR0009197 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/1997 CR0008535 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/16/1996 CR0008535 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/16/1996 CR0008000 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/8/1997 CR0007458 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/13/1996 CR0007075 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/21/1997 CR0007075 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/21/1997 CR0006224 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/9/1997 CR0013407 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/29/1997 CR0012853 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/23/1997 CR0012853 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/23/1997 CR0012835 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/21/1997 CR0012731 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/1997 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0013723 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/1/1998 CR0013707 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/29/1998 CR0013654 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/23/1998 CR0013652 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/23/1998 CR0013634 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/1998 CR0013615 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/1998 CR0013587 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/28/1998 CR0013587 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/28/1998 CR0013555 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1997 CR0013512 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/22/1998 CR0013467 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/1998 CR0013467 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/1998 CR0013465 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/6/1998 CR0013435 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/2/1998 CR0013369 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/28/1998 CR0013312 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/2/1998 CR0013312 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/2/1998 CR0013278 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/5/1998 CR0013278 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/5/1998 CR0013223 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/4/1998 CR0013197 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/16/1998 CR0013164 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/2/1998 CR0013122 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/10/1997 CR0013122 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/10/1997 CR0013091 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/1998 CR0013022 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/2/1998 CR0013011 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/1997 CR0012850 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/19/1998 CR0012744 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/5/1997 CR0012694 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/3/1997 CR0012619 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/5/1997 CR0012549 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/1998 CR0012467 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/30/1997 CR0012467 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/30/1997 CR0012135 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1997 CR0011795 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/14/1997 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0015438 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/17/1998 CR0015403 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/1998 CR0015403 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/1998 CR0015388 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/29/1998 CR0015221 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/8/1998 CR0015209 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/1998 CR0015154 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/1998 CR0015048 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/8/1998 CR0015046 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/8/1998 CR0015042 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/1998 CR0015040 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/1998 CR0015040 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/1998 CR0014929 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/29/1998 CR0014883 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/1998 CR0014866 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/1998 CR0014862 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/28/1998 CR0014862 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/28/1998 CR0014748 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/29/1998 CR0014748 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/29/1998 CR0014627 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/8/1998 CR0014595 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/20/1998 CR0014594 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/27/1998 CR0014592 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/13/1998 CR0014592 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/13/1998 CR0014587 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/7/1998 CR0014583 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/31/1998 CR0014562 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/1998 CR0014553 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/27/1998 CR0014550 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/21/1998 CR0014429 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/9/1998 CR0014311 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/17/1998 CR0014254 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/25/1998 CR0014221 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/1998 CR0014156 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/12/1998 CR0014156 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/12/1998 CR0013965 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/22/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0013273 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/4/1998 CR0012349 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/6/1998 CR0011961 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/25/1997 CR0011474 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/10/1997 CR0010730 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/3/1997 CR0010279 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/1/1997 CR0008938 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/1996 CR0008574 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/10/1996 CR0007997 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/5/1996 J00119336 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1994 CR0017853 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/21/1998 CR0017587 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/21/1998 CR0017176 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/15/1998 CR0016912 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/30/1998 CR0016297 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/25/1998 CR0016276 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/18/1998 CR0016215 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/21/1998 CR0016096 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1998 CR0016058 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/3/1998 CR0015971 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/28/1998 CR0015971 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/28/1998 CR0015913 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/21/1998 CR0015908 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/4/1998 CR0015799 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/12/1998 CR0015781 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/2/1998 CR0015770 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/26/1998 CR0015741 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/25/1998 CR0015741 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/25/1998 CR0015702 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/2/1998 CR0015693 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/6/1998 CR0015666 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/13/1998 CR0015498 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/20/1998 CR0015475 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/4/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0016943 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/11/1998 CR0016848 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/12/1998 CR0016842 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/26/1998 CR0016842 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/26/1998 CR0016750 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/16/1998 CR0016694 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/4/1999 CR0016656 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/1998 CR0016640 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/1998 CR0016502 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/31/1998 CR0016451 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/23/1998 CR0016373 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/3/1998 CR0015958 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/23/1998 CR0015898 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/30/1998 CR0015790 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/10/1998 CR0015344 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/8/1998 CR0015288 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/25/1999 CR0015285 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/10/1999 CR0015284 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1998 CR0015202 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/30/1998 CR0015202 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/30/1998 CR0015074 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/14/1998 CR0014946 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/28/1998 CR0014879 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/23/1998 CR0014843 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/12/1999 CR0014597 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/20/1998 CR0014475 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/1999 CR0014461 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/1998 CR0014461 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/1998 CR0014204 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/20/1998 CR0014204 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/20/1998 CR0014169 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/13/1998 CR0013973 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/6/1998 CR0013776 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/1998 CR0013776 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/1998 CR0013548 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/11/1998 CR0013524 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0018837 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/9/1999 CR0018824 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/26/1999 CR0018737 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/27/1999 CR0018709 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/23/1999 CR0018708 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/22/1999 CR0018642 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/7/1999 CR0018633 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/17/1999 CR0018405 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/29/1999 CR0018313 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/22/1999 CR0018310 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/22/1999 CR0018309 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/22/1999 CR0018228 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/4/1999 CR0018038 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/1/1999 CR0017997 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/4/1999 CR0017973 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/25/1999 CR0017970 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/24/1999 CR0017847 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/29/1999 CR0017843 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/16/1999 CR0017843 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/16/1999 CR0017807 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/24/1999 CR0017711 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/1999 CR0017698 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/18/1999 CR0017668 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/8/1999 CR0017426 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1998 CR0017426 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1998 CR0017423 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/1999 CR0017420 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/30/1998 CR0017403 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/16/1998 CR0017293 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/23/1998 CR0017235 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1998 CR0017183 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1998 CR0017183 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/1998 CR0017144 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/15/1999 CR0017128 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/9/1998 CR0017126 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/26/1998 CR0016975 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/23/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0021728 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/13/1999 CR0021664 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/11/1999 CR0021655 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/21/1999 CR0021599 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/22/1999 CR0021593 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/1999 CR0021533 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/10/1999 CR0021516 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/22/1999 CR0021507 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/7/1999 CR0021043 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/16/1999 CR0020644 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/17/1999 CR0020391 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/21/1999 CR0020104 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/9/1999 CR0020102 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/11/1999 CR0020102 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/11/1999 CR0020059 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/5/1999 CR0019996 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/11/1999 CR0019867 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/2/1999 CR0019856 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/2/1999 CR0019817 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/29/1999 CR0019695 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/1999 CR0019663 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/21/1999 CR0019475 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/8/1999 CR0019475 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/8/1999 CR0019412 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/19/1999 CR0019228 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/20/1999 CR0019170 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/24/1999 CR0019170 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/24/1999 CR0019135 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/24/1999 CR0019090 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/1/1999 CR0019022 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/28/1999 CR0018848 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/8/1999 CR0018848 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/8/1999 CR0018846 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/25/1999 CR0018846 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/25/1999 CR0018841 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/16/1999 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0020348 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/9/2000 CR0020222 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/2000 CR0020215 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/1/1999 CR0020187 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/13/2000 CR0020159 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/29/2000 CR0020072 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/1999 CR0020071 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/1999 CR0020062 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/23/1999 CR0020044 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/2/1999 CR0019973 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/1/1999 CR0019581 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/2000 CR0019573 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/28/2000 CR0019234 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/14/1999 CR0018665 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/31/1999 CR0017677 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/1/1998 CR0017595 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/31/1998 CR0017373 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1998 CR0016873 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/1998 CR0015296 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/15/2000 CR0015291 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/12/1999 CR0015034 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/26/1998 CR0014469 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/25/1999 CR0014469 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/25/1999 CR0013837 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/18/1998 CR0012199 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/28/1997 CR0012036 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/20/1997 CR0011367 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/1/1997 CR0011352 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/21/1997 CR0010345 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/27/1998 CR0010263 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/1997 CR0009950 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/1998 CR0009950 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/1998 CR0002114 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/14/2000 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0022092 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/3/2000 CR0022000 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/22/2000 CR0021929 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/2000 CR0021929 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/2000 CR0021915 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/21/2000 CR0021903 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2000 CR0021897 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/19/2000 CR0021897 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/19/2000 CR0021822 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/11/2000 CR0021781 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/18/2000 CR0021743 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/17/1999 CR0021674 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/18/1999 CR0021624 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/23/1999 CR0021562 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/12/1999 CR0021485 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/14/2000 CR0021451 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/2000 CR0021435 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/17/2000 CR0021400 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/2/2000 CR0021323 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/8/2000 CR0021306 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2000 CR0021301 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/3/2000 CR0021274 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/21/2000 CR0020974 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/1999 CR0020920 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2000 CR0020854 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2000 CR0020810 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/17/2000 CR0020810 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/17/2000 CR0020735 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/2000 CR0020705 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/1999 CR0020697 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/26/2000 CR0020697 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/26/2000 CR0020636 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/6/1999 CR0020610 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/22/1999 CR0020560 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/19/2000 CR0020450 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/14/2000 CR0020408 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/8/1999 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0014578 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/26/1998 CR0014573 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/1/1998 CR0011459 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/28/1997 CR0011459 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/28/1997 CR0024477 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/2000 CR0024353 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/2000 CR0023909 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/15/2000 CR0023908 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/2000 CR0023908 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/2000 CR0023892 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/22/2000 CR0023827 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/18/2000 CR0023736 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/17/2000 CR0023517 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/12/2000 CR0023501 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/5/2000 CR0023335 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/31/2000 CR0023134 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/3/2000 CR0022887 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/7/2000 CR0022773 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/3/2000 CR0022757 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/24/2000 CR0022755 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/18/2000 CR0022755 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/18/2000 CR0022753 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/15/2000 CR0022715 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/6/2000 CR0022666 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/28/2000 CR0022532 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/2000 CR0022498 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/13/2000 CR0022488 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/21/2000 CR0022483 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/10/2000 CR0022343 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/17/2000 CR0022172 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/3/2000 CR0022113 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/31/2000 CR0022102 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/28/2000 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0025310 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/19/2001 CR0025302 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/2/2001 CR0025276 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/14/2001 CR0025117 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/2001 CR0025050 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/4/2001 CR0024886 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/2001 CR0024874 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/5/2001 CR0024834 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/2/2001 CR0024703 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/13/2000 CR0024684 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/16/2001 CR0024645 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/5/2001 CR0024480 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/8/2000 CR0024309 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/14/2000 CR0024222 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/6/2001 CR0024218 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/26/2001 CR0024144 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/4/2001 CR0024144 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/4/2001 CR0024124 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/2/2001 CR0024078 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/30/2000 CR0023793 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/11/2001 CR0023746 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/9/2000 CR0023721 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/19/2001 CR0023100 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/27/2000 CR0023021 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/2000 CR0022774 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/3/2000 CR0022270 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/9/2000 CR0022017 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/2001 CR0021772 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/2000 CR0021497 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/11/2001 CR0021339 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/9/2000 CR0021173 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/15/2000 CR0020768 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/14/2000 CR0020768 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/14/2000 CR0019966 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/26/2000 CR0018772 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/17/1999 CR0015286 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/8/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0026104 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/29/2002 CR0026013 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/2/2001 CR0025987 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/14/2001 CR0025571 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/21/2001 CR0025339 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/17/2001 CR0025215 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/2002 CR0024348 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/17/2001 CR0024111 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/2000 CR0029138 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/22/2001 CR0029096 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/22/2001 CR0028980 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/20/2001 CR0028791 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/20/2001 CR0028671 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/2001 CR0028637 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/2001 CR0028569 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/23/2001 CR0028552 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/18/2001 CR0028525 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/29/2001 CR0028466 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/2001 CR0028266 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/27/2001 CR0028179 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/24/2001 CR0026753 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/2001 CR0026588 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/12/2001 CR0026146 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/31/2001 CR0025940 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/5/2001 CR0025857 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/21/2001 CR0025830 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/24/2001 CR0025819 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/30/2001 CR0025781 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/2001 CR0025598 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/26/2001 CR0025441 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/2001 CR0025434 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/10/2001 CR0025337 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/16/2001 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0028220 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/2001 CR0028199 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/9/2002 CR0028199 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/9/2002 CR0028064 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/5/2002 CR0028058 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/17/2002 CR0028003 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/28/2002 CR0027916 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/24/2002 CR0027915 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/17/2002 CR0027907 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/2002 CR0027696 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/17/2002 CR0027692 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/6/2002 CR0027683 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/15/2002 CR0027669 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/8/2002 CR0027663 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/15/2002 CR0027615 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/4/2002 CR0027446 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/1/2002 CR0027446 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/1/2002 CR0027391 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/21/2002 CR0027329 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/1/2002 CR0027188 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/27/2002 CR0027057 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/4/2002 CR0027052 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/22/2002 CR0027010 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/2002 CR0026974 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/2002 CR0026943 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/2002 CR0026906 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/2002 CR0026817 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/8/2002 CR0026800 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/28/2002 CR0026775 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/22/2002 CR0026774 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/21/2002 CR0026622 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/11/2002 CR0026619 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/11/2002 CR0026603 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/26/2001 CR0026478 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/22/2001 CR0026264 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/11/2002 CR0026197 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/7/2002 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0029146 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/2001 CR0028609 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2001 CR0028546 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/9/2003 CR0028071 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/5/2002 CR0028024 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/21/2002 CR0027311 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/18/2002 CR0026383 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/2002 CR0024677 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/14/2000 CR0017291 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/10/1998 CR0030467 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/28/2002 CR0030354 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/26/2002 CR0030041 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/17/2002 CR0030015 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/23/2002 CR0029980 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/19/2002 CR0029836 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/3/2002 CR0029715 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/16/2002 CR0029707 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/15/2002 CR0029642 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/2002 CR0029563 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/29/2002 CR0029480 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/28/2002 CR0029361 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/3/2002 CR0029337 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/3/2002 CR0029298 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/22/2002 CR0029284 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/24/2002 CR0029247 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/12/2002 CR0029241 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/22/2002 CR0028995 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/24/2002 CR0028986 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/31/2002 CR0028610 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2001 CR0028459 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/9/2001 CR0028413 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/8/2001 CR0028410 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/26/2001 CR0028330 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/29/2001 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0031818 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/18/2003 CR0031803 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/13/2003 CR0031783 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/28/2003 CR0031783 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/28/2003 CR0031752 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/12/2003 CR0031677 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/6/2003 CR0031670 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/4/2003 CR0031521 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/22/2003 CR0031391 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/24/2003 CR0031311 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/11/2003 CR0031224 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/2003 CR0031223 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/21/2003 CR0031220 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/3/2003 CR0031212 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/28/2003 CR0031112 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/6/2003 CR0030980 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/2/2003 CR0030978 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/20/2002 CR0030681 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/2002 CR0030648 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/19/2003 CR0030548 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/19/2003 CR0030548 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/19/2003 CR0030343 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/27/2002 CR0030156 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/28/2002 CR0030070 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/22/2003 CR0030049 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/5/2002 CR0029967 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/9/2003 CR0029967 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/9/2003 CR0029924 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/4/2003 CR0029891 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/11/2003 CR0029765 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/5/2002 CR0029721 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/20/2003 CR0029717 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/23/2002 CR0029716 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/16/2002 CR0029710 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/25/2002 CR0029702 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/25/2002 CR0029348 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/21/2003 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0033704 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/5/2004 CR0033218 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/18/2003 CR0033177 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/9/2003 CR0033113 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/2004 CR0033084 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/28/2003 CR0032742 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/18/2004 CR0032728 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/15/2003 CR0031872 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/5/2003 CR0029713 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/4/2002 CR0024317 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/16/2001 CR0024316 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/16/2001 CR0021784 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/11/2000 CR0008359 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/11/1996 BC0133033 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/2/2004 CR0033981 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/10/2003 CR0033981 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/10/2003 CR0033977 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/8/2003 CR0033851 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/17/2003 CR0033662 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/29/2003 CR0033637 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/2003 CR0033185 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/2003 CR0033185 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/2003 CR0033184 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/9/2003 CR0033181 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/2003 CR0032329 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/2/2003 CR0032130 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/21/2003 CR0032129 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/19/2003 CR0032060 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/2003 CR0031989 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/12/2003 CR0031989 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/12/2003 CR0031983 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/30/2003 CR0031983 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/30/2003 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0037436 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/21/2004 CR0037434 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/11/2004 CR0037326 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/16/2004 CR0035797 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/1/2004 CR0035776 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/20/2004 CR0035686 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/4/2004 CR0035485 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/12/2004 CR0035478 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/2004 CR0035295 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/12/2004 CR0035295 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/12/2004 CR0035019 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/30/2004 CR0035006 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/2004 CR0035005 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/2004 CR0034865 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/10/2004 CR0034837 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/15/2004 CR0034773 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/4/2004 CR0034728 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/12/2004 CR0034701 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/12/2004 CR0034611 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/2/2004 CR0034611 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/2/2004 CR0034573 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/20/2004 CR0034474 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/22/2004 CR0034315 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/2004 CR0034312 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/10/2004 CR0034312 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/10/2004 CR0034266 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/23/2004 CR0034207 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/2003 CR0034135 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/2/2004 CR0034031 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/13/2004 CR0033975 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/26/2004 CR0033824 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/18/2004 CR0033816 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2004 CR0033780 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/9/2004 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0036804 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/14/2005 CR0036804 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/14/2005 CR0036767 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/7/2005 CR0036581 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/23/2005 CR0036533 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/26/2005 CR0036519 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/16/2005 CR0036517 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/25/2005 CR0036462 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/6/2005 CR0036404 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/21/2005 CR0036403 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/21/2005 CR0036363 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/7/2005 CR0036361 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/28/2005 CR0036231 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/25/2005 CR0036211 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/23/2005 CR0036142 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/30/2005 CR0036134 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/2/2005 CR0036119 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/7/2005 CR0036068 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/15/2005 CR0035987 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/3/2005 CR0035950 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/6/2005 CR0035950 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/6/2005 CR0035873 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/14/2005 CR0035861 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/3/2005 CR0035745 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/9/2005 CR0035445 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2005 CR0035445 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2005 CR0035399 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/4/2005 CR0035239 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/17/2004 CR0035173 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/2004 CR0035049 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/2004 CR0033759 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/6/2004 CR0032895 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/13/2003 CR0032895 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/13/2003 CR0029665 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/14/2005 CR0026505 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/16/2001 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0038398 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/23/2006 CR0038328 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/21/2005 CR0038247 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/7/2005 CR0038167 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/22/2005 CR0038099 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/5/2005 CR0037618 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/27/2006 CR0036174 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/22/2005 CR0038858 