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Officers Upset About Lack of Warning From Department Following Bombing, Threat

Originally posted Saturday

In the moments following the shooting and arrest of a man suspected in the murder of Officer Timothy Brenton, Seattle police officers were ecstatic that the case had seemingly been brought to a close.  One female officer cheered “Wooohooo!” over police radio. Others chimed in, asking about the condition of the suspect—who police have identified as Christopher J. Monfort of Tukwila—clearly relieved that the man who allegedly gunned down a fellow officer in cold blood was off the streets.

But a day after the arrest, there’s already tension amongst the rank-and- file at SPD who have expressed frustration with the department for not sharing enough information about threats made against officers following the bombing of several police vehicles at a city maintenance facility in the International District, which police have since called a “domestic terrorist event.”

According to law enforcement sources, a threatening note left at the site of a bombing at the Charles Street vehicle service center near I-5—which destroyed three police patrol cars and a mobile command unit—on October 22nd said that an officer would be killed. Although the attack was fairly sophisticated—sources say pipe bombs were used to destroy the three vehicles—the threat was not specific to any officer.


One officer says police could have been more aware of their surroundings and handled themselves differently while police investigated the case. “They should have released the information,” one officer says. After receiving any sort of warning of possible danger, the officer says, “You don’t go on routine traffic stops [and] you don’t pull over on the side of the road.”

The Seattle Police Officers Guild was not immediately available for comment on officer complaints.

It appears that last week, department heads received complaints from officers upset about the department’s decision to not release certain details of its investigation into the bombing. However, SPD Director John Hayes says that the department sent information out to officers over email and in daily briefings reinforcing police tactics and observation techniques—including maintaining a 300 foot distance from any potential explosives—and warning officers to not rush in to any situations where they could be endangered. Still, the department did not explicitly warn officers about the note—which police describe as a “general threat”—left at the site of a sophisticated bombing at the city’s Charles Street facility.

When asked whether the department was negligent in not releasing more information to officers following the bombing—which the department has since connected to Officer Brenton’s murder—Chief Pugel dismissed the notion that SPD had any obligation to warn officers of possible danger following a fairly sophisticated attack. “Once we had the homicide of Officer Brenton, we clearly warned officers to pay attention, to be diligent,” he says. Prior to that, Pugel says, “there was nothing that led us to believe, until…the night of Officer Brenton’s homicide, that it could be connected.” Department spokesman Sean Whitcomb also added that having someone break into a secure government facility should have been a “specific enough” incident to put officers on alert.

Ultimately, however, one question remains: was Officer Brenton’s death preventable? “You never know,” one law enforcement source says. “At least he would have had that heightened sense [of danger].”




  • lilyson

    Stressing safety techniques is NOT saying, “Oh, by the way- there’s some crazy guy who’s out to kill officers, so be on guard!” Such directives are nowhere near enough to get officers on guard about their personal safety- I’d guess they’re routinely disregarded as a CYA move. If the note had been released as soon as they obtained it, officers would have adjusted their behavior and Timothy Brenton might be home with his family right now getting ready for another day on the streets.

    Realistically, I know that the SPD officials have their reasons for releasing or not releasing particular pieces of information, and that there is a reason they were chosen for the job they’re doing, but I just don’t understand why they would keep something like this under wraps.

  • Madisonian

    No one likes to be kept out of the loop. It’s just human nature. But when you wear a badge it’s very poor form to publicly call out the command structure. They call them captain and not precinct coworker coordinator for a reason. If officers don’t like it they could always go to work at the food coop and call a vote on taking out the compost.

  • Lee

    Did they keep it under wraps, or just fail to take it seriously? Realistically, threats are very easy to make, and often cause a sense of alarm in the target population that is disproportionate to the actual amount of risk presented. Taking every threat to the police seriously may well entail constant panic among the rank and file, creating a lot of unnecessary stress and ulcers.

    So, I like Whitcomb’s point: the break-in was more notable than the threat. And that information was public.

  • Heath Hunnicutt

    In the days prior to Halloween, I noticed the police Lieutenants were acting really worried about anything that could be an explosive. There was an incident I listened to on Capitol Hill where the officers were in a building and found a barrel marked “Corrosive” and “Explosive.” That was the end of that investigation — building was evacuated and the Lieutenants who were ordering the evacuation were more meticulous than I have ever observed them — they counted all officers to make sure nobody was in the building. Turned out to be a barrel of some chemical, not a bomb.

    So my impression is that they took the Charles St. bombing note very seriously, but thought it indicated there would be further bombings. Compared to the usual profile of an arsonist/bomber, that makes sense — arson/bombing is a removed activity that isn’t certain to cause injuries or deaths; close-quarters rifle attack is a lot different than lighting a fuse and running.

    This Monfort guy was really not what they are used to predicting.

  • lilyson

    Oops, responded to the wrong post. About yours though, I see what you’re saying, but I think that it’s important not to forget that the police department is not the military, meaning that I don’t think officers have the same expectation of blind respect and obedience to their superiors as soldiers might.

  • Michael R Burt

    Very interesting and good comment Heath.

  • Madisonian

    Modern American police forces have both quasi-military and bureaucratic feature. Bureaucracies are notorious for not communicating in an open and free-flowing manner. SPD probably didn’t communicate info about the bombing, or concerns about lone-shooter and unabomber scenarios, because internal communications rarely reach the lowest levels for ANY reason.

    While it’s tragic that Brenton was killed, we can probably also learn from this that the SPD senior leadership haven’t really come to terms with the organizational changes to succeed at community policing. The grumbling probably should stay ‘in-house,’ but has a point.