A jaywalking ticket leads to arrest of man for theft | Kirkland Police Blotter

The blotter feature is both a description of a small selection of police incidents and a statistical round-up of all calls to the Kirkland Police Department that are dispatched to on-duty police officers. The Kirkland Reporter police blotter is not intended to be representative of all police calls originating in Kirkland, which average about 1,000 per week.

The blotter feature is both a description of a small selection of police incidents and a statistical round-up of all calls to the Kirkland Police Department that are dispatched to on-duty police officers. The Kirkland Reporter police blotter is not intended to be representative of all police calls originating in Kirkland, which average about 1,000 per week.

Between April 26 to May 2, the Kirkland Police Department reported 583 traffic violations (five DUIs), 19 school zone traffic violations, 29 alarm calls, 15 noise complaints, 10 calls of disturbance, 11 thefts, eight animal calls, nine car prowls, one car theft, 22 traffic accidents, 10 calls of civil disturbance, two reported burglaries, eight reports of juvenile crime, six domestic violence calls, six calls for harassment, 10 acts of fraud, four malicious mischief reports, one robbery, four suicides, two illegal drug reports and one reported sex offense. At least 36 people were arrested.

May 1

Order violation: 7:09 p.m., 9900 block of N.E. 126th St. A 28-year-old man violated an order of protection by visiting the 30-year-old mother of his baby boy.

April 28

Order violation: 12 p.m., 500 block of 7th Ave. A 33-year-old man was booked into Kirkland jail after violated a no contact order by emailing and texting a 32-year-old woman. The woman felt threatened and harassed by the emails that mentioned details about an upcoming court date for the man’s previous order violation.

Warrant: 11:40 p.m., 12500 block of 116th Ave. N.E. An 18-year-old man was contacted for jaywalking. Although he had no identification on him, he verbally identified himself. After police discovered he had a Bellevue warrant for theft and providing false statements, he was taken into custody.