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/18/2005 CR0038664 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/24/2005 CR0038658 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/10/2005 CR0038528 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/22/2005 CR0038422 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/19/2005 CR0038417 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/12/2005 CR0038416 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/8/2005 CR0038391 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/4/2005 CR0038391 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/4/2005 CR0038386 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/12/2005 CR0038330 Criminal Traffic 8/15/2005 CR0038251 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/12/2005 CR0038096 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/7/2005 CR0038095 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/31/2005 CR0037804 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/26/2005 CR0037742 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/16/2005 CR0037570 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/4/2005 CR0037544 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/2004 CR0037510 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2005 CR0037497 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/3/2005 CR0037444 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/8/2004 CR0037444 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/8/2004 CR0037412 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/2/2005 CR0037216 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/15/2004 CR0036827 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/27/2005 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0044758 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/31/2006 CR0044664 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/27/2006 CR0044602 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/15/2006 CR0041177 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/2/2006 CR0040905 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/3/2006 CR0040597 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/27/2006 CR0040429 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/6/2006 CR0040428 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/6/2006 CR0040413 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/13/2006 CR0040290 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/21/2006 CR0040155 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/19/2006 CR0039757 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/21/2006 CR0039721 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/27/2006 CR0039708 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/7/2006 CR0039683 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/13/2006 CR0039678 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/1/2006 CR0039633 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/10/2006 CR0039411 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/2/2006 CR0039268 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/5/2006 CR0039268 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/5/2006 CR0039220 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/6/2006 CR0039212 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/28/2005 CR0039186 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/6/2006 CR0039097 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/20/2006 CR0039084 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/18/2006 CR0039059 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/28/2005 CR0039038 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/3/2006 CR0039019 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/10/2006 CR0038865 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/22/2005 CR0038700 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/18/2006 CR0038672 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/28/2005 CR0038666 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/31/2005 CR0038583 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/13/2006 CR0038448 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/27/2006 CR0038447 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/27/2006 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0041756 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/2007 27462686 CR0041703 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/2007 23217231 16384559CR0041663CriminalNon-Traffic 4/16/2007 CR0041578 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/9/2007 17443377 CR0041548 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2007 21145144 23953551CR0041524CriminalNon-Traffic 5/14/2007 CR0041519 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/7/2007 27606670 CR0041517 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/4/2007 15709548 27786071CR0041511CriminalNon-Traffic 4/30/2007 CR0041433 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/10/2007 28920216 CR0041195 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/7/2006 27576226 15772669CR0040994CriminalNon-Traffic 2/14/2007 CR0040694 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/14/2007 18998832 CR0040608 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/25/2006 16595555 24875325CR0040323CriminalNon-Traffic 9/7/2006 CR0040222 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/28/2006 21179024 CR0040094 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/2/2006 19689351 25987948CR0040017CriminalNon-Traffic 10/10/2006 CR0039722 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/25/2006 19391346 CR0039722 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/25/2006 19391346 23022303CR0039247CriminalNon-Traffic 3/3/2006 CR0038857 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/17/2005 25202416 CR0038703 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/6/2005 21756401 21756401CR0038703CriminalNon-Traffic 9/6/2005 CR0038418 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/19/2005 21175723 CR0038086 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/29/2005 17608859 26871614CR0037836CriminalNon-Traffic 12/20/2005 CR0037314 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/25/2007 21057991 CR0036743 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2005 18767848 22181892CR0036563CriminalNon-Traffic 7/12/2005 CR0036563 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/12/2005 22181892 CR0031058 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/27/2003 16955081 16955081CR0031058CriminalNon-Traffic 1/27/2003 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 27150284CR0045571CriminalNon-Traffic 5/31/2007 CR0045478 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2007 17297199 CR0045473 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/14/2007 14440188 20624100CR0045453CriminalNon-Traffic 1/26/2007 CR0045402 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/1/2007 18595661 CR0045327 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/10/2007 16458733 17697007CR0045176CriminalNon-Traffic 12/29/2006 CR0045161 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/24/2007 24801346 CR0045119 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/2/2007 24537783 22083448CR0044886CriminalNon-Traffic 10/9/2006 CR0044880 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/8/2006 29105089 CR0044877 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/5/2006 26630529 14407727CR0044811CriminalNon-Traffic 6/6/2007 CR0044807 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/15/2006 20218797 CR0044659 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/21/2006 27517798 21592632CR0044278CriminalNon-Traffic 11/20/2007 CR0044178 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/13/2007 18203082 CR0043901 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/17/2007 23578387 25110403CR0043877CriminalNon-Traffic 11/5/2007 CR0043660 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/3/2007 20039691 CR0043555 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2007 15196481 16362282CR0043250CriminalNon-Traffic 9/18/2007 CR0043012 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/23/2007 23966595 CR0042965 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/8/2007 21993568 17851752CR0042735CriminalNon-Traffic 7/13/2007 CR0042586 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2007 15425295 CR0042508 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/13/2007 16980216 16775025CR0042407CriminalNon-Traffic 7/17/2007 CR0042371 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/3/2007 15694950 CR0042011 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/11/2007 18105885 20172652CR0041981CriminalNon-Traffic 11/26/2007 CR0041966 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/23/2007 21651135 CR0041763 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/7/2007 17019547 17019547CR0041763CriminalNon-Traffic 6/7/2007 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0044285 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/2008 25198686 18073427CR0044284CriminalNon-Traffic 1/7/2008 CR0044223 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/10/2008 22781269 CR0044203 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/30/2007 15042995 18082176CR0043897CriminalNon-Traffic 1/15/2008 CR0043740 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/31/2007 26555792 CR0043728 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/30/2007 27338222 18879981CR0043703CriminalNon-Traffic 10/15/2007 CR0043549 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/7/2008 22227272 CR0043435 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/14/2008 20873545 24610261CR0043422CriminalNon-Traffic 3/3/2008 CR0043318 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/24/2007 22383899 CR0043272 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/3/2008 25201843 19216636CR0043181CriminalNon-Traffic 8/13/2007 CR0043125 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/19/2007 24489501 CR0042750 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/30/2007 15967732 23091478CR0042588CriminalNon-Traffic 10/30/2007 CR0042579 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/27/2007 27743713 CR0042465 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/19/2007 15393031 25763652CR0042461CriminalNon-Traffic 9/5/2007 CR0042413 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/21/2007 27540455 CR0042406 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/17/2007 18282291 19536550CR0042116CriminalNon-Traffic 6/25/2007 CR0041984 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/2/2007 22584583 CR0041771 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/27/2008 26073749 26073749CR0041771CriminalNon-Traffic 5/27/2008 CR0041669 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/23/2007 17837495 CR0041523 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/14/2007 24621041 23711843CR0038358CriminalNon-Traffic 9/19/2005 CR0037495 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/25/2005 17963762 CR0036815 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/28/2005 17159735 19628571CR0035948CriminalNon-Traffic 6/27/2005 CR0031723 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/30/2003 28178885 CR0031723 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/30/2003 28178885 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0048243 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/10/2008 19885383 27032994CR0048180CriminalNon-Traffic 9/8/2008 CR0047864 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/7/2008 22250230 CR0047864 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/7/2008 22250230 24209887CR0047558CriminalNon-Traffic 7/24/2008 CR0047549 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/6/2008 16603825 CR0047532 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/14/2008 28159904 24298002CR0047454CriminalNon-Traffic 5/20/2008 CR0047453 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/20/2008 28230569 CR0047453 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/20/2008 28230569 26034060CR0047316CriminalNon-Traffic 10/30/2008 CR0047307 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/23/2008 28067053 CR0047181 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/2008 26838267 22170907CR0046956CriminalNon-Traffic 6/2/2008 CR0046956 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/2/2008 22170907 CR0046778 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/28/2008 16722416 22135266CR0046726CriminalNon-Traffic 3/17/2008 CR0046706 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/3/2008 26034847 CR0046459 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/21/2008 25992044 16427825CR0046410CriminalNon-Traffic 6/16/2008 CR0046410 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/16/2008 16427825 CR0046404 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/17/2008 15268372 15642756CR0046217CriminalNon-Traffic 8/25/2008 CR0046216 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/25/2008 14723770 CR0046211 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/25/2008 24498632 18927339CR0046205CriminalNon-Traffic 3/19/2008 CR0046163 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/14/2008 27808857 CR0046127 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/20/2008 18809597 24978808CR0046052CriminalNon-Traffic 2/18/2008 CR0046033 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/4/2008 23127556 CR0045960 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/17/2008 14532784 28182396CR0045847CriminalNon-Traffic 3/3/2008 CR0045839 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/11/2008 25752442 CR0045835 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/4/2008 20901671 21990642CR0045730CriminalNon-Traffic 2/27/2008 CR0045598 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/31/2008 17815190 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0049373 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/17/2009 24849801 17689885CR0049261CriminalNon-Traffic 11/24/2008 CR0049070 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/2009 24080548 CR0049070 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/2009 24080548 28468633CR0049069CriminalNon-Traffic 2/9/2009 CR0048825 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/20/2009 25617662 CR0048784 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/29/2008 25114191 20443659CR0048692CriminalNon-Traffic 7/29/2009 CR0048397 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/4/2008 28986388 CR0048378 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/16/2008 23854442 26628924CR0048365CriminalNon-Traffic 12/1/2008 CR0047685 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/13/2009 17097652 CR0047419 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/5/2008 17615039 20710204CR0047293CriminalNon-Traffic 2/12/2009 CR0047107 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/15/2008 16077648 CR0047088 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/10/2008 21959988 24739079CR0046787CriminalNon-Traffic 2/25/2009 CR0046750 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/12/2009 24107326 CR0046741 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/5/2008 18292088 17368741CR0046672CriminalNon-Traffic 8/8/2008 CR0046657 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/11/2008 27499590 CR0046495 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/25/2008 20503259 16953079CR0046144CriminalNon-Traffic 4/21/2008 CR0045131 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/26/2007 22783088 CR0045112 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/6/2007 19662773 26784982CR0044420CriminalNon-Traffic 11/6/2008 CR0044345 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/18/2009 28080315 CR0042774 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/2009 15778132 23859431CR0042468CriminalNon-Traffic 10/19/2007 CR0040850 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/15/2009 16285833 CR0036544 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/20/2008 20735789 25085054CR0048664CriminalNon-Traffic 9/3/2008 CR0048301 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/25/2008 27751136 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0048859 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/29/2008 23712275 26362368CR0048271CriminalNon-Traffic 9/9/2009 CR0047564 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/19/2008 20711686 CR0047536 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/11/2008 17704659 20439676CR0046592CriminalNon-Traffic 8/11/2008 CR0046538 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/3/2008 14668736 CR0046014 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/30/2008 21533590 25754473CR0045006CriminalNon-Traffic 1/25/2007 CR0039643 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/17/2006 27647050 CR0052828 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/8/2009 15369082 21557448CR0052791CriminalNon-Traffic 9/8/2009 CR0052741 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/14/2009 24020733 CR0052571 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/20/2009 16635047 22912632CR0052565CriminalNon-Traffic 8/10/2009 CR0052244 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/1/2009 19454743 CR0052164 Criminal Non-Traffic 5/26/2009 25608106 21875415CR0051328CriminalNon-Traffic 5/26/2009 CR0050916 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/17/2009 26373957 CR0050653 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/6/2009 28509955 23266140CR0050636CriminalNon-Traffic 6/8/2009 CR0050586 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/10/2009 21727465 CR0050419 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/2/2009 24150854 19953698CR0050364CriminalNon-Traffic 3/16/2009 CR0050362 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/16/2009 23983896 CR0050281 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/16/2009 21543775 26533524CR0050235CriminalNon-Traffic 3/13/2009 CR0050136 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/22/2009 25498801 CR0050128 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/27/2009 16834490 15710347CR0050029CriminalNon-Traffic 1/5/2009 CR0049833 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/20/2009 16829712 CR0049833 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/20/2009 16829712 25153943CR0049824CriminalNon-Traffic 2/2/2009 CR0049442 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/27/2009 22304031 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 168346661Z0182959CriminalNon-Traffic 2/18/2011 1Z0110867 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/9/2011 17291966 1Z0084613 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/11/2011 26842656 17372598XY0438945CriminalNon-Traffic 9/9/2010 XY0231294 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/18/2010 20898497 XY0176851 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7/12/2010 26422990 CR0052410 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/28/2010 19548546 20383485CR0052196CriminalNon-Traffic 7/22/2009 CR0051949 Criminal Non-Traffic 10/28/2009 15495745 CR0051520 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/10/2009 14424879 22655890CR0049928CriminalNon-Traffic 4/24/2009 CR0049721 Criminal Non-Traffic 7/8/2009 21911734 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) CR0041983 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/26/2007 17188652 2Z0564572 Criminal Non-Traffic 8/1/2012 25131198 152792442Z0247371CriminalNon-Traffic 2/27/2012 2Z0140729 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/11/2012 19150079 1Z0626566 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/14/2011 14481919 264313231Z0559460CriminalNon-Traffic 9/19/2011 XY0610603 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/30/2010 14572082 XY0588410 Criminal Non-Traffic 12/6/2010 16768446 19671653XY0504058CriminalNon-Traffic 11/1/2010 XY0475596 Criminal Non-Traffic 11/23/2010 20252551 XY0440306 Criminal Non-Traffic 9/28/2010 18435555 28943770XY0322817CriminalNon-Traffic 10/5/2010 XY0088515 Criminal Non-Traffic 6/28/2010 18796858 CR0057378 Criminal 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15902912 9Z0125419 Criminal Non-Traffic 4/2/2019 25592267 395673761A0207958CriminalNon-Traffic 2/5/2021 1A0207567 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/18/2021 39618053 1A0194002 Criminal Non-Traffic 3/29/2021 39775019 394997821A0192160CriminalNon-Traffic 1/21/2021 1A0138203 Criminal Non-Traffic 2/8/2021 39573566 1A0138199 Criminal Non-Traffic 1/5/2021 39441219 394277621A0094836CriminalNon-Traffic 1/3/2021 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1181788542/6/1995 26756459 3/20/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1240404603/10/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1216950161/25/1995 18715955 3/9/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1276286482/20/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1228929461/16/1995 25311630 4/17/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1250817275/8/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1221626022/21/1995 23434529 1/24/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1247664053/23/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1234019673/6/1995 21737289 1/3/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1157280641/20/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1210801661/10/1995 17185300 2/27/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2197498955/19/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2158148395/18/1995 19926030 12/28/1994 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 Case Key Charge Document File Date Charge Law Number Charge Law Charge Law Count 22504866112/28/1994 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 21470824012/12/1994 23592833 12/12/1994 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1222411719/5/1995 24717233 8/22/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11850173110/2/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1258554509/25/1995 22624862 9/15/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1215236728/14/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1263960829/22/1995 15226095 7/25/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1193483387/17/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2291462537/31/1995 17869314 7/19/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11615960710/4/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1217004587/12/1995 22316064 6/16/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1252834326/29/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1169615547/21/1995 26679763 7/17/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1247868025/3/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1218621635/8/1995 22520589 4/17/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1182599656/26/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1166557274/24/1995 17345969 4/25/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1146397284/10/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2159203654/3/1995 27475716 3/6/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1149995853/31/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1278785425/8/1995 23861163 3/6/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1172595642/27/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1257938522/20/1995 18304639 3/16/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2289823523/13/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2262151495/8/1995 16498734 2/22/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1147722091/3/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 15403928 11/29/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2206088401/10/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1221952221/10/1996 18606806 11/6/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12589065910/16/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11621531411/17/1995 28877541 11/17/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1171845141/18/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2173429621/12/1996 21221938 10/20/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1221376768/31/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12309476211/27/1995 25885551 7/25/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1277943096/19/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1247844024/21/1995 28917130 10/4/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2227657084/12/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 22845370812/28/1994 16014705 12/30/1994 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1270605601/4/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12000350612/22/1995 24901548 11/27/1995 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12490154811/27/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12158074511/13/1995 23423919 10/30/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12430482911/1/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1210850879/27/1995 18918175 9/20/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12567768511/21/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1172149449/11/1995 19049333 9/5/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12129402510/6/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 16402435 4/1/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2240802676/6/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1245924785/16/1996 29008845 8/21/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1217891164/23/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1267518043/19/1996 20084787 3/12/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1168554423/21/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2274091163/4/1996 27409116 3/4/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1182588342/5/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1238762624/15/1996 23034352 3/18/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1255950473/18/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1269107432/16/1996 22182461 5/13/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2205033182/12/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1265053603/18/1996 27393840 3/11/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1203417631/19/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2285234281/18/1996 16075161 1/22/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1267255271/22/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12424474812/27/1995 24393561 1/8/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1212449331/8/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1208864311/10/1996 20224063 1/2/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1250137501/8/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1282506801/12/1996 26406920 3/20/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 22234540112/12/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 22065386211/27/1995 20653862 11/27/1995 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1187845531/25/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1202407351/16/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 24882365 11/1/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 12601468611/4/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 12221173610/14/1996 20402426 9/27/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1180752609/23/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1163155719/9/1996 23894559 12/2/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12389455912/2/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)21848967110/24/1996 22292980 10/8/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12229298010/8/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 11963198410/9/1996 18615416 10/9/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 21598349910/4/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1244472669/23/1996 20644625 9/16/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1206446259/16/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1146225829/3/1996 26777944 8/22/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11524365010/23/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1151267678/12/1996 26575380 8/14/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1166547268/6/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1289026006/27/1996 15119019 8/19/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1151190198/19/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1230853197/5/1996 22808851 7/22/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1287714456/26/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1165007076/7/1996 17283464 5/13/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1241981435/1/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1242349505/14/1996 23940697 5/10/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2215562858/12/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1271367384/5/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 16692573 7/2/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 12519121411/4/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2235775241/21/1997 22365651 12/12/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12236565112/12/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)22908141611/8/1996 15128456 12/23/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 22616321910/21/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12616321910/21/1996 22027864 11/12/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12202786411/12/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1226635529/18/1996 17750555 12/31/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12503550210/31/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11886169910/21/1996 29065772 2/6/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1181888627/8/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1209229325/24/1996 16418787 10/3/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2179572796/3/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1179572796/3/1996 17543618 5/6/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1204929894/22/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1153894493/6/1996 27825066 4/21/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1278250664/21/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1288700366/13/1996 15791288 5/16/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1252505319/30/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 11570507812/2/1996 21695248 11/25/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12705899210/25/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11933222011/22/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 18631055 4/25/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1186404846/3/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2188663305/12/1997 18866330 5/12/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1270913975/12/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1187386365/5/1997 16387873 4/29/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1234130154/3/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2208439734/8/1997 22175643 8/4/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1248094166/9/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 22107889511/26/1997 21078895 11/26/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2199531018/1/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1199531018/1/1997 25811723 4/16/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1225703202/7/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2166343502/5/1997 16634350 2/5/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1216111065/6/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2284259401/20/1997 23700880 3/26/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1220380113/28/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1273544821/31/1997 19031662 12/13/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2182333791/3/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1209170831/9/1997 16854892 12/23/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 11956094012/10/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1274548291/13/1997 27904069 11/15/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 12790406911/15/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12259720012/2/1996 23992873 10/28/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 12625453910/28/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 12502083311/14/1996 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 27715437 9/29/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 22297546010/9/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1241159589/30/1997 28788218 10/1/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1205792918/25/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2230400397/28/1997 14995670 9/2/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1220118439/17/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1261262968/6/1997 26126296 8/6/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1185982588/6/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2179602687/28/1997 17960268 7/28/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1185852628/22/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1290051297/28/1997 19332370 7/2/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1263843486/9/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1240878646/5/1997 23222808 6/26/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2273156436/26/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1153917106/16/1997 27184284 6/9/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1162286905/30/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1155533816/2/1997 14393521 8/4/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1238418105/19/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2180413335/19/1997 28156942 9/8/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2268907257/1/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1268907257/1/1997 18410930 5/27/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1184109305/27/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2235661484/23/1997 23566148 4/23/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1214098145/27/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1269997946/2/1997 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 17832589 6/5/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1237283274/29/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 21454154410/20/1997 14541544 10/20/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1254663239/2/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1163316878/11/1997 21955059 12/11/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2290730844/28/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1290730844/28/1997 26845977 4/7/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1284628458/4/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12698924812/22/1997 27951542 5/27/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 2213821589/3/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1277946884/30/1997 28698886 4/14/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1263374013/3/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2263374013/3/1997 20599342 2/26/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1214703835/8/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1152191425/27/1997 16205663 10/16/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 11620566310/16/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1220054121/8/1997 23451436 6/13/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1157215557/21/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2157215557/21/1997 17324776 5/9/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 12724782612/29/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 21901228510/23/1997 19012285 10/23/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12360727411/21/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1228018059/29/1997 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 23857487 4/1/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1179097471/29/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1257608012/23/1998 27234261 2/23/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1238489961/7/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2225525542/9/1998 21801624 1/28/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1218016241/28/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12248243912/22/1997 17094373 1/22/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 2152045932/9/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1152045932/9/1998 28767220 1/6/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1147858621/2/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2188658461/28/1998 18675560 2/2/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1186755602/2/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2231449211/5/1998 23144921 1/5/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1145537233/4/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1187744013/16/1998 16599103 1/2/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 21509455812/10/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11509455812/10/1997 21611285 5/7/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1197091481/2/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 12496939011/13/1997 24826848 1/19/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12486653511/5/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12857590110/3/1997 22265528 11/5/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1212498172/9/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2227274639/30/1997 22727463 9/30/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12395699711/10/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1264037288/14/1997 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 21078612 7/17/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2156013256/3/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1156013256/3/1998 18868346 6/29/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2239418987/8/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1240606936/3/1998 16994550 5/13/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1147220126/8/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1276816576/8/1998 15460067 6/1/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2186925736/1/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1186925736/1/1998 26884591 4/29/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1176568575/1/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1163817075/7/1998 26463374 4/28/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1264633744/28/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2180956686/29/1998 18095668 6/29/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1272877884/8/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1194333954/20/1998 26732153 4/27/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1254739544/13/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2254739544/13/1998 20010118 4/7/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1256629453/31/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1157758545/1/1998 27516669 3/27/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1193721025/21/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1173813033/9/1998 16321060 4/17/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1269763392/25/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1212075005/13/1998 25683199 3/12/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1256831993/12/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1257638596/22/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 23810749 6/4/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1223291255/6/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1240203458/25/1997 18202490 7/10/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2277848044/3/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1239014077/1/1997 16279969 12/2/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 11551728710/10/1996 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11692304412/5/1996 22813710 12/22/1994 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11631028712/21/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12226902112/21/1998 22825515 10/15/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 12162089110/30/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1162171699/25/1998 25769088 8/18/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11871592912/21/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 11523049711/10/1998 19128021 8/3/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2259709939/28/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1259709939/28/1998 20717043 9/21/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1166574679/4/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1220990388/12/1998 23827847 7/2/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2259277578/26/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2242615456/25/1998 24261545 6/25/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1279382587/2/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1283211288/6/1998 14586284 7/13/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1186022088/20/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2291379938/4/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 14598281 12/11/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 22853069111/12/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 21510472910/26/1998 15104729 10/26/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12123343911/16/1998 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1185948851/4/1999 19411731 10/8/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12008549510/9/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1266683888/31/1998 24540618 10/23/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1187925769/3/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12015608610/23/1998 19608334 10/30/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1228574878/10/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2282559357/8/1998 17514418 3/25/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1271347902/10/1999 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 12170848112/22/1998 17612347 4/30/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 1176123474/30/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1253421549/14/1998 22012724 9/28/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1176271707/23/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1159287801/12/1999 27145507 4/20/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1214641649/24/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 22884358011/13/1998 28843580 11/13/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2210211863/20/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1210211863/20/1998 21107182 4/13/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1194707508/6/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2254538032/12/1998 25453803 2/12/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1242657152/11/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1218618922/9/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 