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Snohomish County sheriff who blasted stay-at-home order faces recall fight

May 4, 2020, 5:26 AM

Snohomish County Sheriff Fortney...

Sheriff Fortney (成人X站 Radio, Hanna Scott)

(成人X站 Radio, Hanna Scott)

Put simply, 鈥測our words were akin to yelling ‘Fire’ in a crowded theatre.鈥 That鈥檚 how Snohomish County Prosecutor Adam Cornell closed out a letter to Sheriff Adam Fortney, refusing to defend him against a recall effort over his public criticism and refusal to enforce the Gov. Inslee’s stay-at-home order.

Gov. Inslee extends stay-at-home order through May 31

Fortney made the comments in an April 21 following a from Inslee outlining a path forward to reopening the economy, that critics complained lacked specific details on benchmarks.

Among other things, Fortney repeatedly questioned the constitutionality of the governor鈥檚 order, and reiterated his position that he would not enforce it.

The comments drew criticism from several public officials, including some county officials, State Attorney General Bob Ferguson, and the governor himself.

It also prompted the filing of a by Snohomish County resident Lori Shavlick, accusing him of malfeasance, and a violation of his oath of office for refusing to enforce the emergency order, encouraging violations, and unilaterally declaring it unconstitutional.

Last week, as first reported , Fortney requested the county defend him against the recall effort, should it move forward, at the taxpayer鈥檚 expense.

One day after that request, Snohomish County Prosecutor Adam Cornell responded in a saying that after 鈥渃onsiderable thought,鈥 he had determined Fortney鈥檚 comments on a public Facebook page did not warrant a taxpayer funded defense.

Cornell said he believed Fortney鈥檚 statements could reasonably be read as a call to defy public health officials, and a declaration that the stay home order was unconstitutional. Cornell added that he felt Fortney鈥檚 comments put the public at risk.

鈥淏y directly or indirectly encouraging people to disobey data-driven, science-based lawful orders handed down expressly to limit the spread of COVID-19 and to protect our health and well-being during this pandemic emergency, your statement is fairly construed to support behavior that puts all citizens at greater risk of harm and death,鈥 Cornell wrote. 鈥淧ut simply, your words were akin to yelling 鈥榝ire鈥 in a crowded theater.”

Fortney did not respond to a request for comment. However, in a press conference following a public lashing by the governor, Fortney explained he had hoped to open a dialogue with Inslee about concerns regarding the order and its impact on businesses, residents and the overall economy 鈥 though admitting he had not first tried to reach out to Inslee directly before going public with his critique.

Fortney has also stated if elected sheriffs believe something is pushing constitutional boundaries, not only should they speak up, but they are obligated to.

How early COVID-19 detection sounded 鈥榯ornado siren鈥 for WA response

Shavlick, who filed the recall petition, doesn鈥檛 see it that way. She was angry when she saw the Facebook post.

鈥淚 was angry about this person who stood up. He was the person and raised his hand and said ‘I will uphold the laws of our community and protect our citizens.’ And then he turns around, gets into office and says, ‘I don’t like this law, I’m not going to choose to follow this.’ And we depend on him for our safety,鈥 Shavlick said in an interview with 成人X站 Radio.

鈥淲hen people are given the message that you don’t have to follow the laws you don’t like, that creates a big fear among people that feel that they’ve been betrayed. What’s going to happen if somebody decides to not follow the law and harms other people?鈥 she added.

Others agree in a calling for Sheriff Fortney to be recalled, saying his job is to enforce the law, not decide what it is, and accusing him of going 鈥渞ogue.鈥

But, Fortney also has supporters who, after hearing the county won鈥檛 cover the recall defense, started a effort to raise money for his defense, praising Fortney for 鈥渞ightly questioned the logic and legality of many aspects of Washington Governor Jay Inslee鈥檚 stay-at-home order, and he refused to go after his own citizens by enforcing [it].”

Shavlick believes she has the signatures for the recall but because of the pandemic gathering them the traditional way is a challenge, so she鈥檚 waiting to hear if the courts will allow a special online signature gathering. She is keeping supporters .

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Snohomish County sheriff who blasted stay-at-home order faces recall fight