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The Prosecuting Attorney's Office is located in the King County Courthouse (in downtown Seattle, Washington) and consists of 210 deputy prosecuting attorneys and 190 administrative staff members. [2] The Office prosecuted 6,135 felonies in 2012, about 40% of which were violent crimes. [3] Employees are spread across three divisions:
Leah Taguba: [63] First Filipino American female to serve as a Judge of the King County District Court (2021) Leesa Manion: [64] First (Asian American) female elected to serve as King County Prosecuting Attorney (2022) Leila Robinson Sawtelle (1882): [65] First female lawyer in Seattle, Washington (King County, Washington, 1884)
(The Center Square) – The King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office has filed 34 felony criminal cases against 17 defendants for a combined $100,000 in damages stemming from vandalism. The ...
Mary Isabel Yu [1] (born 1957) is an American lawyer who has served as an associate justice of the Washington Supreme Court since 2014. She served as a judge of the King County Superior Court from 2000 to 2014. She is the state's first openly gay, Asian American, and Latina justice. [2]
She is well-known for prosecuting the Green River Killer, Gary Ridgway, as a deputy prosecuting attorney for King County in the early 2000s. Ridgway terrorized the Northwest in the 1980s and 1990s ...
She is also a former Senior Deputy Prosecuting Attorney with King County, she assisted in the creation of 40-hour crisis intervention training, and served on the Shoreline Police Department’s ...
Norman "Kim" Maleng (September 17, 1938 – May 24, 2007) was an American attorney and politician who served as the King County Prosecuting Attorney for 28 years. [1] He was also an architect of Washington's Sentencing Reform Act.
He then served as a Deputy Attorney General and Chief of the Consumer Protection and Antitrust Division under Washington State Attorney General Slade Gorton. In 1971, he was elected as the King County Prosecuting Attorney. In 1971, he led a grand jury investigation with Judge Stanley C. Soderland and attorney Evan Schwab into police payoffs.