23698691 6/9/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1189362864/26/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1146752274/27/1999 21443718 3/23/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1278247333/22/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1176488889/7/1999 14996298 5/17/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1237067671/29/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1249278732/22/1999 23454806 2/22/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1273041682/22/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1214931652/4/1999 20937121 3/1/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1194171333/4/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1235206426/25/1999 28181156 2/24/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1251868753/29/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2203253073/16/1999 20325307 3/16/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1215347192/24/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1173084341/7/1999 24911991 1/18/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1168862832/8/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 22345518511/10/1998 23455185 11/10/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1216689182/9/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12093971212/30/1998 23003061 11/16/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12009588012/23/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11725537911/10/1998 17780981 11/10/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 2 11778098111/10/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1270792702/15/1999 22240931 11/9/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11788151010/26/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12380651012/23/1998 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1253968819/13/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11797604710/11/1999 25946580 9/21/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12176531010/22/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1215038539/24/1999 23143756 9/10/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2239880059/22/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1169336589/7/1999 26898681 11/16/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12293785912/17/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12361546312/21/1999 22627047 8/9/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2284553578/11/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1284553578/11/1999 23625742 8/5/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1258468278/11/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1203892048/2/1999 28731052 7/2/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1202466197/29/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1225621978/30/1999 18109139 6/21/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 22737131211/8/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12737131211/8/1999 24515815 7/19/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1272974214/20/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2180311285/24/1999 18031128 5/24/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1285775365/24/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 12821078810/1/1999 14445875 6/28/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2199644807/8/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1199644807/8/1999 17895006 6/25/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1178950066/25/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1151095626/16/1999 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1206168413/9/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1211699421/7/2000 24082848 12/1/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1154771591/13/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1179131002/29/2000 18894120 10/8/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12091245910/8/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1289615358/23/1999 25110464 9/2/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12181668512/1/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2160795312/16/2000 25777829 3/28/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1253582866/14/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1249559678/31/1999 16319674 12/1/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11486508912/31/1998 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12101554612/22/1998 17459142 11/13/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 1265730523/15/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1193478185/12/1999 25788180 5/26/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1 2273456383/25/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1273456383/25/1999 24435220 5/18/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12810488510/28/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12399201010/20/1997 25440222 7/1/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2167076765/21/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1242778943/27/1998 16461510 10/8/1997 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2163272792/16/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1163272792/16/1998 25631043 3/14/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2154191064/3/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2284823145/22/2000 23379242 2/9/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1233792422/9/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1247390952/21/2000 29003838 1/24/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1154631416/19/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2154631416/19/2000 15405549 5/11/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1259427032/18/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)22634973412/17/1999 17265133 10/18/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 11984793811/23/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11809775510/12/1999 23376996 9/14/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2173755071/7/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1148189841/17/2000 16649109 5/2/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2245866463/8/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1271332481/24/2000 21720542 1/3/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1206290602/21/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 11479043412/22/1999 27204185 1/24/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1225764931/24/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2167901841/17/2000 16790184 1/17/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1285740621/7/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12253958712/2/1999 16843551 10/26/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 11684355110/26/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12165444012/6/1999 27465121 11/22/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1282249794/19/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1184385906/14/2000 16679446 11/8/1999 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 1284212183/26/1998 24468051 7/1/1998 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2278391968/28/1997 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1278391968/28/1997 15152797 11/27/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11876253811/27/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2226552659/15/2000 25107250 9/29/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1251072509/29/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 21757669211/22/2000 18562785 9/18/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11792231610/17/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 11439678510/12/2000 18607538 9/5/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1222295357/31/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12627676811/3/2000 25503627 7/7/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1222512137/3/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1158007295/24/2000 24666143 5/18/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1246661435/18/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1161628265/15/2000 27571828 6/6/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1272666908/28/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1190352015/8/2000 19341882 9/13/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1187267288/21/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1278781447/10/2000 27007194 4/17/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1207670705/3/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1272165513/31/2000 27441015 2/28/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11578214611/19/2001 29091869 3/2/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1210611153/14/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2175560755/1/2001 27176062 12/4/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1284824412/12/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2269450434/5/2001 24520424 2/2/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12232525512/13/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1283197413/16/2001 15571657 3/5/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12754896312/8/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)22487499312/14/2000 20952423 3/6/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1178776082/26/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2228673024/4/2001 22867302 4/4/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1149126021/2/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12601765910/30/2000 24784012 4/11/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 11636592811/9/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1214124117/19/2001 25449371 10/27/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 12086601511/27/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1158337687/3/2000 16583648 6/9/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2216277572/12/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1271379365/1/2000 25854339 4/11/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1273953976/9/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1189088275/15/2000 22236048 2/14/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1222360482/14/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2205393951/26/2000 27726522 5/17/1999 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12485786812/8/1998 69.50.412 POSS OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 24938822 3/29/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 22610015511/2/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12568680512/14/2001 23954069 11/21/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1188862255/17/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1285169558/30/2002 21988846 9/17/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12662656111/27/2000 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 12629199110/22/2001 18275595 10/22/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11893717411/20/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1199384048/20/2001 25178901 8/30/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1248739678/30/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1231805607/23/2001 20617867 6/18/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 11993275310/29/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11743545410/8/2001 28637294 8/27/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1271866587/24/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11982149711/13/2001 23085308 12/12/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12085513612/31/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11444555610/5/2001 17950179 6/21/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1168170704/24/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1250547557/30/2001 26200484 5/7/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1287743876/26/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1146632485/1/2001 20993450 4/10/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2167791524/16/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 28456877 8/30/2001 69.41.030 SELL/DELIVER/POSSES LEGEND DRUG NO PRESCRIPTION2 1147502744/9/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2147502744/9/2002 22155047 7/5/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1261768116/17/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1245978305/28/2002 20949030 6/24/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1264432966/17/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1149050115/13/2002 15394636 5/17/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 2153417455/6/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1272473794/15/2002 16363309 5/8/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1146237784/15/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1218414283/4/2002 23368074 8/1/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1233680748/1/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1228412986/21/2002 21637200 4/1/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1275434813/27/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1235186542/4/2002 17335722 1/22/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1253617942/12/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1226347195/13/2002 24493142 6/3/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1248594761/7/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1260445783/8/2002 21220701 1/28/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1150199121/22/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1155936531/21/2002 16019859 4/11/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2166292473/11/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11783299211/26/2001 22555610 10/22/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1256355161/11/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1210267663/7/2002 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 28347560 11/13/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1291019459/24/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1236734001/9/2003 26635982 8/5/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 2182803208/21/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1241010199/18/2002 20342087 5/1/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 21769082612/14/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 11973899612/10/1998 16998420 10/28/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12437878511/26/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12000946410/17/2002 19863781 9/23/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1147981498/19/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1166646409/3/2002 28807140 12/16/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12344749911/15/2002 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1279974978/30/2002 26184708 7/29/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 2271385168/28/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1174249879/3/2002 23115841 10/3/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1144455117/22/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2182728326/24/2002 14853132 8/12/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1177790177/22/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1190237474/24/2002 16922061 1/31/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1278319299/24/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1289198758/9/2001 23926941 10/8/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2217583509/26/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2171264285/29/2001 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 23948979 8/18/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1240615175/13/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2269139794/28/2003 26913979 4/28/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1175139145/12/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1208763425/6/2003 14375321 8/4/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1243418444/22/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2159050484/24/2003 15993916 4/11/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1255206755/27/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1255186095/21/2003 23989639 4/3/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1215896592/28/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1206936963/6/2003 19556012 1/2/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12378524812/20/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12191463312/2/2002 28979638 3/19/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 2254270342/19/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1254270342/19/2003 19720894 11/27/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1159478368/28/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1157957464/22/2003 24580241 11/5/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2262919411/9/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1262919411/9/2003 26132521 6/4/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1199362187/11/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1247591288/5/2002 27174979 1/20/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12166431012/23/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11585688012/16/2002 26572073 11/25/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 12769575910/25/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2207700683/21/2003 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1175980051/5/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)12848723611/18/2003 15679548 9/9/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1160117185/27/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2255431528/28/2003 22407286 6/18/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 11811921112/15/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1250640988/5/2003 22534452 12/4/2002 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1199012251/16/2001 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2192118181/16/2001 22470019 2/11/2000 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1151402989/11/1996 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1237714693/2/2004 20918934 12/10/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 12091893412/10/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 12684142412/8/2003 21345222 12/17/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 12157808212/29/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11611559812/22/2003 21719028 10/9/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 12171902810/9/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)11984000310/9/2003 20956267 9/29/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1221844156/2/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1241725595/21/2003 23623288 5/19/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1241745855/7/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2246521756/12/2003 24652175 6/12/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2289225185/30/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1289225185/30/2003 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 12750753910/21/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 12143084710/11/2004 29124000 9/16/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 22582331710/1/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1178637087/20/2004 14424653 11/4/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2281291067/12/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2282984956/1/2004 21865644 10/12/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 12186564410/12/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1283277978/30/2004 26943346 6/1/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1236547446/1/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1150908695/10/2004 27863997 7/15/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2272649128/4/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1273225853/12/2004 18180082 3/12/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 2181928003/2/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1181928003/2/2004 17614188 4/20/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 1223412553/22/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1204748692/16/2004 28532439 2/10/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2285324392/10/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1166297072/23/2004 15299504 12/2/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)2 1145930742/2/2004 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1223725032/13/2004 29009593 4/26/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12833179911/18/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1269405249/24/2004 15431915 2/9/2004 69.50.401 VIO OF CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE 2 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2234953761/14/2005 23495376 1/14/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2219744784/7/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2191681619/23/2005 26332792 5/26/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1255884695/16/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1248387264/25/2005 28126641 7/6/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1239642801/21/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1290387831/21/2005 22697628 2/7/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1168134711/28/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1232413384/25/2005 23533715 5/23/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1199753376/30/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1260623985/2/2005 26266956 3/7/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1235416829/15/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1148214385/3/2005 15357710 7/6/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1153577107/6/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1232739307/14/2005 19200292 5/3/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2204263145/9/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1143986041/24/2005 14398604 1/24/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1203595115/4/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1260365648/17/2004 20045394 12/2/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 22523286012/2/2004 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1260405691/6/2004 16200564 10/13/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 11620056410/13/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E) 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1247238031/14/2005 19898645 10/16/2001 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 26787569 1/23/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2188450527/21/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 22481230310/7/2005 27060424 11/22/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 22295845312/5/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2260356472/27/2006 21147307 11/22/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 22168504710/18/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12788533510/24/2005 26289767 10/10/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1263928088/22/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2145656289/19/2005 20415993 8/12/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1289205888/8/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 12911906511/4/2005 29119065 11/4/2005 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION2 11993116910/12/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2168006818/15/2005 16062698 8/12/2005 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION1 12505060211/7/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 11641071210/31/2005 20632456 5/26/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2252294855/16/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1265473144/4/2005 15962340 12/2/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2189011621/24/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1275412103/3/2005 25345908 11/8/2004 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 22534590811/8/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1253675122/2/2005 22304918 11/15/2004 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1231407831/27/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1251564427/31/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1209549586/27/2006 22192565 5/15/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12294174711/2/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 22035571111/3/2006 20766184 10/27/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11985730311/6/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12397775511/6/2006 23026002 10/13/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2281613778/21/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1164675786/19/2006 25185485 6/21/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1288493979/27/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1259576604/7/2006 19691968 3/13/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2181450762/1/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1165989832/10/2006 19463087 3/2/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2286927395/5/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1286927395/5/2006 17167608 2/6/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 11667035412/28/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1199706532/6/2006 22545432 3/20/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1204133981/18/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 11584806511/28/2005 26648351 1/3/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1246603574/10/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 22501507312/22/2005 16087140 1/18/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12334107612/28/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12362025310/31/2005 21275198 7/13/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1166903644/27/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1232839334/27/2006 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1274626865/7/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1232172315/7/2007 16384559 4/16/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1174433774/9/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1211451449/24/2007 23953551 5/14/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2276066705/7/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1157095485/4/2007 27786071 4/30/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 2289202164/10/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12757622612/7/2006 15772669 2/14/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2189988322/14/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1165955559/25/2006 24875325 9/7/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12117902412/28/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 11968935110/2/2006 25987948 10/10/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1193913469/25/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION2193913469/25/2006 23022303 3/3/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12520241610/17/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2217564019/6/2005 21756401 9/6/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1211757238/19/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1176088598/29/2005 26871614 12/20/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1210579917/25/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1187678481/24/2005 22181892 7/12/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1221818927/12/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2169550811/27/2003 16955081 1/27/2003 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 27150284 5/31/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1172971991/24/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1144401889/14/2007 20624100 1/26/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1185956615/1/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1164587331/10/2007 17697007 12/29/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1248013461/24/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1245377832/2/2007 22083448 10/9/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1291050899/8/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1266305299/5/2006 14407727 6/6/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 22021879711/15/2006 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2275177986/21/2006 21592632 11/20/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11820308211/13/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12357838712/17/2007 25110403 11/5/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12003969112/3/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2151964819/24/2007 16362282 9/18/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1239665958/23/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1219935688/8/2007 17851752 7/13/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1154252959/24/2007 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1169802168/13/2007 16775025 7/17/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11569495010/3/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1181058856/11/2007 20172652 11/26/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1216511357/23/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2170195476/7/2007 17019547 6/7/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1251986861/7/2008 18073427 1/7/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1227812693/10/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 21504299510/30/2007 18082176 1/15/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 12655579212/31/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12733822210/30/2007 18879981 10/15/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1222272721/7/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2208735451/14/2008 24610261 3/3/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1223838999/24/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2252018433/3/2008 19216636 8/13/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 22448950112/19/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1159677327/30/2007 23091478 10/30/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1277437136/27/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2153930319/19/2007 25763652 9/5/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1275404558/21/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2182822917/17/2007 19536550 6/25/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 12258458312/2/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2260737495/27/2008 26073749 5/27/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1178374954/23/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1246210415/14/2007 23711843 9/19/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1179637622/25/2005 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2171597353/28/2005 19628571 6/27/2005 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2281788855/30/2003 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.401(E)CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE VIOL - SECTION (E)1281788855/30/2003 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 11988538311/10/2008 27032994 9/8/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2222502307/7/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1222502307/7/2008 24209887 7/24/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11660382510/6/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1281599047/14/2008 24298002 5/20/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2282305695/20/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1282305695/20/2008 26034060 10/30/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2280670539/23/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1268382676/3/2008 22170907 6/2/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1221709076/2/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2167224167/28/2008 22135266 3/17/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1260348473/3/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2259920443/21/2008 16427825 6/16/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1164278256/16/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1152683724/17/2008 15642756 8/25/2008 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION1 2147237708/25/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1244986323/25/2008 18927339 3/19/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1278088574/14/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2188095972/20/2008 24978808 2/18/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1231275563/4/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2145327843/17/2008 28182396 3/3/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1257524422/11/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2209016712/4/2008 21990642 2/27/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1178151903/31/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1248498013/17/2009 17689885 11/24/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2240805482/16/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1240805482/16/2009 28468633 2/9/2009 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 2256176624/20/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1251141918/29/2008 20443659 7/29/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 12898638812/4/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 22385444210/16/2008 26628924 12/1/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2170976522/13/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2176150399/5/2008 20710204 2/12/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1160776487/15/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1219599887/10/2008 24739079 2/25/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 2241073262/12/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 11829208811/5/2008 17368741 8/8/2008 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1274995904/11/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1205032597/25/2008 16953079 4/21/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 1227830882/26/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1196627732/6/2007 26784982 11/6/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1280803156/18/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1157781329/29/2009 23859431 10/19/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1162858335/15/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION1207357898/20/2008 25085054 9/3/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2277511368/25/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS ATTEMPT2237122759/29/2008 26362368 9/9/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 3207116869/19/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS ATTEMPT 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1177046598/11/2008 20439676 8/11/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1146687366/3/2008 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2215335904/30/2008 25754473 1/25/2007 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1276470503/17/2006 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2153690829/8/2009 21557448 9/8/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2 2240207339/14/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1166350478/20/2009 22912632 8/10/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1194547436/1/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1256081065/26/2009 21875415 5/26/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1263739576/17/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1285099552/6/2009 23266140 6/8/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1217274654/10/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1241508549/2/2009 19953698 3/16/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1239838963/16/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1215437752/16/2009 26533524 3/13/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1254988011/22/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1168344902/27/2009 15710347 1/5/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 2168297121/20/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1168297121/20/2009 25153943 2/2/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1223040313/27/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 16834666 2/18/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1172919663/9/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2268426564/11/2011 17372598 9/9/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1208984976/18/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1175404724/5/2010 28232424 4/15/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1248794534/5/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS ATTEMPT2191583541/20/2010 23132496 10/15/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 4240569027/15/2010 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1212362826/11/2010 14696727 3/10/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1214020424/8/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2226930714/8/2010 25548516 11/2/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1245676996/7/2010 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS ATTEMPT4288808891/11/2010 26349924 12/28/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1151823661/19/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1232285401/12/2010 23212328 1/4/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS ATTEMPT3 12485407710/20/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2286242012/5/2010 25312655 4/14/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1264229907/12/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1195485461/28/2010 20383485 7/22/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11549574510/28/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1144248798/10/2009 22655890 4/24/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2219117347/8/2009 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 21718865211/26/2007 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 2251311988/1/2012 15279244 2/27/2012 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1191500791/11/2012 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS ATTEMPT 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 21448191911/14/2011 26431323 9/19/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11457208212/30/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 11676844612/6/2010 19671653 11/1/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12025255111/23/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412(2)DRUG PARAPHERNALIA DELIVERY 2184355559/28/2010 28943770 10/5/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1187968586/28/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1289304327/6/2011 24112719 7/6/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 12278714910/7/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1215003362/28/2011 20879220 6/10/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2209405452/22/2010 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE ATTEMPT 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1214075032/17/2010 26119460 10/5/2010 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 2255401512/20/2009 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1255401512/20/2009 20708350 12/29/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1222852546/9/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 22416300010/19/2007 21976536 9/20/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1278381457/6/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1186132895/16/2011 25989417 3/24/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 1269794353/18/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1275453814/25/2011 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 3/28/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 2 01/17/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 3 01/28/2019 3/12/2019 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 0 31590099510/2/2018 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4013 CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION ATTEMPT3231256699/7/2018 21125380 2/19/2018 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 3 1264172253/22/2018 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 12814343212/21/2017 20333925 1/5/2018 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1182959041/3/2017 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 03/24/2017 9/28/2016 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 02/26/2016 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 07/21/2015 27028229 10/14/2008 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 11479578010/27/2014 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1237901651/11/2010 16296652 8/24/2012 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 4 1239993858/3/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1267097946/25/2012 25753483 7/21/2011 69.50.4014 MARIJUANA POSSESS 40 GRAMS OR LESS 1 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 10/31/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 010/16/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 09/11/2019 10/29/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 011/8/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 010/4/2019 8/27/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 3 06/10/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 012/26/2019 12/1/2019 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 0 1 011/4/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 010/22/2019 9/27/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 09/27/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 09/27/2019 10/7/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 09/17/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 010/21/2019 10/21/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 09/11/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 09/5/2019 9/11/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 09/27/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 011/8/2019 11/25/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 09/20/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 09/5/2019 9/3/2019 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 08/1/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 09/3/2019 5/6/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 3 0 2 01/24/2019 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 01/11/2019 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2 010/19/2020 69.41.030(2)(B)LEGEND DRUG-POSSESS NO PRESCRIPTION 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 010/5/2020 10/22/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 0 1 07/13/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 