Top stories of 2020 | Part 2

At the end of the year, the Journal of the San Juans takes a look at the biggest headlines of the past 12 months. We chose the top stories from our most-read online articles and events we feel impacted our communities. Here is part two.

6. Missing person cases solved with help from SJC

In early December, San Juan County Coroner Randy Gaylord reported that three men discovered along the water over the course of several years in San Juan County have been identified using DNA genetic profiles developed with the assistance of the Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s office.

The success in each case occurred after the DNA of the unidentified person was submitted to a database in Canada and matched against DNA from the relative of a missing person. The identity was then confirmed through circumstances that enhanced each identification.

According to Gaylord, many methods are used to identify human remains including fingerprints, basic characteristics, circumstances, medical devices and dental charting. Dozens of people in local and federal agencies were involved in putting together a profile of information that was shared widely through computer databases.

Gaylord added that every case presents a puzzle to be solved, and the family members are looking for comfort and some answers. For those people who make their way to the County’s shores, they may have traveled a long distance in the water and across international boundaries making the task of coordination even more important.

7. Islanders join BLM movement

In early summer, islanders on Orcas, Lopez and San Juan joined thousands of people in cities across the nation and the world to protest police brutality — specifically against Black people — in the wake of the death of George Floyd, who was 46, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 25.

Floyd, a Black man, died after three police officers held him down as they arrested him for an alleged forgery, one pressing his knee into Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes. Floyd pleaded that he could not breathe for nearly six of those minutes. One officer held back witnesses who filmed the interaction. Floyd fell into unconsciousness at the scene and was pronounced dead at the hospital, according to Minneapolis police. Four officers were fired and ultimately charged as a direct result of Floyd’s death.

The first event held was on Orcas, wherein more than 100 islanders gathered on the Village Green in solidarity with Black Lives Matter marches across the country. On June 1, a cross was erected on the San Juan County Courthouse lawn to honor Floyd and acknowledge the loss of other Black lives to police brutality and racially-motivated violence.

On June 5, a march through Friday Harbor was planned by community members to honor Black lives. The march ended at the San Juan County Courthouse lawn where more crosses with the names of Black people who’ve lost their lives in such a manner were placed. Those crosses remained until July 17, when a ceremony to respectfully remove them was held based on a suggestion by islander William Blackmon, who is Black.

Signs were also raised on Lopez Island, but those particular signs experienced repeated vandalism. In late June, community members painted 28 signs memorializing lives lost to white supremacy in the United States. Shortly after their construction along the side of Fisherman Bay Road, someone pulled all of them out and left them laying on the ground.

The second person to vandalize the signs did so in broad daylight, was filmed and was arrested on assault charges, see the “Lopez man vandalizes BLM signs” section for more information. The following day, the signs were once again vandalized, destroying all but two of the signs.

On Sept. 6, the community gathered to respectfully remove the signs along the road.

8. Lopez man vandalizes BLM signs

A Lopez Island man said he attempted to destroy a Black Lives Matter memorial in retaliation for repeated vandalization done to his Trump 2020 sign.

Deputies asked the San Juan County Superior Court to charge Laverne Dwight Lewis, 78, with two counts of assault in the second degree; two counts of reckless endangerment; one count of malicious mischief in the third degree; and one count of harassment. The matter was later moved to the district court where it will go to trial on Jan. 21 and 22.

On the afternoon of Aug. 12, 2020, deputies responded to a report of malicious mischief in progress in the 1900 block of Fisherman Bay Road on Lopez, where a series of Black Lives Matter memorial signs have been located since June. The memorial was previously vandalized in late June, but no one was charged with a crime.

Witnesses told deputies that Lewis had reportedly used his excavator — which was equipped with a flail mower — to destroy several of the signs. Lewis allegedly used the mower to threaten two witnesses who attempted to stop him.

According to the probable cause statement, Lewis then exited the excavator and yelled at the witness about the “goddamn liberals painting over his Trump sign.”

Lewis reportedly told the deputy that he intended to destroy a Black Lives Matter sign every time his Trump 2020 sign was vandalized. The deputy stated in the probable cause that earlier in the day, he had responded to a report of vandalism at Lewis’ house regarding the Trump sign, which had been painted over.

