Head and his face had been severely beaten by a ham Cheap Womens Nike Free TR
.er, which was found nearby in a hedge close to a bank, its claw covered with blood.
But his shoes were recognized by other transients and offered policemen the name of a 52-year-old guy. As of Tuesday morning, the King County Medical Examiner's Office had to release the victim's name.
The man's body was found by a walker at about 8 a.m. in an alcove behind a shop in the Greater Hi-Lands Shopping Center on Sunset Boulevard Northeast.
Policemen afterwards discovered that that same alcove had been additionally used by the suspect in the slaying as a spot to sleep.
Another transient offered a lead to officers, telling them that a transient who had threatened other displaced guys in the Highlands was in a convenience store that was nearby. Officers discovered him sitting before the shop with a beer.
The 48-year old Renton man had blood on his shoes, slacks, coat, nose and chin, based on the certification of probable cause filed after his ar http://www.blazerselling.com/best-price-for-mens-nike-air-presto-antiflannel-black-royalblue-green-shoes.html
.est with the King County Prosecutor's Office.
The Renton guy hadn't been charged as of Tuesday morning; he is being held in the King County Jail in downtown Seattle on $1 million bond. His next court appearance is Wednesday day in Seattle.
The area where the 52-year-old man was killed is known to Renton police officers as a place where transients gather and drink beer.
According to the court records, a transient well-known to police revealed an officer a hedge alongside a bank drive-through where the BLAZERSELLING
.defendant stayed. An opening in the thick hedge was big enough to allow someone to crawl in.
In the opening to the hedge was.
A transient told officers the victim and the defendant didn't enjoy each other and described the suspect as "mean." He related how a day before he and the defendant were at a bus stop when the defendant pulled the hammer from his trousers and said in any angry tone, "I 'll kill somebody," according to court records.