07/14/2020 5/18/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 3 0 1 06/10/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 08/26/2020 7/17/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 04/15/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 03/31/2020 3/31/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 2 06/24/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 05/22/2020 4/7/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 02/11/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 02/11/2020 1/6/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 03/23/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 02/5/2020 2/5/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 2 01/28/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 04/20/2020 2/26/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 0 1 01/2/2020 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 04/22/2020 2/20/2020 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 1 02/20/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 012/13/2019 11/22/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 0 2 02/11/2020 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 09/27/2019 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 23941076312/24/2020 39230354 11/6/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1363686819/8/2020 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1364034819/17/2020 35879601 5/22/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1363484878/28/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1357162964/23/2020 39695495 3/9/2021 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 1358643915/19/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1362770378/10/2020 35824040 5/12/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1354335522/20/2020 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2352377191/24/2020 21470820 10/18/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1 11590291211/8/2019 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1255922674/2/2019 39567376 2/5/2021 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1396180532/18/2021 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2397750193/29/2021 39499782 1/21/2021 69.50.412 DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 1395735662/8/2021 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 1394412191/5/2021 39427762 1/3/2021 69.50.412(1)UNLAWFUL DRUG PARAPHERNALIA USE 2 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2/15/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/24/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/11/1995 5/24/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/20/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/25/1995 1/25/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/2/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/8/1995 4/24/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/24/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/23/1995 3/15/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/1/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/7/1995 1/23/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/27/199510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/11/1995 11/13/199520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/28/199420 Charge Law Seq Num Charge Result Charge Result Code Charge Result Date 2 0 Guilty GUIL 12/28/1994 12/12/199420GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/12/199420 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 10/26/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/27/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/11/1995 10/18/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/25/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/11/1995 11/7/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/17/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/2/1995 8/4/199520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/19/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/4/1995 11/20/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/8/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/7/1995 9/5/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/26/199520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/11/1995 8/9/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/17/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/26/1995 5/3/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/9/199520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/26/1995 4/5/199520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/6/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/31/1995 6/28/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/23/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/8/1995 10/13/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/21/199510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 5/24/1995 6/7/199520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/6/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/23/1995 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 2/19/199610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 2/27/1996 1/22/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/2/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/5/1996 1/9/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/9/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/12/1996 1/22/199620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/23/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/28/1996 1/17/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/27/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/29/1996 2/1/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/20/199610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/23/1996 5/31/199520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/9/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/10/1995 12/22/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/6/199520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/6/1995 11/21/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/19/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/15/1995 11/15/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/8/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/21/1995 10/30/199510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/5/199510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/14/1995 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 7/22/199610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/8/1996 10/29/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/7/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/1/1996 4/1/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/30/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/1/1996 4/23/199620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/23/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/1/1996 4/24/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/18/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/18/1996 2/16/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/23/199610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/2/1996 5/14/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/1/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/20/1996 1/24/199620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/31/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/24/1996 3/13/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/8/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/2/1996 2/7/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/13/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/17/1996 6/3/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/20/199610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 1/23/1996 2/14/199620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/14/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/6/1996 4/10/199610GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 12/18/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/9/1996 12/13/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/27/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/4/1996 9/9/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/2/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/2/1996 11/25/199620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/5/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/5/1996 12/9/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/9/199620 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/8/1996 10/22/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/9/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/9/1996 9/3/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/22/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/20/1996 10/16/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/14/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/3/1996 12/2/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/19/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/19/1996 7/5/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/1/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/26/1996 7/30/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/22/199610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/1/1996 9/26/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/26/199610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 12/2/1996 4/5/199610GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 11/17/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/27/1997 4/18/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/14/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/14/1997 2/27/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/27/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 2/4/1997 2/4/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/28/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/28/1997 8/6/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/10/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/4/1997 1/22/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/17/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/23/1997 1/13/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/11/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 2/17/1997 2/17/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/22/199710 1 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 7/17/1997 12/3/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/21/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/21/1997 7/22/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/31/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/28/1997 12/2/199610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/30/199620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/27/1996 11/22/199610GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 4/29/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/3/1997 6/24/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/24/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/25/1997 5/5/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/11/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/14/1997 6/11/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/23/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/18/1997 12/9/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/9/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 8/1/1997 8/1/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/16/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/2/1997 2/17/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/17/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/29/1997 4/2/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/21/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/7/1997 1/31/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/3/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/24/1997 2/19/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/26/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/13/1997 2/25/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/28/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/28/1997 1/14/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/15/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/17/1997 1/7/199710GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 10/6/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 11/18/1997 12/9/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/19/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/23/1997 7/28/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/10/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/3/1997 8/6/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/6/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/18/1997 7/28/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/28/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/3/1997 12/3/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/14/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/5/1997 7/16/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/26/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 11/3/1997 6/25/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/22/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/29/1997 6/10/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/23/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/23/1997 5/23/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/20/199710 2 0 Guilty GUIL 7/1/1997 7/1/199710GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/26/199720 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/26/1997 6/23/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/23/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/27/1997 10/23/199710GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 3/9/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/29/1998 2/4/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/4/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/24/1998 5/4/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/24/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/2/1998 4/2/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/13/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/21/1998 4/20/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/24/199820 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/8/1998 1/20/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/29/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/15/1998 1/15/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/4/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/27/1998 1/27/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 1/15/199820 1 0 Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 1/15/1998 1/15/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/1/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/21/1998 1/21/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/21/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/29/1997 10/23/199720GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/23/199710 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/31/1997 10/6/199710GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 10/12/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/28/1998 3/6/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/17/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/1/1998 2/9/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/28/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/28/1998 2/11/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/7/199820 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/23/1998 4/23/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/6/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/10/1998 6/1/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/5/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/5/1998 1/5/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/5/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/3/1998 5/4/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/25/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 3/30/1998 3/30/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/10/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/24/1998 2/10/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/24/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/26/1998 1/19/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/30/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/1/1998 3/5/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/5/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/27/1998 11/30/199810GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 7/27/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/8/1998 9/8/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/4/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 7/8/1998 11/3/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/29/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/1/1998 12/17/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/26/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/26/1998 10/26/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/8/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/1/1998 8/3/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/1/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/1/1998 8/24/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/24/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/8/1998 4/29/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/22/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/13/1998 4/13/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/17/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/5/1998 7/17/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/16/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/2/1998 3/9/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/17/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/28/1998 9/15/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/23/199820 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/23/1998 9/22/199810GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 3/24/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/25/1999 10/7/199910Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 1/20/199910 2 0 Guilty GUIL 6/24/1999 2/22/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/31/199920 1 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 10/18/1999 12/27/199910Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 11/19/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/30/1998 12/30/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/30/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/9/1998 10/29/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/23/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/30/1998 11/23/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/14/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 11/17/1998 11/17/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/15/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/14/1998 12/9/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/16/199810 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/29/1998 11/9/199820GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/9/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/18/1998 12/9/199810GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/22/199810 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/6/1998 12/1/199820GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 1/7/199910 2 0 Guilty GUIL 1/4/1999 4/13/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/13/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/24/1999 1/4/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/1/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/15/1999 3/23/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/29/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/6/1999 6/30/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/10/199920 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/8/1999 9/29/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/3/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/4/1999 1/4/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/5/199920 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/5/1999 1/6/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/4/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/20/1999 2/3/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/29/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/4/1999 2/16/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/16/199910 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/28/1999 4/28/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/24/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/1/1999 1/6/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/6/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/4/1999 6/23/199910GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 11/16/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/15/1999 6/1/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/28/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/28/1999 9/7/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/29/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/30/1999 2/22/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/22/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/3/1999 3/4/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/1/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/27/1999 9/15/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/21/199920 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/4/1999 9/1/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/1/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/2/1999 2/24/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/30/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/17/1999 6/25/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/25/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/5/1999 5/4/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/11/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/10/1999 4/19/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/23/199920 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/23/1999 2/24/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/4/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/24/1999 4/7/199910GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/6/1999 11/17/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/23/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/1/1999 10/20/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/10/199910 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/22/1999 9/15/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/20/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/27/1999 12/29/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/31/199910 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/26/1999 10/26/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/5/199920 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/23/1999 11/23/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/12/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/16/1999 10/12/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/9/199920 2 0 Guilty GUIL 12/21/1999 12/21/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/19/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/13/1999 5/24/199920GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/24/199910 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/10/1999 10/27/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/7/199910 2 0 Guilty GUIL 7/8/1999 7/8/199910GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/3/199920 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/3/1999 9/7/199910GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/10/2000 3/28/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 12/21/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/28/2000 4/17/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/31/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/15/2000 11/22/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/25/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/17/2000 3/27/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/5/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/19/2000 8/10/200010Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 5/30/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/5/2000 9/13/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/15/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/15/2000 3/8/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/26/200010 2 0 Guilty GUIL 3/14/2000 3/14/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/16/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/12/2000 3/16/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 4/10/200010 2 0 Guilty GUIL 2/29/2000 2/3/200010Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 1/27/200010 2 0 Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 1/13/2000 1/13/200010Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR Guilty GUIL 7/26/200010 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2 0 Guilty GUIL 8/25/2000 5/22/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/21/200020 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/21/2000 3/29/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/17/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/19/2000 6/19/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/19/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/12/2000 3/28/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/18/200020 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/8/2000 2/28/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/25/200010 2 0 Guilty GUIL 1/24/2000 1/17/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/7/200010 2 0 Guilty GUIL 5/30/2000 5/16/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/3/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/16/2000 10/5/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/27/200020 1 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 11/27/2000 1/17/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/17/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/27/2000 4/26/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/6/200020 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/6/2000 6/20/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/24/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/30/2000 6/14/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/4/200010 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 11/21/200110Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 1/23/200110 2 0 Guilty GUIL 6/6/2001 6/6/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/27/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/4/2000 9/15/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/8/200020 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/8/2000 12/19/200020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/23/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/29/2000 10/12/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/9/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/11/2000 11/3/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/28/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/12/2000 5/24/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/31/200020 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/31/2000 5/24/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/9/200020 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/30/2000 5/17/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/28/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/21/2000 7/19/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/15/200010 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/15/2000 8/24/200010GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/27/200010 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 11/20/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/5/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/10/2001 11/14/200120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/4/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/11/2001 7/11/200120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/27/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/16/2001 9/20/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/28/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/20/2001 3/23/200120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/22/200120 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/26/2001 5/10/200120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/10/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/12/2001 2/6/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/11/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/15/2001 8/27/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/9/200120 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/6/2001 7/5/200110Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 2/20/200110 2 0 Guilty GUIL 11/2/2001 1/10/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 8/14/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/21/2001 8/1/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 2/8/200120 1 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 2/8/2001 2/7/200120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/8/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/15/2001 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 4/24/200210 2 0 Guilty GUIL 3/11/2002 4/22/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/4/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/11/2002 8/30/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/9/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/1/2002 12/3/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/22/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/3/2001 11/19/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/3/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/27/2001 7/23/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/18/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/17/2001 12/5/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/16/200120 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/14/2001 11/13/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/12/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/31/2001 10/5/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/21/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/24/2001 7/30/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/11/200110 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/25/2001 7/31/200110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/16/200110 2 0 Guilty GUIL 7/3/2001 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 2/13/200220 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/9/2002 4/9/200220GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/6/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/31/2002 5/28/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/3/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/26/2002 6/24/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/14/200220 2 0 Guilty GUIL 5/6/2002 5/8/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/15/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/15/2002 7/2/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/3/200220 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/3/2002 7/15/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/1/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/22/2002 4/23/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/18/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/1/2002 5/13/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/3/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/6/2002 8/5/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/28/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/6/2002 3/15/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/11/200210 2 0 Guilty GUIL 3/11/2002 4/3/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/15/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/12/2002 8/6/200210GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 1/29/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/24/2003 2/4/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/8/200320 2 0 Guilty GUIL 1/15/2003 2/4/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/17/200310 2 0 Guilty GUIL 5/20/2003 3/27/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/9/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/30/2002 12/17/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/30/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/17/2002 10/16/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/16/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/15/2002 8/30/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/15/200220 2 0 Guilty GUIL 8/28/2002 9/3/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/6/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/20/2002 6/24/200220GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/16/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/9/2002 6/3/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/11/200210 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/10/2002 4/24/200210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/27/200210 2 0 Guilty GUIL 11/26/2002 1/3/200220GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 9/16/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/13/2003 5/7/200320GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/7/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/12/2003 11/4/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/4/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 6/4/2003 8/4/200320GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/6/200320 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/27/2003 6/25/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/12/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/29/2003 3/6/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/2/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/3/2003 1/7/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/8/200320 2 0 Guilty GUIL 2/19/2003 2/19/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/3/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/24/2003 5/20/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/16/200310 2 0 Guilty GUIL 1/9/2003 1/9/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/15/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/6/2003 1/8/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/20/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/5/2003 3/18/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/15/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/21/2003 4/9/200320GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1 0 Guilty GUIL 1/5/2004 7/12/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/14/200410 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/12/2004 2/4/200420GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/20/200410 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/2/2004 8/24/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/13/200410 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/8/2004 9/8/200420GuiltyGUIL Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 11/24/200410 1 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 11/9/2004 6/15/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/22/200320 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/22/2003 12/8/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/17/200320 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/29/2003 12/31/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/9/200320 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/9/2003 10/9/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/8/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/20/2003 9/16/200310GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/24/200310 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/7/2003 11/21/200320GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/21/200310 2 0 Guilty GUIL 6/9/2003 6/9/200310GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/21/2004 10/11/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/23/200410 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/1/2004 7/20/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/4/200410 2 0 Guilty GUIL 7/12/2004 6/29/200420GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/12/200420 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/12/2004 10/6/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/1/200410 1 0 Guilty GUIL 9/21/2004 6/22/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/15/200410 2 0 Guilty GUIL 11/29/2004 12/14/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/22/200410 2 0 Guilty GUIL 3/2/2004 3/2/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/10/200410 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/12/2004 3/18/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/10/200410 2 0 Guilty GUIL 2/10/2004 3/3/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/15/200420 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/11/2004 9/13/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/26/200410 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/19/2004 10/25/200410GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/16/200420 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 2/14/200520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/14/200510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/7/2005 9/23/200520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/6/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/16/2005 5/24/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/6/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/21/2005 1/21/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/6/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/7/2005 6/24/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/1/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 8/10/2005 6/7/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/1/200520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/12/2005 6/7/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/6/200520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 7/6/2005 11/28/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/15/200510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 6/13/2005 2/8/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/8/200520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/10/2005 5/17/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/1/200510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 1/4/2005 9/13/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/23/200520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 2/23/2005 1/14/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 8/26/200510 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 2/21/200610 2 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 5/25/2006 2/15/200620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/8/200620 2 0 Guilty GUIL 5/25/2006 5/24/200620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/7/200610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/18/2005 11/30/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/28/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/5/2005 11/30/200520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/12/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/29/2005 12/12/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/12/200520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/14/2005 12/7/200520GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/19/200510 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/16/2005 10/31/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/20/200510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/19/2005 6/22/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/14/200510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 6/30/2005 3/3/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/26/200510 2 0 Guilty GUIL 4/26/2005 4/12/200510GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/1/200520 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/25/2005 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/25/2006 10/16/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/13/200610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 12/21/2006 11/3/200620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/21/200610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/6/2006 11/6/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/13/200610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/19/2006 7/24/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/16/200610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 11/28/2006 6/27/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/17/200610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 9/27/2006 4/19/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/8/200610 2 0 Guilty GUIL 10/11/2006 10/11/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/20/200620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 3/20/2006 7/3/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/21/200610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 4/19/2006 6/19/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/3/200620 1 0 Guilty GUIL 10/13/2006 3/6/200620GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/7/200610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/30/2006 4/11/200610GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/5/200610 1 0 Guilty GUIL 5/24/2006 5/24/200610GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 0 Guilty GUIL 6/20/2007 8/1/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/16/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 6/20/2007 9/24/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/27/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 10/23/2007 5/23/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/29/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 5/8/2007 1/8/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/31/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 11/21/2007 1/10/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/6/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 2/5/2007 4/10/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/12/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 2/28/2007 2/28/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/6/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 12/17/2007 2/14/20070Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 2/14/20070 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 1/29/2007 1/10/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/12/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 9/26/2007 1/2/20070Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 8/28/20070 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 8/28/2007 1/23/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/23/20070 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 5/31/20070 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 11/15/2007 10/24/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/5/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 