Lewis was arrested and booked into the San Juan County jail on the day of the alleged incident.

9. New calves born to J Pod

Two calves were born into the J Pod of Southern Resident orcas in 2020.

On Sept. 4, researchers spotted a calf with 10-year-old Tahlequah, J35, the mother orca who, in 2018, carried her dead calf more than 1,000 miles over 17 days on her head throughout the Salish Sea before letting it go. The new calf, J57, has been affectionately named Phoenix.

According to The Whale Museum, “Phoenix’s name represents that which can overcome the odds. … There was concern that J-57 would not survive. In spite of all the odds, he did and has continued to thrive. He joins his brother, Notch (J-47), who is a very attentive big brother.”

Later that month, researchers spotted a new calf — who was ultimately named Crescent, J58 — on Sept. 24 with its mother Eclipse, J41, who is 15 years old and has two offspring – the new calf Crescent and Nova, J51.

Prior to the birth of Phoenix, the last healthy Southern resident orca calf to be born was more than a year prior in May 2019.

10. Flagger-hitter sentenced

Two years after a driver struck a flagger in Friday Harbor, that driver was sentenced to community service for the wreck.

Brooke Elizabeth Radcliffe, 24, of Friday Harbor, was sentenced to 15 days of work crew and 360 hours of community service to be completed within two years. She was charged after reportedly striking a person, a backhoe and two cars with a van in October 2018, and ultimately pleaded guilty to reckless endangerment in San Juan County District Court on Oct. 7 and was sentenced on Oct. 29.

On Oct. 5, 2018, a deputy responded to a report of a hit-and-run involving a road construction flagger at the intersection of Spring Street and Argyle Avenue. Dispatch told the deputy that the woman flagger was struck by a vehicle which then fled the scene and that the driver was detained by several citizens.

The flagger was transported to the hospital for treatment of injuries sustained.

A toxicology report revealed Radcliffe had not consumed any drugs or alcohol prior to the incident. A clinical behavioral health evaluation of Radcliffe concluded that at the time of the wreck, she was experiencing a dissociative fugue, brought about by the emotional distress she was experiencing at the time.

The victim and five of her friends and family spoke in court about the effect the wreck had on her life. Since the wreck, the victim said she’s been unable to return to work and a normal life because of injuries sustained — both physical and mental.

11. Asian giant hornet nest located and eradicated

At the end of 2019, Asian giant hornets were spotted on Vancouver Island in Canada, and later in Washington state — the first being in Blaine. The news spread throughout the country in May, though the first living Asian giant hornet was not captured in the United States until July.

The largest hornet in the world, three to four times larger than a yellowjacket, is native to the temperate and tropical areas of East Asia, South Asia, mainland Southeast Asia and parts of Far East Russia. The hornets grow between 1.5 and 2 inches long and have large, cartoonish sly prominent eyes on their orange-yellow head, according to the Washington State Department of Agriculture. Their abdomen is like that of a yellowjacket — yellow and black striped.

The insect’s habit of decapitating and eating honeybees earned it the nickname “Murder Hornet.” The Asian giant hornet is typically only aggressive toward people if it feels threatened, between 30 and 50 people in Japan die from the hornet’s sting, according to the United States Department of Agriculture — either from receiving a multitude of stings or by having an allergic reaction.

Theories as to how the hornets arrived in the Pacific Northwest include either accidental introduction — either by riding a cargo ship from Asia or in someone’s belongings — or they were brought on purpose. A number of travel magazines and food blogs explain the protein-pact insect is able to be consumed in a variety of ways.

In late October, WDSA entomologists were able to track three hornets back to their nest using radio trackers. The next was located in the cavity of a tree on private property and contained 98 hornets, according to the WSDA.

“The eradication went very smoothly, even though our original plan had to be adapted due to the fact that the nest was in a tree, rather than the ground,” managing entomologist Sven Spichiger said in a press release. “While this is certainly a morale boost, this is only the start of our work to hopefully prevent the Asian giant hornet from gaining a foothold in the Pacific Northwest. We suspect there may be more nests in Whatcom County.”