5/1/2007 3/28/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/21/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 2/5/2007 3/5/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/16/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 4/11/2007 7/31/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/17/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 3/13/2007 11/13/20070Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 11/28/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 11/13/2007 12/17/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/5/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 12/3/2007 11/13/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/23/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 9/5/2007 9/11/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/17/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 9/24/2007 8/13/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/26/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 12/12/2007 10/22/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/5/20070 0 Guilty GUIL 7/23/2007 6/18/20070GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/18/20070 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 6/16/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/31/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 7/1/2008 4/29/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/24/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 5/14/2008 1/28/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/24/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 4/15/2008 5/21/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/13/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 1/29/2008 4/2/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/7/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 2/12/2008 5/20/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/6/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 3/19/2008 5/14/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/22/20080 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 8/7/2008 1/29/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/20/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 1/30/2008 11/7/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/7/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 2/4/2008 3/20/20080Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 4/10/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 1/28/2008 10/22/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/27/20080 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 4/1/2008 4/1/20080Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 11/19/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/24/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 10/15/2008 10/15/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/3/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 11/12/2008 8/1/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/22/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 5/20/2008 5/20/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/3/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 12/31/2008 6/3/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/18/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 8/18/2008 8/27/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/9/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 7/23/2008 6/10/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/30/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 6/30/2008 5/20/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/24/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 9/24/2008 10/28/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/9/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 8/5/2008 6/16/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/24/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 5/7/2008 8/5/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/5/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 2/11/2008 4/29/20080GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/30/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 8/27/2008 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 4/14/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 11/19/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 2/25/2009 2/25/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/29/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 10/5/2009 10/20/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/6/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 3/4/2009 3/11/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/10/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 6/24/2009 6/23/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/13/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 2/17/2009 1/12/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/5/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 7/22/2009 6/9/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/28/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 1/6/2009 8/25/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/23/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 5/18/2009 9/22/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/5/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 7/14/2009 11/18/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 2/4/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 5/26/2009 8/12/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/3/20080 0 Guilty GUIL 10/29/2008 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1/28/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/13/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 2/9/2010 11/15/20100Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 1/7/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 1/13/2010 7/12/20100Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 6/14/20100 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 2/9/2010 10/14/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/1/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 10/20/2009 9/29/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/28/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 9/10/2009 6/24/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/26/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 7/27/2009 6/23/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/15/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 4/20/2009 10/21/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/15/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 11/4/2009 2/25/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/8/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 6/15/2009 5/20/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/11/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 4/10/2009 4/10/20090GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/5/20090 0 Guilty GUIL 5/20/2009 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 4/4/20110 0 Guilty GUIL 4/5/2011 5/9/20110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/28/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 9/1/2010 5/4/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/12/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 8/25/2010 3/9/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/20/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 8/23/2010 8/18/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/23/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 5/5/2010 5/5/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 8/11/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 8/3/2010 2/8/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/10/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 8/4/2010 3/24/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/24/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 3/3/2010 6/22/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/2/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 11/8/2010 3/1/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 12/13/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 3/24/2010 3/23/20100GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/20/20100 0 Guilty GUIL 12/6/2010 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 1/24/2012 8/29/20120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/4/20120 0 Guilty GUIL 3/26/2012 3/19/20120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/12/20120 0 Guilty GUIL 4/19/2011 5/3/20110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/19/20110 0 Guilty GUIL 3/30/2011 1/12/20110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/2/20110 0 Guilty GUIL 1/5/2011 8/22/20110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/24/20110 0 Guilty GUIL 1/12/2011 5/23/20110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/31/20110 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 2/17/2011 1/27/20110Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 10/18/20110 0 Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 8/18/2011 8/18/20110Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR Guilty GUIL 11/7/20110 0 Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR 12/6/2011 9/19/20110Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 9/30/20110 0 Guilty GUIL 8/9/2011 6/29/20110GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/9/20110 0 Guilty GUIL 9/13/2011 7/18/20110GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 11/6/2019 Guilty GUIL 1/25/2019 2/26/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 7/29/2019 0 Guilty GUIL 10/18/2018 9/12/20180GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/30/20180 0 Guilty GUIL 4/26/2018 5/1/20180GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/16/20180 0 Guilty GUIL 1/3/2018 5/23/2017GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/6/2017 Guilty GUIL 3/25/2016 5/11/2016GuiltyGUIL Guilty Deferred Pros RevokedGDPR 11/25/20150 0 Guilty GUIL 1/20/2015 9/11/20130Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 5/21/20130 0 Guilty GUIL 8/21/2012 8/28/20120GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/2/20120 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 3/11/2020 Guilty GUIL 2/3/2020 1/7/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/25/2020 Guilty GUIL 2/19/2020 3/4/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/4/2020 Guilty GUIL 1/29/2020 12/27/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/6/2019 Guilty GUIL 12/17/2019 10/23/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 11/13/2019 Guilty GUIL 10/31/2019 12/27/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/8/2019 Guilty GUIL 12/20/2019 12/6/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/31/2019 Guilty GUIL 11/19/2019 11/19/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/17/2019 Guilty GUIL 9/27/2019 12/17/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/23/2019 Guilty GUIL 12/5/2019 11/19/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/24/2019 Guilty GUIL 11/13/2019 11/7/2019GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/1/2019 Guilty GUIL 2/19/2019 4/9/2019GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Guilty GUIL 11/24/2020 10/16/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 10/26/2020 Guilty GUIL 7/14/2020 11/4/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/3/2020 Guilty GUIL 10/20/2020 10/13/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/1/2020 Guilty GUIL 7/21/2020 12/2/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 12/28/2020 Guilty GUIL 7/24/2020 5/26/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 9/16/2020 Guilty GUIL 12/2/2020 3/9/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 3/2/2020 Guilty GUIL 5/14/2020 9/8/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 6/16/2020 Guilty GUIL 3/17/2020 4/30/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/27/2020 Guilty GUIL 1/22/2020 11/9/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 5/13/2020 Guilty GUIL 8/11/2020 2/5/2020GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/16/2020 Guilty GUIL 5/28/2020 11/9/2020GuiltyGUIL AGENDA ITEM #6. g) 1/27/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 4/14/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 1/25/2021 3/29/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 2/16/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 3/1/2021 4/16/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/3/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 5/12/2021 1/8/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/26/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 3/24/2021 2/12/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 8/2/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 1/20/2021 4/7/20210Guilty Oth Deferral RevokedGODR Guilty GUIL 2/9/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 4/30/2021 3/29/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/22/20210 0 Guilty GUIL 2/8/2021 1/6/20210GuiltyGUIL Guilty GUIL 1/4/20210 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Page 1 of 4 INTERAGENCY REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENT - BETWEEN WASHINGTON STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS AND This Interagency Reimbursement Agreement (“Agreement”) is entered into by and between Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts (“AOC”) and Everson-Nooksack Municipal Court (“Jurisdiction”) to reimburse extraordinary costs of resentencing and vacating sentences as required by State v. Blake (“Blake”). AOC and Jurisdiction will be known individually as Party and collectively as Parties. I. PURPOSE The purpose of this Agreement is to reimburse the extraordinary judicial, prosecutorial, clerk, court administration and/or defense-related costs of resentencing and vacating the sentences of individuals whose convictions or sentences are affected by the Blake decision. For Municipalities and Counties, this will include language Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill 5187, Section 114(3) passed by the 2023 Legislature, which includes simple drug possession, to include cannabis and possession of paraphernalia. II. REIMBURSEMENT A. Extraordinary Expenses Reimbursement. AOC shall reimburse Jurisdiction up to a maximum of $1,000,000.00 for the extraordinary judicial, clerk, court administration, prosecutorial, and/or defense-related costs of resentencing and vacating the sentences of individuals whose convictions and/or sentences are affected by the Blake decision. For Municipalities this will include language from the Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill 5187, Section 114(13), passed by the 2023 Legislature, which includes simple drug possession to include cannabis and possession of paraphernalia. To be eligible for reimbursement, the Costs must be incurred between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025. AOC will not reimburse Jurisdiction Costs incurred after June 30, 2025. AOC may, at its sole discretion, deny reimbursement requests in excess of the amount awarded. If additional funding is or becomes available for these purposes, AOC and Jurisdiction may mutually agree to increase the amount awarded under this Agreement. B. General. AOC shall reimburse Jurisdiction for approved and completed reimbursements by warrant or electronic funds transfer within 30 days of receiving a properly completed A-19 invoice and the necessary backup documentation. Docusign Envelope ID: ACD4A65C-3FB6-4F6C-B5E0-922D01EC8332 CITY OF RENTON IAA25281 $285,984 City of Renton IAA25281 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Page 2 of 4 III. PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE Performance under this Agreement begins on July 1, 2024, regardless of date of execution, and ends on June 30, 2025. The period of performance maybe amended by mutual agreement of the Parties. IV. TERMS OF REIMBURSEMENT A. Jurisdiction shall electronically submit, once per month, it’s A-19 invoices to payables@courts.wa.gov. B. Jurisdiction’s A-19 invoices must include: 1. Payment documents from Jurisdiction indicating the amounts expended, the recipients, and the date of expenditure; 2. A list of any case numbers associated with the services provided; 3. A breakdown of expenses by judicial, clerk/court administration, prosecutorial, and defense-related costs; 4. Any employee positions supported by Blake related funds, broken down by judicial, clerk/court administration, prosecutorial, and defense-related positions, including name of employee, title, hourly wage of the individual, time spent on Blake-related cases and a list of corresponding cause numbers; 5. The unique three-digit court code for the Jurisdiction the work was completed on behalf of must be provided on the A-19. If a Jurisdiction contracts with another jurisdiction to provide court services, then the unique court code for the jurisdiction for which the work was completed must be provided; and, 6. Data, including case numbers and aggregate data on the number and type of cases: a. Vacated under Blake; b. Resentenced under Blake; and c. Being worked on under Blake. V. REVENUE SHARING A. AOC, in its sole discretion, may initiate revenue sharing. AOC will notify the Jurisdiction no later than May 1, 2025 that AOC intends to reallocate funding among courts in the program and/or to support the Supreme Court’s directive for an AOC case vacating team. If AOC determines the Jurisdiction may not spend all monies available under the Agreement or if Jurisdiction declines and/or elects not to participate in the vacating of Blake eligible cases, AOC may reduce the Agreement amount as mentioned above. If AOC determines the Jurisdiction may spend more monies than available under the Agreement and for its scope, AOC may increase the Agreement amount. B. If the AOC initiates revenue sharing, then the Jurisdiction must submit the final revenue sharing A-19 to payables@courts.wa.gov between July 12, 2025 and August 1, 2025. Docusign Envelope ID: ACD4A65C-3FB6-4F6C-B5E0-922D01EC8332 IAA25281 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Page 3 of 4 VI. AGREEMENT ALTERATIONS AND AMENDMENTS This Agreement may be amended by agreement of the Parties. Such amendments are not binding unless they are in writing and signed by personnel authorized to bind each of the Parties. VII. GOVERNANCE A. This Agreement is entered into pursuant to and under the authority granted by the laws of the state of Washington and any applicable federal laws. The provisions of this Agreement must be construed to conform to those laws. B. In the event of an inconsistency in the terms of this Agreement, or between its terms and any applicable statute or rule, the inconsistency will be resolved by giving precedence in the following order: 1. Applicable state and federal statutes and rules; 2. This Agreement; and then 3. Any other provisions of the Agreement, including materials incorporated by reference. VIII. WAIVER A failure by either Party to exercise its rights under this Agreement does not preclude that Party from subsequent exercise of such rights and is not a waiver of any other rights under this Agreement unless stated to be such in a writing signed by an authorized representative of the Party and attached to the original Agreement. IX. SEVERABILITY If any provision of this Agreement, or any provision of any document incorporated by reference is held invalid, such invalidity does not affect the other provisions of this Agreement that can be given effect without the invalid provision and to this end the provisions of this Agreement are declared to be severable. X. AGREEMENT MANAGEMENT The Program Managers/Point of Contacts noted below are responsible for and are the contact people for all communications and billings regarding the performance of this Agreement: Docusign Envelope ID: ACD4A65C-3FB6-4F6C-B5E0-922D01EC8332 IAA25281 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) Page 4 of 4 XI. ENTIRE AGREEMENT This Agreement contains all the terms and conditions agreed upon by the Parties. No other understandings, oral or otherwise, regarding the subject matter of this Agreement are considered to exist or to bind any of the Parties to this agreement unless otherwise stated in this Agreement. AGREED: Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts Jurisdiction Signature Date Signature Date Christopher Stanley, CGFM Name Name Chief Financial and Management Officer Title Title AOC Program Manager Jurisdiction Program Manager/ Point of Contact Sharon Fogo Blake Implementation Manager PO Box 41170 Olympia, WA 98504-1170 Sharon.Fogo@courts.wa.gov (360) 819-7305 Docusign Envelope ID: ACD4A65C-3FB6-4F6C-B5E0-922D01EC8332 RMcourt@rentonwa.gov 1055 South Grady Way Court Administrator Renton, WA 98057 425-430-6550 IAA25281 AGENDA ITEM #6. g) NOTICE: SLIP OPINION (not the court’s final written decision) The opinion that begins on the next page is a slip opinion. Slip opinions are the written opinions that are originally filed by the court. A slip opinion is not necessarily the court’s final written decision. Slip opinions can be changed by subsequent court orders. For example, a court may issue an order making substantive changes to a slip opinion or publishing for precedential purposes a previously “unpublished” opinion. Additionally, nonsubstantive edits (for style, grammar, citation, format, punctuation, etc.) are made before the opinions that have precedential value are published in the official reports of court decisions: the Washington Reports 2d and the Washington Appellate Reports. An opinion in the official reports replaces the slip opinion as the official opinion of the court. The slip opinion that begins on the next page is for a published opinion, and it has since been revised for publication in the printed official reports. The official text of the court’s opinion is found in the advance sheets and the bound volumes of the official reports. Also, an electronic version (intended to mirror the language found in the official reports) of the revised opinion can be found, free of charge, at this website: https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports. For more information about precedential (published) opinions, nonprecedential (unpublished) opinions, slip opinions, and the official reports, see https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions and the information that is linked there. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) NOTICE: SLIP OPINION (not the court’s final written decision) The opinion that begins on the next page is a slip opinion. Slip opinions are the written opinions that are originally filed by the court. A slip opinion is not necessarily the court’s final written decision. Slip opinions can be changed by subsequent court orders. For example, a court may issue an order making substantive changes to a slip opinion or publishing for precedential purposes a previously “unpublished” opinion. Additionally, nonsubstantive edits (for style, grammar, citation, format, punctuation, etc.) are made before the opinions that have precedential value are published in the official reports of court decisions: the Washington Reports 2d and the Washington Appellate Reports. An opinion in the official reports replaces the slip opinion as the official opinion of the court. The slip opinion that begins on the next page is for a published opinion, and it has since been revised for publication in the printed official reports. The official text of the court’s opinion is found in the advance sheets and the bound volumes of the official reports. Also, an electronic version (intended to mirror the language found in the official reports) of the revised opinion can be found, free of charge, at this website: https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports. For more information about precedential (published) opinions, nonprecedential (unpublished) opinions, slip opinions, and the official reports, see https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions and the information that is linked there. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) THE SUPREME COURT OF WASHINGTON STATE OF WASHINGTON, Respondent, v. SHANNON B. BLAKE, Petitioner. ______________________________________ ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ORDER DENYING FURTHER RECONSIDERATION No. 96873-0 The Court considered the “STATE’S MOTION TO RECONSIDER OPINION FILED FEBRUARY 25, 2021” and the Petitioner’s “ANSWER TO MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION”. The Court entered an “ORDER AMENDING OPINION” in this case on April 20, 2021. Now, therefore, it is hereby ORDERED: That further reconsideration is denied. DATED at Olympia, Washington this 20th day of April, 2021. For the Court For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON STATE OF WASHINGTON, Respondent, v. SHANNON B. BLAKE, Petitioner. NO. 96873-0 ORDER AMENDING OPINION It is hereby ordered that the majority opinion of Gordon McCloud, J., filed February 25, 2021, in the above entitled case is amended as indicated below. All references are to the slip opinion. On page 24, line 5 of footnote 13, after “communities).” delete “But the interpretive rule of legislative acquiescence bars us from disregarding that body’s failure to amend the drug possession statute for the last 40 years.” and insert: But the “fundamental objective” of statutory interpretation is “to ascertain and carry out the Legislature’s intent.” Dep’t of Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146 Wn.2d 1, 9, 43 P.3d 4 (2002). And the legislature has made its intent clear by its failure to amend the drug possession statute for the last 40 years. On page 27, line 1, after “(1982)).” delete “But the history summarized above shows that the ‘issue’ of interpreting RCW 69.59.4013’s as a strict liability statute can no longer be ‘resolved’ For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake, No. 96873-0 (order amending opinion) 2 by this court ‘on statutory grounds.’” and insert: But any attempt to resolve the “issue” of interpreting RCW 69.50.4013 as a strict liability statute by reading into it a silent mens rea element would run afoul of the “fundamental objective” of statutory interpretation: “to ascertain and carry out the Legislature’s intent.” Dep’t of Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146 Wn.2d 1, 9, 43 P.3d 4 (2002). DATED this ______ day of April, 2021. APPROVED: ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ 20th For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON STATE OF WASHINGTON, Respondent, v. SHANNON B. BLAKE, Petitioner. NO. 96873-0 EN BANC Filed ________________ GORDON MCCLOUD, J.—Washington’s strict liability drug possession statute, RCW 69.50.4013, makes possession of a controlled substance a felony punishable by up to five years in prison, plus a hefty fine; leads to deprivation of numerous other rights and opportunities; and does all this without proof that the defendant even knew they possessed the substance. This case presents an issue of first impression for this court: Does this strict liability drug possession statute with these substantial penalties for such innocent, passive conduct exceed the legislature’s police power? The due process clauses of the state and federal : February 25, 2021 FILE IN CLERK·6 2FF,&( SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON FEBRUARY 25, 2021 THIS OPINION WAS FILED FOR RECORD AT 8 A.M. ON F(%58$5< 25, 2021 SUSAN L. CARLSON SUPREME COURT CLERK For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 2 constitutions,1 along with controlling decisions of this court and the United States Supreme Court, compel us to conclude that the answer is yes—this exceeds the State’s police power. INTRODUCTION We begin with the rule that state legislatures have the police power to criminalize and punish much conduct. But the due process clauses of the state and federal constitutions limit that power. The key limit at issue here is that those due process clause protections generally bar state legislatures from taking innocent and passive conduct with no criminal intent at all and punishing it as a serious crime. Unfortunately, that is exactly what RCW 69.50.4013, the strict liability felony drug possession statute, does. And it is the only statute in the nation to do so. We therefore conclude that it violates the state and federal constitutions. To be sure, at one time, it might have been possible for this court to avoid this constitutional issue by interpreting RCW 69.50.4013 as silently including an intent element and thereby saving it from unconstitutionality. But that time has long since passed. First, in 1981, we held that our legislature intended drug possession to be a strict liability felony in State v. Cleppe. 96 Wn.2d 373, 635 P.2d 435 (1981). Then, 16 years ago, and 23 years after Cleppe, we reiterated Cleppe’s 1 WASH. CONST. art. I, § 3; U.S. CONST. amend. XIV. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 3 statutory interpretation holding: that our legislature intended drug possession to be a strict liability felony. State v. Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d 528, 98 P.3d 1190 (2004). Given the interpretive principles of legislative acquiescence and stare decisis, only the legislature, not the court, can now change the statute’s intent. This court, however, is the one that must evaluate whether that statute comports with constitutional due process guaranties. We have been asked to do that today, and we hold that the statute violates those guaranties. Attaching the harsh penalties of felony conviction, lengthy imprisonment, stigma, and the many collateral consequences that accompany every felony drug conviction to entirely innocent and passive conduct exceeds the legislature’s powers. FACTS In 2016, police executed a search warrant in Spokane, Washington, seeking evidence of stolen vehicles. Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 19. They arrested three people on the property, including Shannon Blake. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 13; VRP at 40. At the jail, a corrections officer discovered a small baggy containing methamphetamine in the coin pocket of Blake’s jeans. VRP at 47-48. The State charged Blake with possession of a controlled substance in violation of RCW 69.50.4013. CP at 18. At trial, Blake relied on the judicially created affirmative defense of “unwitting possession.” She testified that a friend had bought the jeans For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 4 secondhand and given them to Blake two days before Blake’s arrest. VRP at 76. Blake said she had never used methamphetamine and did not know the jeans had drugs in the pocket. Id. She acknowledged that the drugs had been “on [her]” on the day of her arrest. Id. at 83. Blake’s boyfriend also testified that Blake did not use drugs and that she had received the jeans from a friend. Id. at 89-90. The trial court served as trier of fact. CP at 20. It found that Blake had “possess[ed]” methamphetamine on the day in question. CP at 26. Consistent with the law as interpreted in Cleppe and Bradshaw, it did not make any findings as to whether the State had proved that Blake’s possession was intentional or knowing. It did conclude, however, that Blake had not met her burden to prove that her possession was unwitting. VRP at 108; CP at 26. Accordingly, the trial court found Blake guilty. On appeal, Blake argued that “requiring her to prove unwitting possession to [sic] the charged offense violates due process.” State v. Blake, No. 35601-9-III, slip op. at 1 (Wash. Ct. App. Jan. 22, 2019) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/356019_unp.pdf. Relying on Cleppe and Bradshaw, the Court of Appeals held that “[t]he crime of possession of a controlled substance does not require a mens rea element” and the defense’s burden to show unwitting possession does not violate due process. Id. at 6 (citing For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 5 Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 532; Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380; State v. Schmeling, 191 Wn. App. 795, 365 P.3d 202 (2015)). We granted review. State v. Blake, 194 Wn.2d 1023 (2020). ANALYSIS I. THE STRICT LIABILITY DRUG POSSESSION STATUTE EXCEEDS THE STATE’S POLICE POWER BY IMPOSING HARSH FELONY CONSEQUENCES ON INNOCENT NONCONDUCT WITH NO MENS REA The basic drug possession statute at issue in this case states, “It is unlawful for any person to possess a controlled substance . . . .” RCW 69.50.4013(1). The State need not prove any mens rea (mental state) element to secure a conviction for this crime. Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 534-35. As we have held for nearly 40 years, “if the legislature had intended guilty knowledge or intent to be an element of the crime . . . it would have put the requirement in the act.” Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380. Blake clearly argues that the constitution bars the legislature from penalizing her conduct without requiring the State to prove she had a guilty mind. Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 18 (“[T]he legislature exceeds its power by creating a strict liability offense that lacks a public welfare rationale, has draconian consequences, and criminalizes innocent conduct.”). Amici provide additional support for this argument.2 The concurrence dismisses our discussion of this argument by claiming 2 Br. of WACDL (Wash. Ass’n of Criminal Def. Lawyers) & ACLU-WA (Am. Civil Liberties Union of Wash.) as Amici Curiae in Supp. of Pet’r at 4 (“[L]egislatures For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 6 that it was not even briefed. Concurrence at 9-10, 22-24.3 As the citations above and in the footnote below show, the concurrence is incorrect about this and the cited portion of Blake’s brief does place a question of first impression 4 before us: whether the legislature possesses the power to punish Blake for innocent conduct—or, more accurately, nonconduct—without proving any mental state at all. generally have flexibility to define crimes, but due process prohibits a State from defining criminal offenses in a manner that ‘offends some principle of justice so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental.’” (quoting Patterson v. New York, 432 U.S. 197, 201-02, 97 S. Ct. 2319, 53 L. Ed. 2d 281 (1977))), 5 (“a legislature does not have unfettered discretion to define the elements of criminal offenses”), 7 (the legislature “never had the power to eliminate the requirement that the government prove the defendant’s mens rea”), 20 (“The statute criminalizes innocent conduct and offends fundamental principles of justice.”). 3 The concurrence accuses our decision of raising “concerns” that are “substantially similar” to the concerns raised in United States v. Sineneng-Smith, __U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1575, 1578, 206 L. Ed. 2d 866 (2020). Concurrence at 23. That’s not a fair comparison. In that case, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals “named three amici and invited them to brief and argue issues framed by the panel” but not presented at all by the briefing and thereby assigned the parties a “secondary role.” Sineneng-Smith, 140 S. Ct. at 1578. In this case, in contrast, we resolve the issue that Blake has presented and that amici have more fully briefed. 4 This is a question of first impression because neither Cleppe nor Bradshaw addressed this issue. The defendants in Bradshaw argued that Cleppe’s interpretation of the statute was unconstitutional “because the statute is vague, criminalizes innocent behavior, and adversely affects the right to intrastate and interstate travel.” 152 Wn.2d at 539. But we did not address those arguments on the merits; we rejected them because the briefing provided insufficient analysis. Id. Thus, the constitutionality of this statute’s “criminaliz[ation of] innocent behavior” remains an open question after Bradshaw. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 7 A.Due Process Clause Protections Limit the Legislature’s Police Power To Criminalize Wholly Innocent and Passive Nonconduct “States have a legitimate interest in restraining harmful conduct and are empowered to do so under their police powers.” State v. Talley, 122 Wn.2d 192, 199, 858 P.2d 217 (1993) (citing City of Seattle v. Hill, 72 Wn.2d 786, 797, 435 P.2d 692 (1967); Minnesota ex rel. Whipple v. Martinson, 256 U.S. 41, 45, 41 S. Ct. 425, 65 L. Ed. 819 (1921)). In 1936, we said the police power “is an attribute of sovereignty, an essential element of the power to govern, and a function that cannot be surrendered. It exists without express declaration, and the only limitation upon it is that it must reasonably tend to correct some evil or promote some interest of the state, and not violate any direct or positive mandate of the constitution.” Shea v. Olson, 185 Wash. 143, 153, 53 P.2d 615 (1936) (citing Bowes v. Aberdeen, 58 Wash. 535, 542, 109 P. 369 (1910); State ex rel. Davis- Smith Co. v. Clausen, 65 Wash. 156, 178, 117 P. 1101 (1911); State ex rel. Webster v. Superior Court, 67 Wash. 37, 40, 120 P. 861 (1912); State v. Mountain Timber Co., 75 Wash. 581, 584, 135 P. 645 (1913), aff’d, 243 U.S. 219, 37 S. Ct. 260, 61 L. Ed. 685 (1917)). But the police power is not infinite. If it were, “the result would be a police state, and the legislative branch of the government would be omnipotent.” Peterson v. Hagan, 56 Wn.2d 48, 53, 351 P.2d 127 (1960). Under both the state For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 8 and federal constitutions, a statute must have “a reasonable and substantial relation to the accomplishment of some purpose fairly within the legitimate range or scope of the police power and [must] not violate any direct or positive mandate of the constitution.” Ragan v. City of Seattle, 58 Wn.2d 779, 783, 364 P.2d 916 (1961)5 (citing Nebbia v. New York, 291 U.S. 502, 54 S. Ct. 505, 78 L. Ed. 940 (1934); State v. Canyon Lumber Corp., 46 Wn.2d 701, 284 P.2d 316 (1955); State v. Dexter, 32 Wn.2d 551, 202 P.2d 906 (1949); Campbell v. State, 12 Wn.2d 459, 122 P.2d 458 (1942); Shea, 185 Wash. 143; City of Seattle v. Proctor, 183 Wash. 293, 48 P.2d 238 (1935), overruled in part on other grounds by Chong Yim v. City of Seattle, 194 Wn.2d 682, 451 P.3d 694 (2019)).6 Though Ragan did not identify the specific constitutional source of this test, it relied on Nebbia; in Nebbia, the Supreme Court explicitly rooted the limits of the police power in “the guaranty of due process” that “the law shall not be unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious” and 5 Ragan and its progeny were overruled by Chong Yim v. City of Seattle, 194 Wn.2d 682, 451 P.3d 694 (2019), to the extent they “requir[ed] heightened scrutiny in article I, section 3 substantive due process challenges to laws regulating the use of property.” Ragan’s application outside the property use context remains unaffected by Yim. 6 Ragan announced this test in a challenge to a municipal ordinance. 58 Wn.2d at 783.We have since applied the same test to decide the scope of the police power of the state legislature. Markham Advert. Co. v. State, 73 Wn.2d 405, 420-21, 439 P.2d 248 (1968) (quoting Ragan, 58 Wn.2d at 783), overruled in part on other grounds by Yim, 194 Wn.2d 682). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 9 “the means selected shall have a real and substantial relation to the object sought to be attained.” 291 U.S. at 525. In other words, prior precedent of the United States Supreme Court and of this court—including Ragan—holds that the State’s police power is limited by the due process clause or “by constitutional protection afforded certain personal liberties.” Talley, 122 Wn.2d at 199 (citing Olympic Forest Prods., Inc. v. Chaussee Corp., 82 Wn.2d 418, 435, 511 P.2d 1002 (1973)). The “constitutional protection[s] afforded certain personal liberties” implicated by RCW 69.50.4013 are (1) the principle that “‘[t]he existence of a mens rea is the rule of, rather than the exception to, the principles of Anglo-American criminal jurisprudence’”7 and (2) the rule that the government cannot criminalize “essentially innocent” conduct.8 With regard to the first constitutional limit, the principle that mens rea is generally a prerequisite to criminalization in “Anglo-American jurisprudence,” it is certainly true that this general rule has exceptions. In Washington, for example, 7 Staples v. United States, 511 U.S. 600, 605, 114 S. Ct. 1793, 128 L. Ed. 2d 608 (1994) (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 438 U.S. 422, 436, 98 S. Ct. 2864, 57 L. Ed. 2d 854 (1978)). 8 City of Seattle v. Pullman, 82 Wn.2d 794, 800, 514 P.2d 1059 (1973); see also Lambert v. California, 355 U.S. 225, 228-29, 78 S. Ct. 240, 2 L. Ed. 2d 228 (1957) (criminalization of “wholly passive” and “entirely innocent” conduct violates due process). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 10 the legislature can still create strict liability crimes in certain circumstances: “our legislature has the plenary power to criminalize conduct regardless of whether the actor intended wrongdoing.” State v. Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d 155, 163, 456 P.3d 1172 (2020) (citing State v. Bash, 130 Wn.2d 594, 604, 925 P.2d 978 (1996)). In particular, the legislature may create “strict liability offenses to protect the public from the harms that have come with modern life by putting the burden of care on those in the best position to avoid those harms.” Id. at 164 (citing Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 255, 72 S. Ct. 240, 96 L. Ed. 2d 288 (1952)). But the second constitutional limit, the rule against criminalizing “essentially innocent” conduct, does not have such exceptions, and it applies with special force to passive conduct—or nonconduct—that is unaccompanied by intent, knowledge, or mens rea. The United States Supreme Court explained this over 60 years ago in Lambert v. California, 355 U.S. 225, 228, 78 S. Ct. 240, 2 L. Ed. 2d 228 (1957). In Lambert, Los Angeles had criminalized “remain[ing] in Los Angeles for a period of more than five days without registering” with the city. Id. at 226. A defendant charged with violating this ordinance was “given no opportunity to comply with the law and avoid its penalty, even though her default [failure to register] was entirely innocent.” Id. at 229. The United States Supreme Court held that this exercise of the police power to criminalize entirely passive, innocent For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 11 nonconduct deprived defendant Virginia Lambert of her liberty without due process of law. Id. at 229. The United States Supreme Court applied the same reasoning to a similar statute 15 years later. In Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville, 405 U.S. 156, 92 S. Ct. 839, 31 L. Ed. 2d 110 (1972), that Court considered the constitutionality of a Florida ordinance that criminalized, among other things, “nightwalking.” Id. at 163. The Florida Supreme Court had upheld the ordinance after construing it “not to make criminal one night’s wandering, only the ‘habitual’ wanderer or, as the ordinance describe[d] it, ‘common night walkers.’” Id. at 163 (citation omitted) (quoting and citing Johnson v. State, 202 So. 2d 852, 855 (Fla. 1967), rev’d on other grounds, 391 U.S. 596, 88 S. Ct. 1713, 20 L. Ed. 2d 838 (1968) (per curiam)). But the United States Supreme Court reversed. It explained that walking, strolling, and wandering—even at night—are “historically part of the amenities of life as we have known them.” Id. at 164. It continued that criminalizing such historically innocent conduct was impermissible for many reasons, including the fact that it made “criminal activities which by modern standards are normally innocent” and did so without proof of any “intent to commit an unlawful act.” Id. at 163. It concluded that criminalizing passive nonconduct while eliminating the requirement of a guilty mind violated due process clause protections, “cannot be squared with our constitutional standards[,] and is plainly For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 12 unconstitutional.” Id. at 171. Lambert’s and Papchristou’s holdings rested on the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 355 U.S. at 229-30; 405 U.S. at 165; U.S. CONST. amend. XIV. Our state constitution’s due process clause provides even greater protection of individual rights in certain circumstances.9 Thus, this court’s precedent also enforces the constitutional due process limit on the reach of the State’s police power (though often without specifying the specific constitutional source of that limit). City of Seattle v. Pullman, 82 Wn.2d 794, 802, 514 P.2d 1059 (1973); see also City of Seattle v. Drew, 70 Wn.2d 405, 408, 423 P.2d 522 (1967) (“The right to be let alone is inviolate; interference with that right is to be tolerated only if it is necessary to protect the rights and the welfare of others.”). Restating Ragan’s due process test, we have analyzed whether “the area of regulation [was] within the government’s scope of authority and [whether] the particular ordinance [was] a reasonable regulatory measure in support of the area of concern.” Pullman, 82 Wn.2d at 799 (citing Markham Advert. Co. v. State, 73 Wn.2d 405, 420-22, 439 9 We “have repeatedly noted that the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment does not control our interpretation of the state constitution’s due process clause.” State v. Bartholomew, 101 Wn.2d 631, 639, 683 P.2d 1079 (1984) (citing Olympic Forest Prods., Inc., 82 Wn.2d 418; Petstel, Inc. v. County of King, 77 Wn.2d 144, 459 P.2d 937 (1969)); see also Yim, 194 Wn.2d at 690 (“[T]his court has a duty to recognize heightened constitutional protections as a matter of independent state law in appropriate cases.” (citing O’Day v. King County, 109 Wn.2d 796, 801-02, 749 P.2d 142 (1988))). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 13 P.2d 248 (1968), overruled in part on other grounds by Yim, 194 Wn.2d 682; Ragan, 58 Wn.2d 779). Applying that test, we have held that criminalization of passive nonconduct without mens rea “makes no distinction between conduct calculated to harm and that which is essentially innocent” and therefore exceeds the State’s police power. Id. at 795. The strict liability drug possession statute challenged in this case is similar to the strict liability curfew ordinance challenged in Pullman. In Pullman, the defendant challenged a Seattle ordinance that prohibited “accompanying a child during curfew hours.” Id. By the language of the ordinance, “any minor under the age of 18 could be arrested for standing or playing on the sidewalk in front of his home at 10:01 p.m. on a warm summer evening.” Id. Justice Utter, writing for the majority, recognized that the government has an “independent interest in the well- being of its youth” and hence has authority to “enact laws to assist those whose primary responsibility is for the well-being of minors.” Id. at 800 (citing Ginsberg v. New York, 390 U.S. 629, 639, 88 S. Ct. 1274, 20 L. Ed. 2d 195 (1968)). But the challenged law made “no distinction between conduct calculated to harm and that which is essentially innocent,” and it bore “an insufficient relationship to the objective of safeguarding minors.” Id. at 795, 802. We therefore concluded that the law was “an unreasonable exercise of the police power.” Id. at 800, 802. We explained that the record before the court was “absolutely devoid of any evidence For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 14 showing ‘bad conduct’. . . . [T]he mere fact that the defendant was in the presence of two minors during curfew hours resulted in this prosecution.” Id. at 802.10 Pullman stands for the rule that the state legislature’s exercise of its otherwise plenary police power to criminalize entirely passive and innocent nonconduct with no mens rea or guilty mind violates the due process clause of the state and federal constitutions. But as discussed below, the legislature criminalized exactly that sort of passive and innocent nonconduct in this case. B. Blake Was Convicted of the Felony of Unknowing Possession of Drugs; This Is Wholly Innocent Nonconduct That Falls beyond the Legislature’s Power To Criminalize The question before us today is whether unintentional, unknowing possession of a controlled substance is the sort of innocent, passive nonconduct that falls beyond the State’s police power to criminalize. Because unknowing possession is just as innocent and passive as staying out late with a juvenile or 10 Criminalization of innocent nonconduct also tends to place “unfettered discretion” in the hands of police, Papachristou, 405 U.S. at 168, and can make people “‘who look suspicious to the police’” become future criminals. Pullman, 82 Wn.2d at 801 (quoting Papachristou, 405 U.S. at 164). This risks violating other constitutional and statutory protections. See Research Working Grp. of Task Force on Race & Criminal Justice Sys., Preliminary Report on Race and Washington’s Criminal Justice System, 35 SEATTLE U.L. REV. 623, 627-28, 651-53 (2012) (concluding that disproportionate minority representation in Washington’s prisons is largely “explained by facially neutral policies that have racially disparate effects”); see Gabriel J. Chin, Race, The War on Drugs, and the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction, 6 J. GENDER, RACE & JUST. 253, 262-70 (2002) (observing racial disparities in drug prosecutions and convictions). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 15 remaining in a city without registering, we hold that this felony drug possession statute is just as unconstitutional as were the laws in Lambert, Papachristou, and Pullman. To be sure, active trafficking in drugs, unlike standing outside at 10:01 p.m., is not innocent conduct. States have criminalized knowing drug possession nationwide, and there is plenty of reason to know that illegal drugs are highly regulated. The legislature surely has constitutional authority to regulate drugs through criminal and civil statutes. But the possession statute at issue here does far more than regulate drugs. It is unique in the nation in criminalizing entirely innocent, unknowing possession. The statute would criminalize, to list a few examples: “a letter carrier who delivers a package containing unprescribed Adderall; a roommate who is unaware that the person who shares his apartment has hidden illegal drugs in the common areas of the home; a mother who carries a prescription pill bottle in her purse, unaware that the pills have been substituted for illegally obtained drugs by her teenage daughter, who placed them in the bottle to avoid detection.” State v. A.M., 194 Wn.2d 33, 64 n.13, 448 P.3d 35 (2019) (Gordon McCloud, J., concurring) (quoting State v. Adkins, 96 So. 3d 412, 432 (Fla. 2012) (Perry, J., dissenting)). “A person might pick up the wrong bag at the airport, the wrong jacket at the concert, or even the wrong briefcase at the courthouse. Or a child might carry an adult’s backpack, not knowing that it contains the adult’s illegal For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 16 drugs.” Id. at 64. These examples illustrate the unreasonable disconnect between the statute’s intended goals and its actual effects. The possession statute also imposes harsh felony consequences on this passive nonconduct. Violation of this simple possession statute constitutes a class C felony. RCW 69.50.4013(2). It is punishable by a maximum of five years’ imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. RCW 9A.20.021(1)(c). In addition, all such felony convictions strip defendants of many fundamental rights, both during their time of incarceration and long afterward. See generally Michael Pinard & Anthony C. Thompson, Offender Reentry and the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions: An Introduction, 30 N.Y.U. REV. L. & SOC. CHANGE 585 (2006); Tarra Simmons, Transcending the Stigma of a Criminal Record: A Proposal to Reform State Bar Character and Fitness Evaluations, 128 YALE L.J.F. 759 (2019); see also MARGARET COLGATE LOVE, RELIEF FROM THE COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES OF A CRIMINAL CONVICTION: A STATE-BY-STATE RESOURCE GUIDE 62 (2006) (collecting state laws regulating licensure and employment of convicted persons). And drug offenders in particular are subject to countless harsh collateral consequences affecting all aspects of their lives. Pinard & Thompson, supra, at 588; Gabriel J. Chin, Race, The War on Drugs, and the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction, 6 J. GENDER, RACE & JUST. 253, 259-60 (“Those convicted of For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 17 drug offenses are subject to a number of additional penalties,” including denial of more than 750 federal benefits, including consequences for health care, education, employment, housing, parenting, professional licenses, and others.).11 Imposing such harsh penalties for such innocent passivity violates the federal and state rule that passive and wholly innocent nonconduct falls outside the State’s police power to criminalize. This is clear from a decision of the Louisiana Supreme Court on the constitutionality of a similar drug possession statue from 1980: State v. Brown, 389 So. 2d 48 (La. 1980). In that case, decided 40 years ago, the Louisiana Supreme Court recognized that a criminal statute penalizing 11 E.g., 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r) (temporary ineligibility for student financial benefits); 21 U.S.C. § 862 (ineligibility for “the issuance of any grant, contract, loan, professional license, or commercial license provided by an agency of the United States or by appropriated funds of the United States”); 42 U.S.C. § 13661, 24 C.F.R. § 5.855 (denial of admission to federally assisted housing for a “reasonable time”); 21 U.S.C. § 862a (ineligibility for “assistance under any State program funded under part A of title IV of the Social Security Act,” or for “benefits under the supplemental nutrition assistance program . . . or any State program carried out under” the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008); 22 U.S.C. § 2714 (ineligibility for passport during supervised release). Federal regulations make prior felony drug convictions a permissible basis for denying employment in certain jobs. E.g., 48 C.F.R. § 352.237‐72 (“Any conviction for a . . . drug felony[] may be grounds for denying employment or for dismissal of an employee providing any” “child care services to children under the age of 18.”); 21 C.F.R. § 1301.71 (preventing “collector[s]” of controlled substances from employing anyone “who has access to or influence over controlled substances acquired by collection . . . who has been convicted of any felony offense relating to controlled substances”); 28 C.F.R. § 97.11 (felony conviction bars employment with private prisoner transportation companies); 49 C.F.R. § 1544.229 (felony conviction bars employment as airport security screener or baggage handler); 18 U.S.C. § 922 (prohibiting any person convicted of a felony from possessing, selling, shipping, transporting, or receiving a firearm in interstate commerce); 42 U.S.C. § 671(a)(20)(A)(ii) (preventing persons convicted of “drug-related offense[s]” from being approved as foster or adoptive parents for five years). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 18 unknowing drug possession violated the constitution. Id. at 51. The Louisiana statute had made it a crime to “‘unknowingly or intentionally’” possess a controlled dangerous substance. Id. at 49 (quoting statute). The defendants challenged the criminalization of “unknowing” possession as unconstitutional. Id. The Louisiana Supreme Court agreed. It ruled that, because the statute criminalized situations where “a third party hands the controlled substance to an unknowing individual who can then be charged with and subsequently convicted . . . without ever being aware of the nature of the substance he was given,” which “offend[ed] the conscious [sic],” the statute was unconstitutional. Id. at 51. It is certainly true that Louisiana provides the only example of a state court striking down a passive and unknowing possession statute like RCW 69.50.4013 as unconstitutional. But that’s probably because Washington is the only state that continues to criminalize this innocent nonconduct. See Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 534 (citing Dawkins v. Maryland, 313 Md. 638, 647 n.7, 547 A.2d 1041 (1988)) (recognizing Washington and North Dakota as the only “exceptions” to the general trend of criminalizing only knowing possession). The North Dakota legislature, the last other state to criminalize passive unknowing possession, amended its drug possession statute by adding a “willfulness” mens rea element in 1989. N.D. CENT. CODE § 19-03.1-23; 1989 N.D. LAWS 748. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 19 Washington’s strict liability drug possession statute, like Louisiana’s strict liability drug possession statute, is therefore unconstitutional. It criminalizes unknowing, and hence innocent, passivity and therefore “has an insufficient relationship to the objective of” regulating drugs. Pullman, 82 Wn.2d at 802. The statute “goes beyond the scope of legitimate police power authority.” Id. (citing Lazarus v. Faircloth, 301 F. Supp. 266 (S.D. Fla. 1969), vacated sub nom. Shevin v. Lazarus, 401 U.S. 987 (1971); Alves v. Justice Court, 148 Cal. App. 2d 419, 306 P.2d 601 (1957)).12 C. The Unwitting Possession Defense Cannot Make the Statute Comply with Due Process This court recognized the harshness of its Cleppe holding that RCW 69.50.4013 permissibly criminalized innocent, passive, unknowing possession. It addressed that harsh result with what it admitted was an “anomalous,” Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380, device: the court created a brand new affirmative defense out of whole cloth. Cleppe decided that an “unwitting possession” affirmative defense, that the defendant had the burden to prove, would “ameliorate[]” the harshness of its strict liability decision. Id. at 380-81. 12 The concurrence warns that our approach “has the potential to overturn a number of criminal statutes to the extent [we] find[] they criminalize innocent or passive conduct.” Concurrence at 22. This does not seem to be a valid fear. It’s the rare Washington State statute that criminalizes innocent, passive nonconduct; most Washington laws target actual conduct and most Washington laws target people who know, or should know, that they are engaging in that actual targeted conduct. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 20 Our addition of this affirmative defense to a statute that eliminated mens rea and was completely silent about affirmative defenses was “judicial legislation in its most direct form.” City of Kennewick v. Day, 142 Wn.2d 1, 16, 11 P.3d 304 (2000) (Talmadge, J., concurring). Bradshaw nevertheless reiterated this affirmative defense and justified doing so because it “ameliorates the harshness of a strict liability crime.” 152 Wn.2d at 538 (citing Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380-81). The State contends that this rewrite saves the statute. Suppl. Br. of Resp’t at 17. Blake argues that the defense unconstitutionally shifts the burden of proof onto her from the State. Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 5-7. We disagree with both of them. The starting point for analyzing these two competing contentions is that “[t]he State is foreclosed from shifting the burden of proof to the defendant only ‘when an affirmative defense . . . negate[s] an element of the crime.’” Smith v. United States, 568 U.S. 106, 110, 133 S. Ct. 714, 184 L. Ed. 2d 570 (2013) (quoting Martin v. Ohio, 480 U.S. 228, 237, 107 S. Ct. 1098, 94 L. Ed. 2d 267 (1987) (Powell, J., dissenting)); see State v. W.R., 181 Wn.2d 757, 765, 336 P.3d 1134 (2014) (“[W]hen a defense necessarily negates an element of the crime, it violates due process to place the burden of proof on the defendant.”). As we ruled in Cleppe and Bradshaw, the simple possession statute lacks a mens rea element entirely. Thus, contrary to the defense’s argument, placing the burden to prove For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 21 unwitting possession on the defendant does not “negate” any existing element of the crime. Instead, the question is whether the legislature may constitutionally penalize passive, unknowing drug possession without a mens rea element at all. Contrary to the State’s argument, the affirmative defense does not play into this analysis because it does not impact the elements that the State must prove to secure a conviction. A judicially created affirmative defense may “ameliorate the harshness” of criminalizing innocent nonconduct, but it cannot save an unconstitutional statute. The judicially created affirmative defense therefore has no legitimate place in our analysis of whether the statute that the legislature created exceeds its police powers. II. CONSTITUTIONAL AVOIDANCE IS IMPOSSIBLE BECAUSE THE LEGISLATURE CLEARLY INTENDED TO OMIT A MENS REA ELEMENT FROM THIS STATUTE At one point in time, it might have been possible to avoid this constitutional problem by reading a mental element into the statute. But that time has passed. Now, in 2021, we have overwhelming evidence that the legislature intends the simple possession statute to penalize innocent nonconduct, and we have overwhelming legal authority that this violates the due process clauses of the state and federal constitutions. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 22 A. We Usually Interpret Statutes To Avoid Constitutional Problems— Including Reading in Absent Mens Rea Elements In general, “[w]e construe statutes to avoid constitutional doubt.” Utter ex rel. State v. Bldg. Indus. Ass’n of Wash., 182 Wn.2d 398, 434, 341 P.3d 953 (2015) (citing State v. Robinson, 153 Wn.2d 689, 693-94, 107 P.3d 90 (2005). But we construe statutes only “to avoid constitutional difficulties when such construction is consistent with the purposes of the statute.” In re Pers. Restraint of Williams, 121 Wn.2d 655, 665, 853 P.2d 444 (1993). In many cases, these statutory interpretation rules have led the United States Supreme Court and this court to read mens rea elements into statutes where the legislature omitted them. See, e.g., Staples v. United States, 511 U.S. 600, 619, 114 S. Ct. 1793, 128 L. Ed. 2d 608 (1994) (interpreting a mens rea element into an unlawful firearm possession statute); State v. Anderson, 141 Wn.2d 357, 366, 5 P.3d 1247 (2000) (same); State v. Boyer, 91 Wn.2d 342, 344, 588 P.2d 1151 (1979) (interpreting a mens rea element into the unlawful delivery of a controlled substance statute). This line of cases does not explicitly discuss the constitutional limits of the police power—it emphasizes interpreting each statute in light of “the background rules of the common law, in which the requirement of some mens rea for a crime is firmly embedded.” Staples, 511 U.S. at 605 (citation omitted) (citing United States For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 23 v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 438 U.S. 422, 436-37, 98 S. Ct. 2864, 57 L. Ed. 2d 854 (1978)). But they reflect a consistent concern about criminalizing fundamentally innocent conduct. Staples, 511 U.S. at 610 (“[T]he Government ignores the particular care we have taken to avoid construing a statute to dispense with mens rea where doing so would ‘criminalize a broad range of apparently innocent conduct.’” (quoting Liparota v. United States, 471 U.S. 419, 426, 105 S. Ct. 2084, 85 L. Ed. 2d 434 (1985))); Anderson, 141 Wn.2d at 366 (concluding that the “[m]ost compelling” reason to interpret mens rea into the statute was “the fact that entirely innocent conduct may fall within the net cast by the statute in question”); Boyer, 91 Wn.2d at 344 (“[W]ithout the mental element of knowledge, even a postal carrier would be guilty of the crime were he innocently to deliver a package which in fact contained a forbidden narcotic.”); see also Rehaif v. United States, __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 2191, 2196, 204 L. Ed. 2d 594 (2019) (“The cases in which we have emphasized scienter’s importance in separating wrongful from innocent acts are legion.”). In part to address this concern, we have adopted a series of factors to consider in deciding whether to interpret a mens rea element into an otherwise strict liability statute. Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d at 166 (quoting Bash, 130 Wn.2d at 605-06). But the case before us today does not lend itself to this approach. Unlike the statutes in Staples, Anderson, and Boyer, we are not interpreting RCW For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 24 69.50.4013 for the first time.13 Instead, we face 40 years of precedent and legislative acquiescence. B. The Legislature Has Embraced Our Early Cleppe and Bradshaw Decisions Holding that RCW 69.50.4013 Imposed Strict Felony Liability The legislature “‘is presumed to be aware of judicial interpretation of its enactments,’ and where statutory language remains unchanged after a court decision the court will not overrule clear precedent interpreting the same statutory language.” Riehl v. Foodmaker, Inc., 152 Wn.2d 138, 147, 94 P.3d 930 (2004) (quoting Friends of Snoqualmie Valley v. King County Boundary Review Bd., 118 Wn.2d 488, 496-97, 825 P.2d 300 (1992)). This is why “[c]onsiderations of stare decisis have special force in the area of statutory interpretation, for here, unlike in the context of constitutional interpretation, the legislative power is implicated, and Congress remains free to alter what we have done.” Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, 491 U.S. 164, 172-73, 109 S. Ct. 2363, 105 L. Ed. 2d 132 (1989). 13 If we were interpreting RCW 69.50.4013 for the first time, we would interpret the statute to include a mens rea element for the reasons outlined by the concurrence. See concurrence at 13-19 (explaining the errors of statutory interpretation in Cleppe and Bradshaw and highlighting the harm they have caused, particularly to minority communities). But the interpretive rule of legislative acquiescence bars us from disregarding that body’s failure to amend the drug possession statute for the last 40 years. The concurrence seems to disagree with our use of legislative acquiescence as an interpretive tool; it makes plausible arguments about its origin and weaknesses, particularly when interpreting criminal statutes. The parties, however, have not made those arguments or asked us to overturn our precedent on that point. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 25 In Buchanan v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters, for example, we were concerned that we had misinterpreted a statute in a prior case. 94 Wn.2d 508, 511, 617 P.2d 1004 (1980). But 22 legislative sessions had passed over 17 years and left our interpretation intact. Id. We therefore held that this showed that “it was and is the policy of the legislature to concur in” our prior ruling. Id. Despite a contrary United States Supreme Court holding interpreting identical language in a federal statute, we held that given that history of legislative acquiescence, the power to change our decision rested solely with the legislature. Id. Coming back to the drug possession statute, 40 years ago, we held that “if the legislature had intended guilty knowledge or intent to be an element of the crime of simple possession of a controlled substance it would have put the requirement in the act.” Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380. Sixteen years ago, we doubled down on Cleppe’s interpretation, holding that “[t]he legislature ha[d] amended RCW 69.50.401 seven times since Cleppe” without adding a mens rea element. Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 537. This acquiescence in our decisions made the legislative intent “so clear” that we again declined to “read a mens rea element into the mere possession statute.” Id. at 540. Since Bradshaw, the legislature and the people have amended the simple possession statute an additional four times. See LAWS OF 2017, ch. 317, § 15; For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 26 LAWS OF 2015, 2d Spec. Sess., ch. 4, § 503; LAWS OF 2015, ch. 70, § 14; LAWS OF 2013, ch. 3, § 20 (Initiative 502). Neither has ever added a mens rea element. We are confident that the legislature has not remained silent out of ignorance of our decisions. Cleppe and Bradshaw are far from obscure—these decisions have been frequently cited and have impacted the lives of countless criminal defendants as drug possession cases churn through the Washington courts. See, e.g., Day, 142 Wn.2d at 10-11; State v. Staley, 123 Wn.2d 794, 799, 872 P.2d 502 (1994); A.M., 194 Wn.2d at 44 (Gordon McCloud, J., concurring). The drug statute that they interpreted has affected thousands upon thousands of lives, and its impact has hit young men of color especially hard. See Research Working Grp. of Task Force on Race & Criminal Justice Sys., Preliminary Report on Race and Washington’s Criminal Justice System, 35 SEATTLE U.L. REV. 623, 651-56 (2012) (attributing Washington’s racially disproportionate criminal justice system to disparity in drug law enforcement and drug-related asset forfeiture, among many other causes). Cleppe and Bradshaw “struck at the heart of our criminal law and social policies. The legislative silence is thus all the more deafening.” A.M., 194 Wn.2d at 56 (Gordon McCloud, J., concurring). Thus, it remains true that “[w]here an issue may be resolved on statutory grounds, the court will avoid deciding the issue on constitutional grounds,” Tunstall v. Bergeson, 141 Wn.2d 201, 210, 5 P.3d 691 (2000) (citing Senear v. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 27 Daily Journal-Am., 97 Wn.2d 148, 152, 641 P.2d 1180 (1982)). But the history summarized above shows that the “issue” of interpreting RCW 69.50.4013’s as a strict liability statute can no longer be “resolved” by this court “on statutory grounds.” Because of the clarity of our prior decisions about this statute and the legislature’s lengthy acquiescence, it is impossible to avoid the constitutional problem now (unless we overturn our own legislative acquiescence precedent as the concurrence, but not the parties, want us to do).14 III. THE STATE RETAINS THE POWER TO ENACT STRICT LIABILITY CRIMES, BUT THE SIMPLE POSSESSION STATUTE IS UNIQUE IN OUR STATE IN PUNISHING WHOLLY INNOCENT NONCONDUCT The State compares the drug possession statute to other crimes and claims that declaring it unconstitutional will undermine the legitimacy of those crimes, also. For example, the State is concerned about the continuing validity of strict liability crimes such as child rape. Suppl. Br. of Resp’t at 9 (citing RCW 9A.44.030; State v. Chhom, 128 Wn.2d 739, 743, 911 P.2d 1014 (1996); State v. Joseph, 3 Wn. App. 2d 365, 374, 416 P.3d 738 (2018)). But the simple possession statute does not violate the due process clause solely because it is a strict liability crime. Instead, the simple possession statute 14 The concurrence contends that its approach “resolves this case on narrow grounds.” Id. at 22. But the concurrence’s approach disregards the court’s “fundamental objective” when interpreting statutes: “to ascertain and carry out the Legislature’s intent.” Dep’t of Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146 Wn.2d 1, 9, 43 P.3d 4 (2002). That is the proper role for this court. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 28 violates the due process clause because it criminalizes wholly innocent and passive nonconduct on a strict liability basis. We do nothing here today to disturb the legislature’s power to enact strict liability crimes. See Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d at 163-72 (holding unlawful practice of law to be a strict liability crime); see also State v. Deer, 175 Wn.2d 725, 731, 287 P.3d 539 (2012) (“As a strict liability crime, child rape in the third degree requires no proof of mens rea.” (citing Chhom, 128 Wn.2d at 741-43)). Even after today, when the legislature enacts a statute without explicit mens rea language, we will still look to the statutory language, the legislative history, and a series of nonexclusive factors to determine “whether the legislature intended to create a strict liability offense.” Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d at 164-66. Our ruling today does not change this statutory interpretation analysis; the only reason that we have not applied that analysis here is because the proper interpretation of RCW 69.50.4013 is already settled law. The only thing we change here today is our view of the validity of the simple possession law as written and interpreted by this court. The key distinction between this simple possession statute and other, valid, strict liability crimes is that the former statute penalizes passive and innocent nonconduct (without mens rea) while the latter statutes do not. For example, to prove that a defendant practiced law unlawfully, the State must show that the defendant actually “practice[d] law, For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 29 or [held] himself or herself out as entitled to practice law.” RCW 2.48.180(2)(a). That conduct is, well, conduct. To be sure, Yishmael held that the defendant need not know that his or her conduct constituted the “practice of law.” 195 Wn.2d at 172.But we continued that the State must still prove the activity of practicing law, and that, of course, requires the State to show intentional activity (not passivity). Id. at 177. As we explained, “Yishmael did not dispute that he gave his clients advice about homesteading, adverse possession, and talking with the police, and that he offered assistance in completing documents to be filed with the county recorder’s office.” Id. Not surprisingly, Yishmael did not claim that he had not intended any of those actions. Id. Similarly, to convict a defendant of rape of a child, the State must prove that the defendant “ha[d] sexual intercourse with another” who is under a particular age, depending on the degree of the crime. RCW 9A.44.073, .076, .079. Sexual intercourse is conduct, not passivity. The crime is “strict liability” in the sense that the State need prove only “‘the doing of the acts constituting the offense,’” State v. Smith, 3 Wn.2d 543, 553, 101 P.2d 298 (1940); the State need not prove that the defendant knew the victim’s age, which is what makes the acts constituting the offense criminal. State v. Johnson, 173 Wn.2d 895, 902, 270 P.3d 591 (2012) For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 30 (citing Chhom, 128 Wn.2d at 741, 743). But the State must certainly show the activity of sexual intercourse, not just innocent passivity.15 The drug possession statute is different. It does not require the State to prove any intent or even any action. And in this case, the State did not prove that Blake did anything except wear jeans that had pockets. Valid strict liability crimes require that the defendant actually perform some conduct. Blake did not. Under the due process clauses of the state and federal constitutions, the legislature may not criminalize such nonconduct. CONCLUSION Legislative acquiescence has locked our old interpretation of RCW 69.50.4013 into that drug possession statute. But that interpretation makes that statute criminalize innocent and passive possession, even by a defendant who does not know, and has no reason to know, that drugs lay hidden within something that they possess. The legislature’s police power goes far, but not that far. 15 We did hold in one case that the State may place the burden on the defendant to prove that her acts were involuntary. Deer, 175 Wn.2d at 731-38. That decision, however, dealt with “actus reus” of the rape charge only—specifically, it addressed whether the defendant’s actions were or were not “voluntary.” Id. at 740-41. It did not explicitly address mens rea. In this case, we deal with an issue not addressed in Deer: whether strict liability felony punishment for nonconduct that is both innocent and passive, without proof of mens rea is, constitutionally permissible at all. To the extent Deer relied on Bradshaw’s “unwitting possession” defense, all justices in the majority and concurrence now disavow Bradshaw’s interpretation—either because it does not save the unconstitutional criminalization of innocent nonconduct or because it was simply wrongly decided. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon B.), No. 96873-0 31 Accordingly, RCW 69.50.4013(1)—the portion of the simple drug possession statute creating this crime—violates the due process clauses of the state and federal constitutions and is void. We vacate Blake’s conviction. WE CONCUR: For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part) No. 96873-0 STEPHENS, J. (concurring in part, dissenting in part)—The novel question the majority presumes to answer today about the extent of the legislature’s police power is a question that appears almost nowhere in the briefing of either party. The parties recognize, as do I, that the main question before the court is whether RCW 69.50.4013, our state’s model drug possession statute, should be read as having an implied mens rea element. Nearly every state to have interpreted the model statute holds that it does, and Blake urges us to embrace this interpretation. I would do so, concluding that our precedent in State v. Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d 373, 380, 635 P.2d 435 (1981), and State v. Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d 528, 539-40, 98 P.3d 1190 (2004), is both incorrect and harmful. On this basis, I concur in the majority’s decision to vacate Blake’s conviction. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -2- Where I part company with the majority is its decision to declare this court powerless to reconsider our prior statutory interpretation and to instead announce a broad constitutional holding, based on its own new test of passive nonconduct versus active criminal conduct. While we do not lightly overrule precedent, we should do so in rare cases such as this, and thereby avoid an unnecessary—and here essentially unbriefed—declaration that the legislature exceeded its constitutional authority. Because I would resolve this case based on statutory interpretation of RCW 69.50.4013, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s analysis, though I concur in the result. ANALYSIS Shannon Blake was convicted of felony possession of a controlled substance under RCW 69.50.4013 following a bench trial; the court rejected her affirmative defense of “unwitting possession.” See State v. Blake, No. 35601-9-III, slip op. at 2 (Wash. Ct. App. Jan. 22, 2019) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/ 356019_unp.pdf. The Court of Appeals affirmed Blake’s conviction based on precedent from two decisions interpreting and upholding prior versions of Washington’s model drug possession statute. Id. at 6 (citing Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380 (holding legislature’s omission of “knowingly” or “intentionally” from drug possession statute resulted in strict liability); Bradshaw, For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -3- 152 Wn.2d at 532); see also Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 539 (rejecting due process challenge to statute as inadequately briefed).1 While the Court of Appeals necessarily followed this precedent, we are offered compelling reasons to reconsider it. I do not share the majority’s view that the legislature’s failure to correct our mistakes in Cleppe and Bradshaw renders us powerless to do so, especially in light of a plainly incorrect statutory interpretation and the harmful effects it continues to produce. I would overrule our erroneous precedent and, considering the main arguments actually briefed in this case, read an implied intent element into the drug possession statute. I.The Drug Possession Statute Does Not Impose Strict Liability but Necessarily Presumes Knowledge and Intent The presumption of mens rea is a common law principle foundational to our system of criminal justice. The Latin axiom actus reus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea has long controlled our conception of criminal law. See generally Francis Bowes Sayre, Mens Rea, 45 HARV. L. REV. 974 (1932). It stands for the basic proposition 1 Relying on State v. Schmeling, 191 Wn. App. 795, 801-02, 365 P.3d 202 (2015), the Court of Appeals determined Blake failed to articulate specific reasons why Schmeling was wrongly decided and found the two out of state cases Blake cited unpersuasive. Blake, slip op. at 6. Schmeling held that “RCW 69.50.4013 does not violate due process even though it does not require the State to prove intent or knowledge to convict an offender of possession of a small amount of a controlled substance.” 191 Wn. App. at 802. Schmeling, in turn, relies on Cleppe and Bradshaw in reaching its holding that the drug possession statute does not violate due process. See id. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -4- that a criminal act does not make a person guilty unless their mind is also guilty. See id. at 974. Strict liability crimes—those crimes that relieve the State from proving intent or mental state—are therefore disfavored. State v. Anderson, 141 Wn.2d 357, 361, 363, 5 P.3d 1247 (2000); accord Staples v. United States, 511 U.S. 600, 606, 114 S. Ct. 1793, 128 L. Ed. 2d 608 (1994) (recognizing Congress may enact strict liability crimes, but “offenses that require no mens rea generally are disfavored”). When a criminal statute does not include some form of intent or mental state, courts will apply a presumption of “‘scienter.’”2 Staples, 511 U.S. at 605 (quoting United States v. Balint, 258 U.S. 250, 251, 42 S. Ct. 301, 66 L. Ed. 604 (1922)); State v. A.M., 194 Wn.2d 33, 47, 448 P.3d 35 (2019) (Gordon McCloud, J., concurring) (collecting cases). It is not uncommon for criminal statutes to omit reference to an express mental state, and courts regularly read a mens rea element into such statutes. In Elonis v. United States, 575 U.S. 723, 135 S. Ct. 2001, 2009, 192 L. Ed. 2d 1 (2015), the United States Supreme Court emphasized that the “‘mere omission from a criminal enactment of any mention of criminal intent’ should not be read ‘as dispensing with 2 Scienter is another term denoting intent or mental state but is generally broader than mens rea because it also describes the culpable mental state required in civil cases. One definition of “scienter” is “[a] degree of knowledge that makes a person legally responsible for the consequences of his or her act or omission; the fact of an act’s having been done knowingly, esp. as a ground for civil damages or criminal punishment.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1613 (11th ed. 2019). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -5- it.’” (quoting Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 250, 72 S. Ct. 240, 96 L. Ed. 288 (1952)). “This rule of construction reflects the basic principle that ‘wrongdoing must be conscious to be criminal.’” Id. (quoting Morissette, 342 U.S. at 252). Though our current drug possession statute has been recodified several times, both the former and current versions of the statute omit any reference to mental state: (1) It is unlawful for any person to possess a controlled substance unless the substance was obtained directly from, or pursuant to, a valid prescription or order of a practitioner while acting in the course of his or her professional practice, or except as otherwise authorized by this chapter. (2) Except as provided in RCW 69.50.4014, any person who violates this section is guilty of a class C felony punishable under chapter 9A.20 RCW. RCW 69.50.4013. In the former version of the statute, our legislature deleted the words “knowingly or intentionally” from the uniform act. Compare former RCW 69.50.401(c) (1973), with UNIF. CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT § 401(c) (1970), 9 pt. 5 U.L.A. 887 (2007). However, the legislature never stated that this omission rendered the drug possession statute devoid of any element of intent. Rather, “[t]he provisions of the common law relating to the commission of crime . . . shall supplement all penal statutes of this state.” RCW 9A.04.060. Consistent with the common law’s general presumption of mens rea, we should read an intent element into the drug possession statute. Doing so upholds our requirement to interpret uniform statutes in a uniform manner with other states and provides the narrowest ground on which Blake is entitled to the relief she seeks. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -6- A. The Drug Possession Statute Is Required To Be Read in a Uniform Manner with Other States The Uniform Controlled Substances Act (UCSA) requires a defendant “knowingly or intentionally” possess a controlled substance. UNIF. CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES ACT § 401(c). After the North Dakota legislature amended its own possession statute to add a “willfulness” mens rea element, Washington became the only state that interpreted its drug possession statute to not require proof of intent. See Dawkins v. State, 313 Md. 638, 647 n.7, 547 A.2d 1041 (1988) (recognizing Washington and North Dakota as the only states to determine “knowledge is not an element of the offense of possession of controlled substances”); N.D. CENT. CODE §19-03.1-23; 1989 N.D. LAWS 748. To be sure, Washington is not the only state whose model drug possession statute is ambiguous in regard to an intent element. See, e.g., ALASKA STAT. § 11.71.040(a)(3) (making it a class C felony to “possess[] any amount of a schedule IA controlled substance” without indicating whether “knowing” possession is required). But, at least 15 state courts have interpreted their own versions of the uniform drug possession statute to require proof of knowledge or intent. See Walker v. State, 356 So. 2d 672, 674 (Ala. 1977); Bell v. State, 519 P.2d 804, 809 n.17 (Alaska 1974); Loy v. State, 88 Ark. App. 91, 101, 195 S.W. 3d 370 (2004); People v. Rubacalba, 6 Cal. 4th 62, 67, 859 P.2d 708, 23 Cal. Rptr. 2d 628 (1993); State v. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -7- Carbone, 116 Conn. App. 801, 816, 977 A.2d 694 (2009); Ayers v. State, 97 A.3d 1037, 1041 (Del. 2014); Duvall v. State, 289 Ga. 540, 542, 712 S.E.2d 850 (2011); State v. Armstrong, 142 Idaho 62, 64, 122 P.3d 321 (2005); State v. Faulkner, 220 Kan. 153, 156, 551 P.2d 1247 (1976); Neal v. State, 191 Md. App. 297, 316, 991 A.2d 159 (2010); State v. Ali, 775 N.W.2d 914, 918 (Minn. Ct. App. 2009); State v. Anderson, 159 Mont. 344, 351, 489 P.2d 295 (1972); State v. Sinclair, 191 N.C. App. 485, 492, 663 S.E.2d 866 (2008); Commonwealth v. Fortune, 456 Pa. 365, 368- 69, 318 A.2d 327 (1974); Kabat v. State, 76 Wis. 2d 224, 227, 251 N.W.2d 38 (1977). Some state courts have gone so far as to interpret the possession of a controlled substance to require knowledge of both the presence of the substance and the general character of the substance. See, e.g., State v. Barber, 635 S.W.2d 342, 343 (Mo. 1982); State v. Alexander, 471 A.2d 216, 218 (R.I. 1984); Clodfelter v. Commonwealth, 218 Va. 619, 622, 238 S.E.2d 820 (1977); Wise v. State, 654 P.2d 116, 119 (Wyo. 1982). Washington’s Uniform Controlled Substances Act “shall be so applied and construed as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this chapter among those states which enact it.” RCW 69.50.603. “At least 48 states have adopted the Uniform Controlled Substances Act, and all but two (Washington and [at the time] North Dakota) expressly require knowledge to be For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -8- proved as an element of unlawful possession.” Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 541 (Sanders, J., dissenting) (citing Dawkins, 313 Md. at 646-49). This is true regardless of whether the intent element is expressly set out in the operative language. See, e.g., Walker, 356 So. 2d at 675 (holding “knowledge is an essential element of the offense of illegal possession of a controlled substance under the Alabama Controlled Substance Act” despite statute’s omission of whether “knowing” possession is required). Reading Washington’s possession statute to require proof of knowledge or intent upholds RCW 69.50.603’s requirement for uniformity of interpretation and corrects an error that has made Washington an outlier among our sister states.3 3 The majority relies on a Louisiana case that held its drug possession statute unconstitutionally imposed strict liability. State v. Brown, 389 So. 2d 48, 49 (La. 1980). But the majority concedes “Louisiana provides the only example of a state court striking down a . . . statute like RCW 69.50.4013 as unconstitutional.” Majority at 14-15. Louisiana serves as the sole parallel because, as noted, at least 15 other state courts read a mens rea element into their respective possession statutes, thereby avoiding a constitutional conflict. Moreover, unlike our drug possession statute, the Louisiana statute explicitly made it “unlawful for any person ‘unknowingly or intentionally’ to possess a controlled dangerous substance.” Brown, 389 So. 2d at 49 (emphasis added). It was therefore impossible for the court in Brown to avoid the statute’s constitutional implications because the statute unambiguously stated unknowing possession was unlawful. Even so, Brown ultimately held only “the portion of the statute making it illegal ‘unknowingly’ to possess [certain controlled] substance[s] is unconstitutional” and found the remainder of the statute valid. Id. at 51. In contrast, the majority’s approach fails to save any portion of our possession statute, despite the fact that our state’s more ambiguous statute contains no explicit indication that unknowing possession is unlawful. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -9- B.Requiring Proof of Intent Addresses Blake’s Primary Request for Relief without Reaching an Unnecessary Constitutional Holding Blake’s primary request, both in her briefing and at oral argument, is for this court to read a mens rea element into the possession statute. See Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 1 (asking this court to “hold the drug possession statute requires the prosecution to prove knowledge”); see also Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, State v. Blake, No. 96873-0 (June 11, 2020), at 5 min., 45 sec. through 5 min., 58 sec., video recording by TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network, https://www.tvw.org/watch/?eventID=2020061060 (in which Blake’s counsel notes, “I would submit the language [in the drug possession statute] does reasonably permit [reading a mens rea into the statute]. . . . Just because the legislature does not explicitly put a mens rea element in the criminal statute does not mean they intend to eliminate it”). Blake correctly observes that such a reading is supported, in part, on “the maxim that all criminal statutes are [generally] read to have a mental element.” Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 1. Properly interpreting the drug possession statute to presume a knowledge element is consistent with the doctrine of constitutional avoidance. At oral argument, Blake’s counsel recognized that “this court can avoid declaring the statute unconstitutional by using the canon of constitutional avoidance or the canon of constitutional doubt and read in a knowledge element and avoid the constitutional For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -10- question.” Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, supra, at 1 min., 56 sec. through 2 min., 13 sec., audio recording by TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network, https://www.tvw.org/watch/?eventID= 2020061060. Absent such an element, Blake submits the statute “should be declared unconstitutional,” but not for the reasons the majority offers. Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 17. In contrast to the majority’s declaration that RCW 69.50.4013 exceeds the legislature’s police power, Blake’s constitutional challenge is premised on the more modest notion that “due process does not permit shifting the burden to the defendant to disprove knowledge.” Id. at 17-18 (citing Patterson v. New York, 432 U.S. 197, 210, 97 S. Ct. 2319, 53 L. Ed. 2d 281 (1977); Schad v. Arizona, 501 U.S. 624, 640, 111 S. Ct. 2491, 115 L. Ed. 2d 555 (1991) (plurality portion)). Either of these constitutional concerns can be avoided by our willingness to revisit our past mistake in misinterpreting the drug possession statute and to properly read into it the presumed element of intent. While this requires us to revisit Cleppe and Bradshaw, as will be explained, these cases are both incorrect and harmful and should be overturned. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -11- II.Cleppe and Bradshaw Were Wrongly Decided and We Are Not Required To Uphold Their Erroneous Interpretations Today The majority rightly observes that stare decisis applies to our decisions in Cleppe and Bradshaw.4 “But stare decisis does not compel us to follow a past decision when its rationale no longer withstands careful analysis. When the generalization underpinning a decision is unfounded, we should not continue in blind adherence to its faulty assumption.” Rose v. Anderson Hay & Grain Co., 184 Wn.2d 268, 282, 358 P.3d 1139 (2015). When a rule announced by past cases is clearly incorrect and harmful, we will overturn those erroneous decisions. State v. Schierman, 192 Wn.2d 577, 764, 438 P.3d 1063 (2018). (Yu, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) This court does not limit the meaning of “incorrect” to any specific kind of error. State v. Barber, 170 Wn.2d 854, 864, 248 P.3d 494 (2011). “An opinion can 4 Blake argues we are not bound by stare decisis because Cleppe and Bradshaw “overlooked [the constitutional-doubt canon of statutory interpretation] and did not consider the due process argument presented here.” Pet’r’s Suppl. Br. at 14. Supporting amicus also notes the creation of the unwitting possession defense is a “judge-made rule” and “‘[r]evisiting precedent is particularly appropriate where, as here, a departure would not upset expectations, the precedent consists of a judge-made rule . . . , and experience has pointed up the precedent’s shortcomings.”’ Br. of Amicus Curiae Inst. for Justice at 13 n.10 (alterations in original) (quoting Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 233, 129 S. Ct. 808, 172 L. Ed. 2d 565 (2009)). While it is true that Cleppe never directly addressed the issues presented in this case, I find Bradshaw’s rejection of the petitioner’s due process argument (albeit on grounds of inadequate briefing) suggests we should analyze whether both of those decisions were incorrect and harmful for purposes of overcoming the doctrine of stare decisis. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -12- be incorrect when it was announced, or it can become incorrect because the passage of time and the development of legal doctrines undermine its bases.” State v. Abdulle, 174 Wn.2d 411, 415-16, 275 P.3d 1113 (2012). “A decision may be ‘harmful’ for a variety of reasons as well.” Barber, 170 Wn.2d at 865. In State v. W.R., 181 Wn.2d 757, 769, 336 P.3d 1134 (2014), we held a rule from two prior cases, which impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to the defendant, was harmful because it violated the defendant’s constitutional due process right to have the State prove every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt and could lead to wrongful convictions. The interpretation of our possession statute announced by Cleppe and extended by Bradshaw was incorrect from the start because those decisions ignored the legislature’s clear direction to “supplement all penal statutes” with “provisions of the common law relating to the commission of crime and the punishment thereof,” which includes the common law presumption of mens rea. RCW 9A.04.060. Instead, recognizing the inherent injustice of convicting a person of criminal possession for something they carried unknowingly, the court adopted the affirmative defense of unwitting possession. Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 380-81. But this work-around created the very constitutional harm Blake identifies: by requiring the defendant to prove a lack of mens rea—which, properly interpreted, is an essential For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -13- element of criminal drug possession—the unwitting possession defense arguably violates due process. See, e.g., W.R., 181 Wn.2d at 769. We should avoid this harm by overturning the clearly incorrect interpretation adopted by Cleppe and Bradshaw and instead supplement our possession statute with the common law presumption of mens rea. As noted, this is the approach taken by other states with similar statutes, and it properly reads the drug possession statute in context as a model criminal law. A. Cleppe Was Incorrect and Bradshaw Extended That Error As a matter of statutory interpretation, Cleppe—and, by extension, Bradshaw—is clearly incorrect. “The purpose of statutory interpretation is ‘to determine and give effect to the intent of the legislature.’” State v. Evans, 177 Wn.2d 186, 192, 298 P.3d 724 (2013) (quoting State v. Sweany, 174 Wn.2d 909, 914, 281 P.3d 305 (2012)). We determine legislative intent “from the plain language enacted by the legislature, [including] the text of the provision in question, the context of the statute in which the provision is found, related provisions, and the statutory scheme as a whole.” Id. Only if the statute is ambiguous do we turn to legislative history and other tools of statutory construction to derive legislative intent. Id. at 192-93. Cleppe erred by turning directly to legislative history rather than examining the context of the possession statute, its related provisions, and the statutory scheme as a whole to determine legislative intent. As indicated above, both the former and For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -14- present version of the drug possession statute are silent as to whether proof of the defendant’s mental state is required. But the possession statute’s silence on mens rea does not automatically make possession a strict liability crime or render the statute unconstitutional. Years before Cleppe, the legislature enacted RCW 9A.04.060, which remains unchanged today: “The provisions of the common law relating to the commission of crime . . . shall supplement all penal statutes of this state.” LAWS OF 1975, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 260, § 9A.04.060 (emphasis added). The legislature thus directed the court in Cleppe and Bradshaw (and the court here today) to supplement the drug possession statute with common law principles—including the presumption of mens rea. See id.; A.M., 194 Wn.2d at 47 (Gordon McCloud, J., concurring). By failing to apply RCW 9A.04.060, the court rendered that related statute meaningless. See State v. Berlin, 133 Wn.2d 541, 547-48, 947 P.2d 700 (1997) (holding a past decision was incorrect and harmful because it disregarded our basic rule of statutory construction to avoid rendering any relevant statutory provision meaningless).5 5 By not reading mens rea into the possession statute, Cleppe and Bradshaw also incorrectly rendered meaningless RCW 69.50.603, which requires the UCSA “shall be so applied and construed as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this chapter among those states which enact it.” As noted above, Washington appears to be the only state in the United States that does not require the State to prove intent or mental state. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -15- Rather than properly supplement the statute with the relevant common law as directed by RCW 9A.04.060 and the United States Supreme Court, the Cleppe court immediately resorted to legislative history to try to resolve the statute’s ambiguity. See Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 377-79. Bradshaw repeated Cleppe’s flawed statutory interpretation and reliance on legislative history and likewise rendered meaningless RCW 9A.04.060 and RCW 69.50.603. Neither Cleppe nor Bradshaw considered and rejected arguments based on the failure to apply RCW 9A.04.060 as directed. Cf. Barber, 170 Wn.2d at 864 (noting we have been reluctant to overrule past decisions based on arguments that were adequately considered and rejected in the original decisions themselves, but not so when the past decision conflicts with controlling rules of law that the court failed to previously consider and apply). I would hold these cases were incorrectly decided. B. Cleppe and Bradshaw Are Also Harmful “It is not enough that a decision is incorrect for us to overrule it; we must also find that it is harmful.” Id. at 871. Cleppe and Bradshaw are clearly harmful. The Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause guarantees, “No state shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. CONST. amend . XIV, § 1. When the government seeks to convict someone, it must prove “beyond a reasonable doubt . . . every fact necessary to constitute the crime with For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -16- which he is charged.” In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364, 90 S. Ct. 1068, 25 L. Ed. 2d 368 (1970); Patterson, 432 U.S. at 210 (“[T]he Due Process Clause requires the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt all of the elements included in the definition of the offense of which the defendant is charged.”). This foundational principle stems from one of the hallmarks of our criminal justice system: “[T]hat every person accused of a crime is constitutionally endowed with an overriding presumption of innocence, a presumption that extends to every element of the charged offense.” State v. Crediford, 130 Wn.2d 747, 759, 927 P.2d 1129 (1996). “A corollary rule is that the State cannot require the defendant to disprove any fact that constitutes the crime charged.” W.R., 181 Wn.2d at 762. “[W]hen a defense necessarily negates an element of the crime, it violates due process to place the burden of proof on the defendant.” Id. at 765. The court in Cleppe recognized the inherent “harshness” of a law strictly criminalizing all drug possession and sought to mitigate the unjust consequences of such a law by adopting the affirmative defense of unwitting possession. 96 Wn.2d at 381. The affirmative defense currently provides, “A person is not guilty of possession of a controlled substance if the possession is unwitting. Possession of a controlled substance is unwitting if a person [did not know that the substance was in [their] possession] [or] [did not know the nature of the substance].” 11 WASHINGTON For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -17- PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS: CRIMINAL 52.01, at 1196 (4th ed. 2016) (most alterations in original). “The burden is on the defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the substance was possessed unwittingly. Preponderance of the evidence means that you must be persuaded, considering all of the evidence in the case, that it is more probably true than not true.” Id.; State v. Deer, 175 Wn.2d 725, 735, 287 P.3d 539 (2012). The unwitting possession defense recognizes that a person cannot be convicted under the possession statute if possession is unknowing or unintentional. Blake makes a compelling argument that burdening a defendant with proving unwitting possession violates due process because it negates the implied mens rea element we must read into the statute. See W.R., 181 Wn.2d at 765. “This impermissible shift in burden is not merely academic but . . . rais[es] a very real possibility of wrongful convictions.” Id. at 769. For these reasons, Cleppe and Bradshaw are harmful. Those decisions are also harmful because they deviate from proper methods of statutory interpretation, render two statutes meaningless, and fail to adhere to long established common law principles. Affirming Cleppe’s and Bradshaw’s incorrect interpretations would harm the integrity of this court by approving of interpretative methods that are otherwise impermissible. While adhering to stare decisis is For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -18- generally desirable, we should not do so when it forces us to discard well-established rules of statutory interpretation and common law principles that safeguard the rights of the accused. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, “[t]he fact of racial and ethnic disproportionality in our criminal justice system is indisputable.” Research Working Grp. of Task Force on Race and the Criminal Justice Sys. Preliminary Report on Race and Washington’s Criminal Justice System, 35 SEATTLE U.L. REV. 623, 627 (2012). “[S]cholars have shown that the poor, people of color, sexual minorities, and other marginalized populations have borne the brunt of criminal punishment and police intervention.” Benjamin Levin, Mens Rea Reform and Its Discontents, 109 J.CRIM. L. & CRIMINOLOGY 491, 530 (2019). Given that criminal laws are enforced against marginalized communities at disproportionate rates, this court’s past decisions divesting the possession statute of mens rea created a constitutional harm that has hit these vulnerable communities hardest. The majority similarly recognizes the harm of reading the drug possession statute to criminalize unknowing possession given the racial disparities in drug prosecutions and convictions. Majority at 13 n.10 (citing Gabriel J. Chin, Race, the War on Drugs, and the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction, 6 J. GENDER, RACE & JUST. 253, 262-70 (2002)). These For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -19- harsh realities give us all the more reason to overrule Cleppe and Bradshaw based on the harmful effects the holdings in those cases created. We recently acknowledged this court’s culpability in perpetuating the racial injustices in our legal system and pledged to recognize and correct such injustices. See Letter from Wash. State Supreme Court to Members of Judiciary & Legal Cmty. 1 (June 4, 2020) (“Too often in the legal profession, we feel bound by tradition and the way things have ‘always’ been. We must remember that even the most venerable precedent must be struck down when it is incorrect and harmful.”), https://www.courts.wa.gov/content/publicUpload/Supreme%20Court%20News/Ju diciary%20Legal%20Community%20SIGNED%20060420.pdf [https://perma.cc/QNT4-H5P7]. We should take ownership of and responsibility for our mistakes in Cleppe and Bradshaw, and overrule those decisions as incorrect and harmful. C. The Majority’s Reliance on Legislative Acquiescence Sidesteps this Court’s Commitment To Overturn Incorrect and Harmful Decisions As the final authority on Washington law, we undisputedly have the ability to correct our own erroneous statutory interpretation in a previous case. See, e.g., Keene v. Edie, 131 Wn.2d 822, 834, 935 P.2d 588 (1997) (overruling Brotton v. Langert, 1 Wash. 73, 23 P. 688 (1890) (interpreting a statute to preclude community real estate from the execution of a judgment against a tortfeasor)). Yet, the majority For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -20- argues, “Given the interpretive principles of legislative acquiescence and stare decisis, only the legislature, not the court, can now change the statute’s intent.” Majority at 3. More specifically, the majority notes, whatever the current validity of Cleppe and Bradshaw, the legislature has acquiesced in their statutory interpretation by failing to add a mens rea element to the possession statute in the intervening years, thereby preventing us from revisiting those cases. Majority at 2.6 We should not lean so heavily on the rule of legislative acquiescence because “‘[legislative] inaction lacks persuasive significance’ in most circumstances.” Star Athletica, LLC v. Varsity Brands, Inc., ___ U.S. ___, 137 S. Ct. 1002, 1015, 197 L. Ed. 2d 354 (2017) (quoting Pension Benefit Guar. Corp. v. LTV Corp., 496 U.S. 633, 650, 110 S. Ct. 2668, 110 L. Ed. 2d 579 (1990)). Importantly, “‘evidence of legislative acquiescence is not conclusive, but is merely one factor to consider.’” Fast v. Kennewick Pub. Hosp. Dist., 187 Wn.2d 27, 39, 384 P.3d 232 (2016) (emphasis added) (quoting Safeco Ins. Cos. v. Meyering, 102 Wn.2d 385, 392, 687 P.2d 195 (1984)). In the context of criminal statutes, it is unclear whether the rule of legislative acquiescence should even apply to our statutory interpretation. The rule originated in the context of administrative constructions of ambiguous statutes, 6 In contrast to today’s majority, the concurrence in A.M. stated, “[I]t is debatable whether a finding of legislative acquiescence is constitutionally permissible when the text of a criminal statute cannot support the court’s long-standing interpretation using ordinary principles of statutory interpretation.” 194 Wn.2d at 56 (Gordon McCloud J., concurring). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -21- where deference to the executive often pertains. See, e.g., Pringle v. State, 77 Wn.2d 569, 573, 464 P.2d 425 (1970) (citing State ex rel. Pirak v. Schoettler, 45 Wn.2d 367, 371-72, 274 P.2d 852 (1954)); see also State ex rel. Ball v. Rathbun, 144 Wash. 56, 59, 256 P. 330 (1927) (“An executive construction is accepted generally by the courts as persuasive where the legislature has silently acquiesced in such construction by failing to amend the particular act.”); Smith v. N. Pac. Ry. Co., 7 Wn.2d 652, 665, 110 P.2d 851 (1941). We are neither bound by legislative silence nor beholden to the legislature’s inaction in response to our incorrect and harmful decisions. The scant support legislative silence or inaction may lend a prior interpretation cannot overcome the need to correct a long-standing injustice of our own making. We should not hold ourselves powerless to correct prior decisions reflecting an erroneous statutory interpretation, even when the legislature has not responded to those decisions. To adhere to the majority’s view of legislative acquiescence would be to abdicate our judicial responsibility to correct course when precedent perpetuates harmful effects. Unlike the majority, I would hold that Cleppe’s and Bradshaw’s statutory interpretations are both incorrect and harmful, and should be overturned. We should reject these decisions in favor of a proper interpretation that recognizes the implied For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -22- mens rea element, requiring the State to prove the absence of unwitting possession defense beyond a reasonable doubt. III.Reading an Intent Element into the Drug Possession Statute Provides a Better Resolution Than Declaring the Statute Unconstitutional Recognizing that our drug possession statute includes an intent element corrects our past mistakes and resolves this case on narrow grounds. This approach avoids the majority’s sweeping holding to declare the statute unconstitutional in its entirety as beyond the legislature’s police powers. It is particularly noteworthy that the majority reaches its holding based on a test that was never addressed in the briefing of either party. While Blake raised a constitutional due process challenge as an alternative to her statutory interpretation argument, her arguments do not align with the majority’s position. The majority’s novel analysis of substantive due process has the potential to overturn a number of criminal statutes to the extent this court finds they criminalize innocent or passive nonconduct. I would reject this analysis because it reaches far beyond the issues and arguments before us, and it misinterprets the precedent the majority relies on. A. The Majority Oversteps by Creating a Test That No One Asked for and Is Not Sufficiently Grounded in Our Case Law Under the principle of “party presentation” the United States Supreme Court has noted, “‘[Courts] do not, or should not, sally forth each day looking for wrongs For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -23- to right. We wait for cases to come to us, and when they do we normally decide only questions presented by the parties.’” Greenlaw v. United States, 554 U.S. 237, 244, 128 S. Ct. 2559, 171 L. Ed. 2d 399 (2008) (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Samuels, 808 F.2d 1298, 1301 (8th Cir. 1987) (Arnold, J., concurring in denial of reh’g en banc)). The Court reaffirmed this point in United States v. Sineneng-Smith, ___ U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct. 1575, 1578, 206 L. Ed. 2d 866 (2020), holding the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals overstepped its bounds by inviting amici to brief a First Amendment overbreadth issue and subsequently accepting amici’s arguments to declare a particular immigration provision facially unconstitutional— rather than confronting the petitioner’s request to find the provisions at issue did not cover her conduct or, if they did, “they violated the Petition and Free Speech Clauses of the First Amendment as applied.” The Court noted that while there are circumstances where “a modest initiating role for a court is appropriate,” “[n]o extraordinary circumstances justified the panel’s takeover of the appeal.” Id. at 1579, 1581. The majority’s approach in the current case presents substantially similar concerns as in Sineneng-Smith. Rather than meaningfully engage with the arguments Blake raises, the majority summarily concludes the “time has long since passed [to interpret RCW 69.50.4013 as including an intent element]” and rejects For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -24- Blake’s alternative due process challenge that the affirmative defense of unwitting possession “unconstitutionally shifts the burden of proof onto her from the State.” Majority at 2, 20. The majority then steers this case into deep, uncharted waters to decide “whether unintentional, unknowing possession of a controlled substance is the sort of innocent, passive nonconduct that falls beyond the State’s police power to criminalize.” Id. at 14. I do not believe that question is actually before us. Moreover, the substantive due process test announced by the majority is constructed from a collection of passing phrases from three separate cases. Specifically, the majority strings together a series of citations to announce a new rule that the “legislature’s exercise of its otherwise plenary police power to criminalize entirely passive and innocent nonconduct with no mens rea . . . violates . . . due process.” Id. at 10-14 (citing Lambert v. California, 355 U.S. 225, 78 S. Ct. 240, 2 L. Ed. 2d 228 (1957); Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville, 405 U.S. 156, 92 S. Ct. 839, 31 L. Ed. 2d 110 (1972); City of Seattle v. Pullman, 82 Wn.2d 794, 514 P.2d 1059 (1973)). I cannot speak to what the parties may have to say about this rule, but I believe this passive nonconduct versus active criminal conduct test is not supported by the cited precedent and is ill suited to the present case. In Lambert, the United States Supreme Court held a felon registration ordinance unconstitutional where it was “unaccompanied by any activity” other than For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -25- “mere presence in the city.” 355 U.S. at 229. And in Papachristou, the Court determined a vagrancy ordinance was void for vagueness given that it “‘fails to give a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice’” and “makes criminal activities which by modern standards are normally innocent.” 405 U.S. at 162-63 (quoting United States v. Harriss, 347 U.S. 612, 617, 74 S. Ct. 808, 98 L. Ed 989 (1954)). In Pullman, we held a Seattle ordinance prohibiting individuals from accompanying a child during curfew hours was unconstitutionally vague and violated due process. 82 Wn.2d at 795. In reaching this holding, we noted that the certain words in the ordinance, including “‘to loiter, idle, wander or play”’ failed to “provide ascertainable standards for locating the line between innocent and unlawful behavior.” Id. at 799. One major distinction between these cases and the present case is that criminalizing the possession of controlled substances differs greatly from the criminalization of night walking or failure to register. To be sure, knowing possession of a controlled substance necessarily involves an active decision to obtain that particular drug. And the majority concedes that the active trafficking of drugs “is not innocent conduct.” Majority at 14. Instead, the majority appears to argue that “unknowing possession is just as innocent and passive as staying out late with a juvenile or remaining in a city without registering.” Id. (emphasis added). But if that is true, then the proper solution is to remedy the For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -26- statute’s unconstitutional implications by reading in an intent requirement, as courts regularly do. Adopting the majority’s approach means striking the possession statute in its entirety, and it opens the door to a slew of due process challenges asserting passive versus active conduct in criminal statutes. In addition to the future challenges the majority’s novel test will undoubtedly invite, the test also has the potential to undermine our existing constitutional analysis. The majority insists its “active” versus “passive” test leaves undisturbed other constitutionally permissible strict liability crimes such as the rape of a child because, there, “the State must certainly show the activity of sexual intercourse, not just innocent passivity.” Id. at 29 (emphasis added). But the majority acknowledges one case where we held a defendant had the burden of proving her acts were involuntary in a child rape case. Id. at 29 n.15 (citing Deer, 175 Wn.2d at 731-38). The majority attempts to distinguish Deer because that case concerned the “actus reus” element of the rape charge, whereas the present case concerns “strict liability felony punishment for nonconduct that is both innocent and passive.” Id. But the majority fails to explain how its test would account for our holding in Deer. Under the test the majority proposes, the defendant in Deer would be able to argue that criminalization of child rape without a mens rea element unconstitutionally punishes innocent and passive behavior where a defendant was For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -27- asleep and, therefore, failed to partake in the activity of the alleged rape. In Deer, we noted that just because a defendant was asleep during sexual intercourse with a child “does not negate the fact that sexual intercourse occurred.” 175 Wn.2d at 734. Similarly, if drug possession is regarded as a strict liability crime, just because an individual is unaware they possess an uncontrolled substance does not change the fact that possession of that uncontrolled substance occurred. The consequence of the majority’s test is that statutes that lack a mens rea element now have the potential to be overturned not because a mens rea element is required but as a result of a test that hinges on whether the act or conduct at issue is deemed passive or innocent. Such a test conflates the distinct elements of mens rea and actus reus and will undoubtedly lead to confusion and divergent application among the courts. B.The Better Course Is To Properly Construe the Drug Possession Statute and Follow the Doctrine of Constitutional Avoidance The majority recognizes that “‘[w]e construe statutes to avoid constitutional doubt.’” Majority at 21 (alteration in original) (quoting Utter ex rel. State v. Bldg. Indus. Ass’n of Wash., 182 Wn.2d 398, 434, 341 P.3d 953 (2015)). Interpreting the possession statute to require a mens rea element “avoids a confrontation with the constitution.” A.M., 194 Wn.2d at 49 (Gordon McCloud, J., concurring). Yet the majority argues constitutional avoidance is impossible based on the “overwhelming evidence that the legislature intends the simple possession statute to penalize For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -28- innocent nonconduct.” Majority at 21. As explained, such “overwhelming evidence” does not exist, and legislative inaction following Cleppe and Bradshaw “‘is merely one factor to consider.’” Fast, 187 Wn.2d at 39. (quoting Safeco Ins. Cos., 102 Wn.2d at 392) When the drug possession statute is considered in context—including the context of RCW 9A.04.060, which favors presuming a general mens rea requirement in criminal statutes—there is little to suggest the legislature intended to impose strict liability. Admittedly, the legislative intent is not clear, but I would adhere to the constitutional-doubt canon, which instructs that ambiguous statutes are interpreted to avoid constitutional doubts when statutory language reasonably permits. Gomez v.United States, 490 U.S. 858, 864, 109 S. Ct. 2237, 104 L. Ed. 2d 923 (1989); Utter, 182 Wn.2d at 434. The majority’s only reason for avoiding this outcome is unwarranted deference to prior case law that erroneously interpreted the statute as a strict liability crime. But as explained, this case law is incorrect and harmful, and should not be further extended given the constitutional implications at stake. In adherence to the doctrine of constitutional avoidance, we should overturn Cleppe and Bradshaw and properly construe our model drug possession statute as containing an implied mens rea element, consistent with similar statutes in other states. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Shannon) (Stephens, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part), 96873-0 -29- CONCLUSION Cleppe and Bradshaw are incorrect and harmful decisions that this court—not the legislature—should remedy by reading an intent requirement into the possession statute. Such an outcome is supported by the presumption of mens rea in criminal statutes and the requirement for uniform interpretation of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act among the states. Because I read the drug possession statute to require proof of intent, I concur in result with the majority’s decision to overturn Blake’s conviction. I respectfully dissent from the majority’s unnecessary decision to declare the statute unconstitutional as exceeding the legislature’s police power. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake No. 96873-0 JOHNSON, J. (dissenting)—Over 60 years ago, this court decided that the crime of possession of a controlled substance does not require knowledge or intent. “Whether intent or guilty knowledge is to be made an essential element . . . is basically a matter to be determined by the legislature.” State v. Henker, 50 Wn.2d 809, 812, 314 P.2d 645 (1957). We reiterated this principle in State v. Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d 373, 378, 635 P.2d 435 (1981), unanimously rejecting a challenge to the validity of the legislature’s power to enact RCW 69.50.401(c), which continued to make possession of a controlled substance a crime without a mens rea requirement. In the course of our decision, we reversed holdings from Court of Appeals cases to the contrary. See Cleppe, 96 Wn.2d at 377 (citing State v. Weaver, 24 Wn. App. 83, 600 P.2d 598 (1979); State v. Smith, 17 Wn. App. 231, 562 P.2d 659 (1977); State v. Hennings, 3 Wn. App. 483, 475 P.2d 926 (1970)). And, again, more recently in State v. Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d 528, 98 P.3d 1190 (2004), we rejected an argument to For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Johnson, J., dissenting) 2 overrule Cleppe (and implicitly those many cases consistent with Cleppe’s holding). Finally, removing any doubt in this long-standing principle, in State v. Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d 155, 456 P.3d 1172 (2020), we held that the crime of the unauthorized practice of law, RCW 2.48.180(3), does not require proof of knowledge or intent. We stated, “[U]nder our constitutional system, our legislature has the plenary power to criminalize conduct regardless of whether the actor intended wrongdoing.” Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d at 163 (citing State v. Bash, 130 Wn.2d 594, 604, 925 P.2d 978 (1996)). We call these crimes strict liability crimes. See, e.g., Yishmael, 195 Wn.2d at 163-64; Bradshaw, 152 Wn.2d at 536-37. The legislative power to enact strict liability crimes remains consistent and undiminished, and the Court of Appeals decision upholding RCW 69.50.4013(c) should therefore be affirmed.1 Our continued recognition of this legislative power applies with special force in this case given the length of time that the crime of possession of a controlled substance has been upheld as a strict liability crime. The 1 This legislative power repeatedly affirmed by our cases is consistent with United States Supreme Court cases, which have recognized the ability of the legislature to enact strict liability crimes for over a century. See Shevlin-Carpenter Co. v. Minnesota, 218 U.S. 57, 68-70, 30 S. Ct. 663, 54 L. Ed. 930 (1910); see also United States v. Balint, 258 U.S. 250, 254, 42 S. Ct. 301, 66 L. Ed. 604 (1922) (upholding strict liability for selling a controlled substance). For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) State v. Blake (Johnson, J., dissenting) 3 constitutional analysis in the majority’s decision is not convincing enough to outweigh those considerations. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. For the cur rent opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/warepor ts/. AGENDA ITEM #6. g) AB - 3894 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Project Acceptance for West Hill Booster Pump Station Improvements Project with Gary Harper Construction Inc. (CAG-23-005) RECOMMENDED ACTION: Council Concur DEPARTMENT: Public Works Utility Systems Division STAFF CONTACT: Ken Srilofung, Water Utility Project Engineer EXT.: 7247 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: The awarded construction contract amount for the West Hill Booster Pump Station Improvements (CAG-23- 005) was $2,669,704.80. The final contract amount is $2,750,154.72, reflecting an increase of $80,449.92 (approximately 3%). This increase is due to a change order for the replacement of three existing pump cans, which were found to be shallower than anticipated and required modification to accommodate the new pumps. Sufficient funding is available in the 2025 Water Utility Capital Improvement Program budget (accounts 425.455530 and 425.455582) to cover this cost increase. SUMMARY OF ACTION: The contract was awarded to Gary Harper Construction Inc. on April 17, 2023. Construction began on April 4, 2023, and physical completion was achieved on July 7, 2025. The project included the replacement of three 40-year-old pumps with one new 1,200-gallon-per-minute (gpm) pump and two new 600 gpm pumps. Additional improvements included the installation of a new electrical generator for back-up emergency power supply with an outdoor shelter, a new motor control center (MCC), electrical system upgrades, site landscaping, and access improvements. The project significantly improves the reliability and efficiency of the pump station and ensure it can meet projected water demand for future years. EXHIBITS: A. Notice of Completion of Public Works Contract B. Final Contract Voucher Certificate C. Recommendation of project acceptance by the city’s consultant RH2 Engineering Inc. STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Accept the West Hill Booster Pump Station Improvements Project completed by Gary Harper Construction Inc. and authorize the release of the retainage bond 60 days after all required releases from the state have been received. AGENDA ITEM #6. h) F215-038-000 Notice of Completion of Public Works Contract 05-2020 Notice of Completion of Public Works Contract Department Use Only Assigned to Date Assigned Date Form Version Revision Reason Awarding Agency Information Company Name UBI Number Address City State Zip Code Contact Name Phone Number Email Address Prime Contractor Information Company Name UBI Number Address City State Zip Code Contact Name Phone Number Email Address Project Information Project Name Contract Number Affidavit ID Number Jobsite Address City State Zip Code Date Awarded Date Work Commenced Date Work Completed Date Work Accepted Is this a Federally Funded Transportation Project? Yes No If yes, attach the Contract Bond Statement Have Subcontractors been used? Yes No If yes, complete Addendum A Contract/Payment Bond Waived? Yes No Retainage Bond Waived? Yes No Detailed Description of Work Completed DOR Tax Information Calculated Amount Liquidated Damages Additions (+) Amount Disbursed Reductions (-) Amount Retained Sub-Total Other Sales Tax Amount Sales Tax Rate Total Total Both totals must to be equal - If multiple sales tax rates, attach a list Apprentice Utilization Information Was apprentice utilization required? Yes No Engineer’s Estimate: Utilization %: If utilization did not meet or exceed 15%, was a Good Faith Estimate approved? Yes No Comments The Disbursing Officer must submit this completed notice immediately after acceptance of the work done under this contract. No payment shall be made from the retained funds until receipt of all release certificates and affidavits. Complete and submit for by email to all three agencies below Contract Release (855) 545-8163, option # 4 ContractRelease@LNI.WA.GOV Employment Security Department Registration, Inquiry, Standards & Coordination Unit (360) 890-3499 publicworks@esd.wa.gov AGENDA ITEM #6. h) Subcontractor's Name:UBI Number: (Required)Affidavit ID* Addendum A: Please List all Subcontractors and Sub-tiers Below This addendum can be submitted in other formats. Provide known affidavits at this time. No L&I release will be granted until all affidavits are listed. For tax assistance or to request this document in an alternate format, please call 1-800-647-7706. Teletype (TTY) users may use the Washington Relay Service by calling 711. REV 31 0020e Addendum (10/26/15)F215-038-000 05-2020 AGENDA ITEM #6. h) AGENDA ITEM #6. h) RH2 ENGINEERING Bothell 22722 29th Drive SE, Suite 210 Bothell, WA 98021 1.800.720.8052 / rh2.com 07/10/25 4:10 PM J:\DATA\REN\23-0075\60 SDC\PROJECT CLOSEOUT\LTR TO K SRILOFUNG RE WEST HILL BPS RECOMMENDATION OF PROJECT ACCEPTANCE.DOCX WASHINGTON LOCATIONS Bellingham Bellevue Bothell (Corporate) East Wenatchee Richland Tacoma OREGON LOCATIONS Medford Portland IDAHO LOCATIONS Nampa July 10, 2025 Mr. Ken Srilofung, PE Civil Engineer 3 – CIP Project Manager City of Renton 1055 South Grady Way, 5th Floor Renton, WA 98057 Sent via: Email Subject: City of Renton West Hill Booster Pump Station Improvements Project Acceptance Recommendation Dear Mr. Srilofung: This letter serves as the Recommendation for Final Acceptance of the West Hill Booster Pump Station Improvements project. RH2 Engineering, Inc., (RH2) provided part-time on-site construction observation and coordination for the construction of this project by Gary Harper Construction, Inc. (GHC). The Notice to Proceed for this project was issued on April 26, 2023. All portions of the project were deemed substantially complete on May 14, 2025. RH2 and City of Renton (City) staff developed the final punch list, which was distributed with the notice of substantial completion. Since that time, all of the punch list items were completed to the satisfaction of RH2 representative Mr. Chris Roberts, PE. Since issuing substantial completion, GHC has provided: • Contractor and subcontractor affidavits of wages paid, less one subcontractor affidavit that is expected to be received imminently after the resolution of filing issues with the Department of Labor and Industries (L&I); and • As-constructed records, operations and maintenance (O&M) manuals, spare parts, and other items as required per contract. The one item remaining for GHC to provide the City is the final project contract voucher certificate. AGENDA ITEM #6. h) 07/10/25 4:10 PM J:\DATA\REN\23-0075\60 SDC\PROJECT CLOSEOUT\LTR TO K SRILOFUNG RE WEST HILL BPS RECOMMENDATION OF PROJECT ACCEPTANCE.DOCX MR. KEN SRILOFUNG July 10, 2025 Page 2 GHC includes a general warranty on materials and workmanship performed by the contractor or its subcontractors and suppliers for a period of one (1) year from the date of Substantial Completion. The general project warranty extends to May 14, 2026. Any specific equipment warranties as required by contract supersedes the general warranty. It is RH2’s opinion that GHC has completed the project in general conformance with the contract. RH2 recommends the City accept the project as completed and make final payment to GHC. It has been a pleasure working with you and City staff to make this project a success. RH2 will continue to support the City in any way possible. We look forward to future opportunities to provide professional services for the City. If you have any questions or concerns regarding this recommendation, please feel free to contact me at (425) 951-5358. Sincerely, Chris Roberts, PE Project Manager CMR AGENDA ITEM #6. h) AB - 3897 City Council Regular Meeting - 11 Aug 2025 SUBJECT/TITLE: Bid Award for Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Project, Phase 4 (CAG-25-155, Project No. WWP-27-04323) RECOMMENDED ACTION: Council Concur DEPARTMENT: Public Works Utility Systems Division STAFF CONTACT: Michael Benoit, Wastewater Utility Project Manager EXT.: 7206 FISCAL IMPACT SUMMARY: Equity Builders LLC. submitted the lowest bid of $1,101,897.00, for the Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Phase 4 project. The bid is under the engineer’s estimate of $1,641,815.50. Funding for the contract for this project is available from the approved 2025-2026 Wastewater Capital Improvement Program Lift Station and Force Main Rehabilitation project budgets (426.465508 and 426.465516). There is sufficient unencumbered funding remaining in the budget ($2,242,372) to fund this contract. SUMMARY OF ACTION: Phase 4 of the Sewer Lift Station and Force Main Improvement Project will include installation of backup generators at Kensington Crest and Wedgewood Lift Stations. Station controls and telemetry at Stonegate and Shy Creek Lift Stations will also be improved. The lift station and force main projects insure the continued efficient and effective operations of the 20 lift stations currently in our system. Bids for this construction contract were received and opened on Tuesday, July 22, 2025. Four bids were submitted, and the bid amounts are summarized below. Bid submitted by Bid amount Engineers Estimate $1,641,815.50 Equity Builders LLC $1,101,897.00 McClure and Sons, Inc. $1,524,089.00 Northwest Cascade, Inc. $1,571,571,00 Road Construction Northwest, Inc $1,691,450.50 The lowest responsible bid is within the project budget and contains no irregularities. Determination of responsive and responsible bidder Wastewater Utility staff has reviewed the submitted bid and determined that the bid is responsive and that Equity Builders LLC. is a responsible bidder as defined in RCW 39.04.350, and in Renton City policy 250-02. (see Exhibit B). Equity Builders has done several successful previous projects for the city of Renton and has extensive experience in constructing public works utility projects. AGENDA ITEM #6. i) EXHIBITS: A. Final Bid Tabulation CAG-25-155 B. Bidder Assessment CAG-25-155 C. Clerk Bid Tabulation CAG-25-155 STAFF RECOMMENDATION: Award the construction contract to the lowest responsive and responsible bidder, Equity Builders LLC. in the amount of $1,101,897.00 and authorize the Mayor and City Clerk to execute the construction contract CAG- 25-155. AGENDA ITEM #6. i) Project Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Phase 4 City of Renton Apparent Low Bid McClure and Sons, Inc BID DATE:12-Sep-23 Engineers Estimate Equity Builders LLC Item No. Description Unit Quantity Unit Price Bid Amount Unit Price Bid Amount Unit Price Bid Amount Schedule A A01 Mobilization, Demobilization, Site Preparation, and Cleanup Lump Sum 1 135,500.00 135,500.00 99,000.00 99,000.00 $84,000.00 84,000.00 A02 Excavation Safety and Shoring Lump Sum 1 5,500.00 5,500.00 5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 A03 Temporary Sedimentation and Erosion Control Lump Sum 1 12,000.00 12,000.00 4,000.00 4,000.00 $15,000.00 15,000.00 A04 Slurry Seal Surface Treatment Improvements Lump Sum 1 18,000.00 18,000.00 14,000.00 14,000.00 $15,000.00 15,000.00 A05 Kensington Crest Lift Station Contractor Designed Shoring System Lump Sum 1 84,500.00 84,500.00 33,000.00 33,000.00 $145,000.00 145,000.00 A06 Kensington Crest Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 150,000.00 150,000.00 112,000.00 112,000.00 $190,767.00 190,767.00 A07 Kensington Crest Lift Station Structural Lump Sum 1 173,000.00 173,000.00 115,000.00 115,000.00 $195,000.00 195,000.00 A08 Kensington Crest Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 192,000.00 192,000.00 144,000.00 144,000.00 $180,000.00 180,000.00 A09 Wedgewood Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 88,500.00 88,500.00 70,000.00 70,000.00 $112,000.00 112,000.00 A10 Wedgewood Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 241,500.00 241,500.00 146,000.00 146,000.00 $180,000.00 180,000.00 A11 Shy Creek Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 131,500.00 131,500.00 73,000.00 73,000.00 $60,000.00 60,000.00 A12 Stonegate Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 55,000.00 55,000.00 41,000.00 41,000.00 $70,000.00 70,000.00 A13 Stonegate Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 131,500.00 131,500.00 73,000.00 73,000.00 $60,000.00 60,000.00 A14 Operations and Maintenance (O&M) Manuals and On-site Owner Training Lump Sum 1 5,000.00 5,000.00 5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 A15 Minor Change Lump Sum 1 60,000.00 60,000.00 60,000.00 60,000.00 $60,000.00 60,000.00 A16 Prepare Construction Records Lump Sum 1 5,000.00 5,000.00 5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 Subtotal A 1,488,500.00 Subtotal A 999,000.00 Subtotal A 1,381,767.00 Tax 10.3%153,315.50 Tax 10.3%102,897.00 Tax 10.3%142,322.00 Total A 1,641,815.50 Total A 1,101,897.00 Total A 1,524,089.00 AG E N D A I T E M # 6 . i ) Project Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Phase 4 BID DATE:12-Sep-23 Item No. Description Unit Quantity Schedule A A01 Mobilization, Demobilization, Site Preparation, and Cleanup Lump Sum 1 A02 Excavation Safety and Shoring Lump Sum 1 A03 Temporary Sedimentation and Erosion Control Lump Sum 1 A04 Slurry Seal Surface Treatment Improvements Lump Sum 1 A05 Kensington Crest Lift Station Contractor Designed Shoring System Lump Sum 1 A06 Kensington Crest Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 A07 Kensington Crest Lift Station Structural Lump Sum 1 A08 Kensington Crest Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A09 Wedgewood Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 A10 Wedgewood Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A11 Shy Creek Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A12 Stonegate Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 A13 Stonegate Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A14 Operations and Maintenance (O&M) Manuals and On-site Owner Training Lump Sum 1 A15 Minor Change Lump Sum 1 A16 Prepare Construction Records Lump Sum 1 Northwest Cascade, Inc Road Construction Northwest, Inc Unit Price Bid Amount Unit Price Bid Amount $140,415.05 140,415.05 $150,000.00 150,000.00 $30,000.00 30,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 $30,000.00 30,000.00 $13,500.00 13,500.00 $23,500.00 23,500.00 $45,000.00 45,000.00 $148,300.00 148,300.00 $150,000.00 150,000.00 $169,800.00 169,800.00 $115,000.00 115,000.00 $185,000.00 185,000.00 $220,000.00 220,000.00 $188,300.00 188,300.00 $245,000.00 245,000.00 $70,900.00 70,900.00 $80,000.00 80,000.00 $185,600.00 185,600.00 $245,000.00 245,000.00 $57,800.00 57,800.00 $75,000.00 75,000.00 $66,200.00 66,200.00 $45,000.00 45,000.00 $59,000.00 59,000.00 $75,000.00 75,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 $60,000.00 60,000.00 $60,000.00 60,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 Subtotal A 1,424,815.05 Subtotal A 1,533,500.00 Tax 10.3%146,755.95 Tax 10.3%157,950.50 Total A 1,571,571.00 Total A 1,691,450.50 AG E N D A I T E M # 6 . i ) Project Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Phase 4 BID DATE:12-Sep-23 Item No. Description Unit Quantity Schedule A A01 Mobilization, Demobilization, Site Preparation, and Cleanup Lump Sum 1 A02 Excavation Safety and Shoring Lump Sum 1 A03 Temporary Sedimentation and Erosion Control Lump Sum 1 A04 Slurry Seal Surface Treatment Improvements Lump Sum 1 A05 Kensington Crest Lift Station Contractor Designed Shoring System Lump Sum 1 A06 Kensington Crest Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 A07 Kensington Crest Lift Station Structural Lump Sum 1 A08 Kensington Crest Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A09 Wedgewood Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 A10 Wedgewood Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A11 Shy Creek Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A12 Stonegate Lift Station Site Lump Sum 1 A13 Stonegate Lift Station Electrical Lump Sum 1 A14 Operations and Maintenance (O&M) Manuals and On-site Owner Training Lump Sum 1 A15 Minor Change Lump Sum 1 A16 Prepare Construction Records Lump Sum 1 Average Bid Low Bid Compareed to Average Low Bid Compareed to Eng Est Unit Price Bid Amount Low Bid Average Bid Low Bid Engineer Est $118,353.76 118,353.76 $99,000.00 118,353.76 83.65%$99,000.00 135,500.00 73.06% $11,250.00 11,250.00 $5,000.00 11,250.00 44.44%$5,000.00 5,500.00 90.91% $15,625.00 15,625.00 $4,000.00 15,625.00 25.60%$4,000.00 12,000.00 33.33% $24,375.00 24,375.00 $14,000.00 24,375.00 57.44%$14,000.00 18,000.00 77.78% $119,075.00 119,075.00 $33,000.00 119,075.00 27.71%$33,000.00 84,500.00 39.05% $146,891.75 146,891.75 $112,000.00 146,891.75 76.25%$112,000.00 150,000.00 74.67% $178,750.00 178,750.00 $115,000.00 178,750.00 64.34%$115,000.00 173,000.00 66.47% $189,325.00 189,325.00 $144,000.00 189,325.00 76.06%$144,000.00 192,000.00 75.00% $83,225.00 83,225.00 $70,000.00 83,225.00 84.11%$70,000.00 88,500.00 79.10% $189,150.00 189,150.00 $146,000.00 189,150.00 77.19%$146,000.00 241,500.00 60.46% $66,450.00 66,450.00 $73,000.00 66,450.00 109.86%$73,000.00 131,500.00 55.51% $55,550.00 55,550.00 $41,000.00 55,550.00 73.81%$41,000.00 55,000.00 74.55% $66,750.00 66,750.00 $73,000.00 66,750.00 109.36%$73,000.00 131,500.00 55.51% $5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 100.00%$5,000.00 5,000.00 100.00% $60,000.00 60,000.00 $60,000.00 60,000.00 100.00%$60,000.00 60,000.00 100.00% $5,000.00 5,000.00 $5,000.00 5,000.00 100.00%$5,000.00 5,000.00 100.00% Subtotal A 1,334,770.51 999,000.00 1,334,770.51 74.84%999,000.00 1,488,500.00 67.11% $134,811.82 $100,899.00 $134,811.82 74.84%$100,899.00 $150,338.50 67.11% Total A $1,469,582.33 $1,099,899.00 $1,469,582.33 74.84%$1,099,899.00 $1,638,838.50 67.11% AG E N D A I T E M # 6 . i ) AGENDA ITEM #6. i) Item Description Determination 1.A Proposal will be considered irregular and will be rejected if:Criteria Met (Per Below) 1.a.The bidder is not prequalified when so required;Not required for this project. 1.b.The authorized proposal form furnished by the Contracting Agency is not used or is altered.Authorized proposal form used. 1.c.The complete proposal form contains any unauthorized additions, deletions, alternate bids, or conditions;No edits to proposal conditions. 1.d.The bidder adds provisions reserving the right to reject or accept the award, or enter into the Contract;No edits to proposal conditions. 1.e.A price per unit cannot be determined from the bid proposal;Price per unit clearly identified. 1.f.The proposal form is not properly executed; Proposal form submitted with bid. Signed by George Hochstein. 1.g.The Bidder fails to submit or properly complete a Subcontractor list, if applicable, as required in Section 1-02.6.Subcontractor list submitted with bid. 1.h.The bidder fails to submit or properly complete a Disadvantaged, Minority or Women’s Business Enterprise Certification, if applicable, as required in Section 1-02.6; or Not applicable 1.i.The bid proposal does not constitute a definite and unqualified offer to meet the material terms of the bid invitation.Definite and unqualified offer. 1.j.More than one proposal is submitted for the same project from a Bidder under the same or different names.One proposal submitted. Item Description Determination 2.A Proposal may be considered irregular and may be rejected if:Criteria Met (Per Below) 2.a.The Proposal does not include a unit price for every Bid item.Unit price included for every bid item. 2.b.Any of the unit prices are excessively unbalanced (either above or below the amount of a reasonable Bid) to the potential detriment of the Contracting Agency; All unit prices considered reasonable and balanced. 2.c.The authorized Proposal Form furnished by the Contracting Agency is not used or is altered; Proposal form submitted with bid. Signed by George Hochstein. 2.d.The completed Proposal form contains any unauthorized additions, deletions, alternate Bids, or conditions;No edits to proposal conditions. 2.e.Receipt of Addenda is not acknowledged;Receipt of Addenda acknowledged. 2.f.A member of a joint venture or partnership and the joint venture or partnership submit Proposals for the same project (in such an instance, both Bids may be rejected); or No evidence that members of a joint venture or partnership submitted multiple proposals. 2.g.If the Proposal form entried are not made in ink.Proposal form entries made in ink. Lift Station and Force Main Improvements Phase 4 2022 WSDOT Standard Specifications 1-02.13 Irregular Proposals L&I Doing Business As (DBA): Equity Builders LLC City Special Provisions 1-02.13 Irregular Proposals WA UBI No.: 601 606 620 License No.: EQUITBL987N7 Entity Type: LLC Bidder Assessment CAG-25-155 Bid Opening: July 22, 2025 Bidder: Equity Builders LLC Bidder Assessment-West Hill BPS Improvements Project Page 1 of 3 AGENDA ITEM #6. i) Item Description Determination 1.A Bidder will be deemed not responsible and the proposal rejected if the bidder does not meet the responsibility criteria in RCW 39.04.350. Criteria Met (Per Below) (1)Before award of a public works contract, a bidder must meet the following responsibility criteria to be considered a responsible bidder and qualified to be awarded a public works project. The bidder must: Criteria Met (Per Below) YES L&I Acct ID: 034,303-00 Account is CURRENT (1)(b)Have a current state unified business identifier number;WA UBI: 602 220 464 (1)(c)If applicable, have industrial insurance coverage for the bidder's employees working in Washington as required in Title 51 RCW; Meets current requirements Per L&I (1)(d)Not be disqualified from bidding on any public works contract under RCW 39.06.010 or 39.12.065(3); No debarments have been issued against this contractor Per L&I. (1)(e) If bidding on a public works project subject to the apprenticeship utilization requirements in RCW 39.04.320, not have been found out of compliance by the Washington state apprenticeship and training council for working apprentices out of ratio, without appropriate supervision, or outside their approved work processes as outlined in their standards of apprenticeship under chapter 49.04 RCW for the one-year period immediately preceding the date of the bid solicitation; No active Washington registered apprentices exist for this business Per L&I. (1)(f) Have received training on the requirements related to public works and prevailing wage under this chapter and chapter 39.12 RCW. The bidder must designate a person or persons to be trained on these requirements. The training must be provided by the department of labor and industries or by a training provider whose curriculum is approved by the department. The department, in consultation with the prevailing wage advisory committee, must determine the length of the training. Bidders that have completed three or more public works projects and have had a valid business license in Washington for three or more years are exempt from this subsection. The department of labor and industries must keep records of entities that have satisfied the training requirement or are exempt and make the records available on its web site. Responsible parties may rely on the records made available by the department regarding satisfaction of the training requirement or exemption; and Exempt from this requirement Per L&I. (1)(g) Within the three-year period immediately preceding the date of the bid solicitation, not have been determined by a final and binding citation and notice of assessment issued by the department of labor and industries or through a civil judgment entered by a court of limited or general jurisdiction to have willfully violated, as defined in RCW 49.48.082, any provision of chapter 49.46, 49.48, or 49.52 RCW. No lawsuits against the bond or savings accounts during the previous 6 year period, per L&I. (2) Before award of a public works contract, a bidder shall submit to the contracting agency a signed statement in accordance with chapter 5.50 RCW verifying under penalty of perjury that the bidder is in compliance with the responsible bidder criteria requirement of subsection (1)(g) of this section. A contracting agency may award a contract in reasonable reliance upon such a sworn statement. form submitted with bid. Signed by George Hochstein. 2.A bidder may be deemed not responsible and the proposal rejected if: Criteria Met (Per Below) 2.a.More than one proposal is submitted for the same project from a bidder under the same or different names;One proposal submitted. 2.b.Evidence of collusion exists with any other bidder or potential bidder. Participants in collusion will be restricted from submitting further bids; No evidence of collusion. 2.c. The bidder, in the opinion of the Contracting Agency, is not qualified for the Work or to the full extent of the bid, or to the extent that the bid exceeds the authorized prequalification amount as may have been determined by a prequalification of the bidder; Bidder considered to be qualified. 2.d. An unsatisfactory performance record exists based on past or current Contracting Agency Work or for Work done for others, as judged from the standpoint of conduct of the Work; workmanship; progress; affirmative action; equal employment opportunity practices; or Disadvantaged Enterprise, Minority Enterprise, or Women’s Business Enterprise utilization; No evidence of unsatisfactory performance. 2.e.There is uncompleted Work (Contracting Agency or otherwise) which might hinder or prevent the prompt completion of the Work bid upon; No evidence of uncompleted work. 2.f.The bidder failed to settle bills for labor or materials on past or current contracts; No evidence of unsettled bills. (1)(a)At the time of bid submittal, have a certificate of registration in compliance with chapter 18.27 RCW; City Special Provisions 1-02.14 Disqualification of Bidder RCW 39.04.350 Bidder Assessment-West Hill BPS Improvements Project Page 2 of 3 AGENDA ITEM #6. i) 2.g.The bidder has failed to complete a written public contract or has been convicted of a crime arising from a previous public contract; No evidence of failure to complete a public contract. 2.h.The bidder is unable, financially or otherwise, to perform the Work; No evidence of inability to perform the Work. 2.i.A bidder is not authorized to do business in the State of Washington (not registered in accordance with RCW 18.27); Meets current requirements Per L&I. 2.j.There are any other reasons deemed proper by the Contracting Agency. No other reasons for rejection. Bidder Assessment-West Hill BPS Improvements Project Page 3 of 3 AGENDA ITEM #6. i) 1 CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON RESOLUTION NO. _______ A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR AND CITY CLERK TO ENTER INTO AN INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT WITH RENTON SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR THE PURPOSE PROVIDING SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICERS FOR 2025 to 2028. WHEREAS, the City and Renton School District No. 403 (“District”) are authorized, pursuant to RCW Chapter 39.34, the Interlocal Cooperation Act, to enter into an interlocal government cooperative agreement; and WHEREAS, the District and the City desire to promote law enforcement and related services to Renton High School, Hazen High School, Lindbergh High School and other District schools within the City; and WHEREAS, a School Resource Officer Program (the “Program”) was established by CAG- 15-114, Interlocal Agreement for School Resource Officers dated May 13, 2015, which expired on June 30, 2017; and WHEREAS, the City and District reestablished the Program by entering into CAG-17-223, which expired on June 30, 2019; and WHEREAS, the City and District reestablished the Program by entering into CAG-19-301, which expired on August 31, 2020; and WHEREAS, the City and District reestablished the Program by entering into CAG-20-445, which expired on August 31, 2022; and WHEREAS, the City and District reestablished the Program by entering into CAG-22-344, which expired on August 31, 2023; and AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) RESOLUTION NO. _______ 2 WHEREAS, the City and District reestablished the Program by entering into CAG-23-346, which expires on August 31, 2024; and WHEREAS, the City and District reestablished the Program by entering into CAG-24-230 , which expires on August 31, 2025; and WHEREAS, the District and the City continue to recognize the potential benefits of the Program to the citizens of the City and to the students and staff of the District high schools within the City; and WHEREAS, through the Program, the District and the Renton Police Department have committed to providing a safe school environment that promotes education and interaction with students in a positive caring manner; and WHEREAS, it is in the best interest of the citizens and residents of the District and the City to reestablish this program by entering into a new interlocal agreement; NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, DO RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS: AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) RESOLUTION NO. _______ 3 SECTION I. The Mayor and City Clerk are hereby authorized to enter into an interlocal agreement with the District regarding School Resource Officers for the 2025-2026, 2026-2027, and 2027-2028 school years, attached hereto as Exhibit “A” and incorporated by this reference. PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL the day of , 2025. Jason A. Seth, City Clerk APPROVED BY THE MAYOR this day of , 2025. Armondo Pavone, Mayor Approved as to form: Shane Moloney, City Attorney RES - PD: 25RES020: 7.22.2025 AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) RESOLUTION NO. _______ 4 EXHIBIT “A” INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT FOR SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER BETWEEN THE CITY OF RENTON AND RENTON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 403 AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT For SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER Between THE CITY OF RENTON and RENTON SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 403 In Accordance with the Interlocal Cooperation Act (RCW 39.34), the City of Renton ("the City"), and Renton School District No. 403 ("the District"), each of which is a Washington Municipal Corporation, hereby enter into the following INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT: RECITALS WHEREAS: The District and the City desire to promote law enforcement and related services to Renton High School, Hazen High School, Lindbergh High School and other Renton District schools as mutually agreed upon within the City; A School Resource Officer (SRO) Program has been proposed for the District high schools within the City as hereinafter described; The District and the City recognize the potential benefits of the School Resource Officer Program to the community members of the City and particularly to the students, parents, legal guardians, and staff of the District high schools within the City; and It is in the best interest of the community members and residents of the District and the City to establish this program. NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual promises and covenants herein contained, the Parties agree as follows: I. TERM OF AGREEMENT AND RENEWAL 1.1 This Agreement shall commence as of September 1, 2025, and shall terminate as of August 31, 2028. 1.2 This Agreement may be renewed by written agreement of both Parties. 1.3 The Agreement may be terminated by either party by ninety (90) days written statement of termination directed to the other party. Should the Agreement be terminated be either party, the District shall pay the City for services provided through the termination date, and the City will reimburse the District on a prorated basis for any payment previously made in advance of services provided by the City. II. SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER PROGRAM 2.1 A School Resource Officer Program has been established between the City of Renton Police Department ("Renton PD") and the District, with services provided to Renton School District high schools within the City of Renton. Said program shall continue for the term of this agreement. 2.2 Through the School Resource Officer Program, the District and the Renton PD have committed to providing a safe school environment that promotes education and SRO interaction with students in a positive, caring manner. This is accomplished with a committed partnership among the school, student, AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) staff, parents, legal guardians, police department, and neighbors to enhance the schools and the community. III. RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF THE RENTON PD 3.1 The Chief of the Renton Police Department ("the Chief'') shall assign three (3) regularly-employed police officers as School Resource Officers ("SRO") to Renton School District with assignment at Renton High School, Hazen High School and Lindbergh High School in the City of Renton and will also provide additional services, as described herein, to other District schools (e.g., middle schools) located within the City of Renton. 3.2 Retain the authority and responsibility for training the School Resource Officer. By signing this agreement, the City confirms any School Resource Officer assigned to the District will, prior to serving in their capacity as a School Resource Officer, have received training sufficient to satisfy the mandate of RCW 28A.320.124(1). School Resource Officers shall complete training on all mandated topics within three (3) months of starting the position. The Chief shall annually provide verification that each assigned School Resource Officer has received the training described in this section. 3.3 The SRO shall be assigned to the District for a minimum of twenty-six (26) hours per week while school is in session. Additional time may be authorized by Renton PD at the request of the District not to exceed a total of forty-two (42) hours per week subject to Renton PD approval and provided the SRO's assistance is not required for other police activities away from the school. Absences from the school by the SRO during the school year for training or other Renton PD activities shall not exceed five (5) school days in duration at any one time. The City may temporarily reassign the SRO during school holidays and vacations, with advance notification to District. 3.4 The SRO shall also act as an instructor for specialized, short-term law enforcement related programs at the high schools or other District schools within Renton when invited to do so by the principal or member of the faculty. 3.5 The SRO shall have the following additional duties and responsibilities: 3.5.1 When requested by the principal, the SRO shall attend parent/faculty meetings to solicit support and understanding of the program. 3.5.2 The SRO shall make him/herself available for conferences with students, parents/guardians, and faculty members in order to assist them with problems of a law enforcement or crime prevention nature. 3.5.3 The SRO shall become familiar with all community agencies which offer assistance to youth and their families such as youth job placement assistance, mental health clinics, drug treatment centers, etc. The SRO shall make referrals to such agencies when necessary, thereby acting as a resource person to the students, faculty, and staff of the school. 3.5.4 The SRO shall assist the principal and the District's Safety and Security Manager in developing plans and strategies to prevent and/or minimize dangerous situations that may result in student unrest. 3.5.5 The SRO shall assist and advise the District's Safety and Security Manager in planning and coordinating the work of the District and School Safety Officer who work under the supervision of the Safety and Security Manager. AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) 3.5.6 The SRO shall comply with District policies and administrative procedures. Should it become necessary to conduct formal police interviews with a student, the SRO shall adhere to the Renton PD policies and legal requirements with regard to such interviews involving youth. 3.5.7 The SRO shall take law enforcement action as required, including but not limited to appropriate law enforcement action against intruders and unwanted guests who may appear at the school and related school activities. As soon as practicable, the SRO shall make the principal of the school aware of any law enforcement action. 3.5.8 The SRO shall give assistance to other police officers in matters regarding his/her school assignment, whenever necessary. 3.5.9 The SRO shall patrol the assigned school and surrounding neighborhoods in order to identify, investigate, and prevent incidents involving weapons, violence, harassment, intimidation, and other law violations. The SRO may also be assigned investigations related to runaways, assaults, thefts, and truancy, provided such investigations relate to the students attending the school to which the SRO is assigned. The SRO may also be assigned or provide traffic enforcement duties at the schools and surrounding neighborhoods. Such duties may include school zone speed enforcement. 3.5.10 The SRO shall maintain detailed and accurate records of the operation of the School Resource Officer Program. 3.5.11 The SRO shall not act as a school disciplinarian, as disciplining students is a school responsibility. However, if the principal believes an incident is a violation of the law, the principal is expected to contact the SRO and the SRO shall then determine whether law enforcement action is appropriate. The SRO must understand when to informally interact with a student and when to enforce the law; the SRO’s focus should be on keeping students out of the criminal justice system, when possible and should not attempt to impose criminal sanctions that are more appropriately handled within the educational system. 3.5.12 The SRO shall not be used for regularly assigned duties such as lunchroom duty. If there is a problem area, the SRO may assist the school until the problem is solved. The SRO serves in a role to teach, informal counselor and law enforcement officer. 3.5.13 The SRO shall have a primary obligation to the City, not the District. This contract and performance thereof by the City or its SRO shall not create any special relationship with any person or duties to protect any specific persons from harm or injury including the party signing this contract. The law enforcement duties to be performed pursuant to the contract are the same in extent and scope as those provided by law enforcement officers to every member of the public. 3.5.14 Any exceptions to the above must be mutually agreed upon by the Chief of Police of the Renton PD, the School District, and the School Principal. 3.5.15 Pursuant to RCW 10.93.160, the SRO duties do not extend to immigration enforcement and the SRO will not inquire into or collect information about an individual’s immigration or citizenship status, or place of birth. Neither will the SRO provide information pursuant to notification requests from federal immigration authorities for the purposes of civil immigration enforcement, except as required by law. AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) IV. RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF THE DISTRICT 4.1 The District shall provide the SRO with the materials and facilities necessary to the performance of the SRO duties at the assigned High School 4.2 The following materials and facilities are deemed necessary to the performance of the SRO's duties: 4.2.1 Access to a properly lighted private office with a telephone and online connection capabilities that may be used for general business purposes. 4.2.2 A location for files and records that can be properly locked and secured. 4.2.3. A desk with drawers, a chair, work table, filing cabinet, and office supplies. 4.2.4. Access to a computer, and/or clerical assistance. V. FINANCING OF THE SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER 5.1 The District will compensate the City for a portion of the salary and benefits incurred for the assigned School Resource Officer on a monthly basis for the duration of the agreement. The District will pay the City each school year, for each SRO assigned, prorated basis for those days the officer is actually at the school or on school business for the period beginning September 1, 2025 and ending the last day of school in June, 2028 and invoiced on a monthly basis. The payment structure will be tiered for the next three school years as follows: 2025-2026 The District will pay the City $90,000 for each SRO assigned. 2026-2027 The District will pay the City $100,000 for each SRO assigned. 2027-2028 The District will pay the City $110,000 for each SRO assigned. 5.2 Any overtime hours requested and authorized by either party to this Agreement shall be paid by the party requesting and authorizing the additional overtime hours. If the District requests and authorizes the overtime hours, the District will be separately invoiced for the direct salary and related benefits for the overtime hours worked by the assigned SRO. VI. EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER 6.1 The SRO shall be employees of the City and shall not be employees of the District. The District and the Chief acknowledge that the SRO shall remain under the direct supervision of the Renton PD. VII. APPOINTMENT OF SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER 7.1 The SRO must be a volunteer for the position with a minimum of three (3) years of law enforcement service or experience, unless the only available volunteers have lesser experience. 7.2 The appointment of the SRO shall be at the discretion of the Chief based upon: AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) 7.2.1 A written application to the Chief that outlines his/her qualifications; and 7.2.2 Input from the Renton School District Superintendent or his/her designee, and the District’s Safety and Security Manager. 7.3 Additional criteria for consideration by the Chief shall include job knowledge, training, education, appearance, attitude, communication skills, and bearing. 7.4 Additional SROs may be assigned to the program by the City during the period of this contract upon mutual written agreement between the RSD Superintendent and the RPD Chief of Police. VIII. DISMISSAL OF SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICER; REPLACEMENT 8.1 In the event the District determines that the SRO is not effectively performing his or her duties and responsibilities, the District shall state the reasons therefore in writing, and shall request a mediation process, as described herein, to resolve the issue(s) identified. If the Chief desires, the Superintendent and Chief, or their designees shall meet with the SRO to mediate or resolve the identified problems. At such meeting, specified school or district staff may be required to be present. If, within a reasonable amount of time after commencement of such mediation the problem cannot be resolved or mediated or in the event mediation is not sought by the chief, then the SRO shall be removed from the program and a replacement shall be obtained. 8.2 The Chief may dismiss or reassign the SRO based upon Renton PD rules, regulation, and/or policy and when it is in the best interest of the Parties, the students and the community members of the City of Renton. 8.3 In the event of the resignation, dismissal, or reassignment of the SRO, or in the case of long-term absences by the SRO, the Chief shall attempt to provide a temporary replacement for the SRO within thirty (30) school days of such absence, dismissal, resignation, or reassignment. As soon as practicable, the chief shall appoint a permanent replacement for the SRO position. IX. LIABILITY 9.1 Each party shall be responsible and liable for the consequences of any act or failure to act on the part of itself, its employees, and its agents. Each party shall be responsible for its own negligence; neither party shall indemnify nor hold the other party harmless. X. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS 10.1 Effective Date. This Agreement shall be effective upon ratification by action of the governing body and execution by the chief Executive Officer of each of the Parties. 10.2 Amendment. This Agreement may be amended only upon consent of all Parties hereto. Any amendment hereto shall be in writing and shall be ratified and executed by the Parties in the same manner in which it was originally adopted. 10.3 Waiver. The waiver by any Party of any breach of any term, covenant, or condition of the Agreement shall not be deemed a waiver of any subsequent breach of the same term, covenant, or condition of this Agreement. 10.4 Severability. If any provision of the Agreement shall be held invalid, the remainder of this AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) Agreement shall not be affected thereby. 10.5 Entire Agreement. This Agreement represents the entire understanding of the Parties and supersedes any oral representations that are inconsistent with or modify its terms and conditions. 10.6 Counterparts. This Agreement shall be effective whether signed by all Parties on the same document or whether signed in counterparts. 10.7 Notices. Except as otherwise provided in the Agreement, any notice required be provided under the terms of this Agreement shall be delivered by certified mail, return receipt requested, or by personal service, to: Dr. Damien Pattenaude, Superintendent Renton School District No. 403 300 SW 7th Street Renton, WA 98057 Jon Schuldt, Chief of Police City of Renton Police Department 1055 South Grady Way Renton, WA 98057 EXECUTED and APPROVED by the Parties in identical counterparts of this Agreement, each of which shall be deemed an original hereof, on the dates set forth below. Dated this ___ day of __________________, 2025. CITY OF RENTON By: ______________________________________ Armondo Pavone, Mayor Attest: _______________________________________ Jason A. Seth, CMC, City Clerk Approved as to Legal Form: _______________________________________ Shane Moloney, City Attorney RENTON SCHOOL DISTRICT By: _______________________________________ Damien Pattenaude, Superintendent, At the direction of the Renton School Board at and open public meeting held on: _____________________________________ AGENDA ITEM # 8. a) 1 CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON RESOLUTION NO. _______ A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, SETTING A PUBLIC HEARING DATE REGARDING DECLARING AN EXISTING SANITARY SEWER EASEMENT SURPLUS TO THE CITY’S NEEDS AND AUTHORIZING RELEASE OF SAID EASEMENT. WHEREAS, on November 30, 2017, Ruth Bill granted the City a sanitary sewer easement contained and described under King County Recording No. 20171208000184 (the “Easement”), located within parcel number 1463400021; and WHEREAS, a petition was filed by the current owner of the property, Connor Homes at Maple Highlands, LLC, with the City Clerk on or about June 9, 2025, pursuant to the requirements of RMC 9-1-1, petitioning for the release of the Easement. The petition was signed by the owners of more than two-thirds (2/3) of the property affected by the Easement; NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF RENTON, WASHINGTON, DO RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS: SECTION I. That the 8th day of September, 2025, at the hour of 7:00 P.M., is hereby fixed as the date and time for a public hearing to consider the above-mentioned petition. SECTION II. The City Clerk is hereby authorized and directed to give notice of the time and date of the public hearing as provided in RCW 35.94.040, including instructions on accessing the hearing via Zoom, if applicable, and/or providing comment, and any and/or all persons interested therein or objecting to release of the Easement may then appear and be heard, or they may file their written objections with the City Clerk at or prior to the time of public hearing. AGENDA ITEM # 8. b) RESOLUTION NO. ________ 2 SECTION III. After the close of the public hearing, the City Council shall determine whether the Easement is surplus to the City’s needs and if it is in the best interest of the public to be released. PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCIL this day of , 2025. ______________________________ Jason A. Seth, City Clerk APPROVED BY THE MAYOR this day of , 2025. ______________________________ Armondo Pavone, Mayor Approved as to form: Shane Moloney, City Attorney 25RES021: CED: 8.4.25 AGENDA ITEM # 8. b)