The Olympia Washington Kiwanis members and their friends have cost the Washington State taxpayers over $50 million dollars (so far), because of their willful ignorance of long term, merciless and well known, child abuse that occurred at the Olympia Kiwanis Boys Ranch.
October 2006 note: This Olympia Kiwanis stuff is old news. I've left this information on the web, because I like the thought that someone will say to one of these Kiwanis friends or members: "Grandma, (Grandpa), are you still friends with those Olympia Kiwanians?"
Back to the2001 or 1999 or 1997 or 1995 Washington State Employees Salaries List
Back to the beginning OKBR Home Page(http://lbloom.net/indexok.html)
Fischnaller joins prosecutor race
By Brad Shannon The Olympian May 29, 1994
Promising more involvement
with schools and the community on crime issues, Olympia lawyer
Bryan Fischnaller announced he will seek election as Thurston County
prosecutor as a Democrat.
Fischnaller is the third candidate
to announce a bid to replace Prosecutor Pat Sutherland, who plans
to retire after five terms in December. Two current Sutherland
employees, Democrat John Bumford and Republican Bernardean Broadous,
are running.
The Prosecutor's Office has
grown from six to 27 deputies since Sutherland took it over in
1974. The annual department budget is near $2.5 million.
"The top legal position in the county needs to have someone with a broad base of experience and good balanced judgment," Fischnaller, 49 said in his announcement. "I've spent 20 years of my life protecting
people and the environment. I can further that goal (as prosecutor),"
he added in an interview. He said fairness and equality of treatment would be his guides in office.
A native of Omak, Fischnaller
said he worked for the state Attorney General bringing river polluters
to account in the 1970s.
He later worked a year for
the Prosecutor's Office before going into private practice in
l981.
Much of that private work
was defending "the underdog," including women and children
he said were in need of protection against "anger and alcohol."
Calling the current Prosecutor's
office staff fine attorneys, Fischnaller said he would get more
involved in the community, even attending PTA meetings.
He also would expand victim's
assistance and push a three-point plan to improve service
to the public.
Below is an e-mail I received from a former Olympia, Washington resident.
From: ~~~~~~~~@aol.com
From: louis a bloom manaco@whidbey.net
To: Louis Bloom manaco@whidbey.net
Sent: Wednesday, July 28, 1999 11:34 AM
Subject: OKBR
Just came across your pages and felt the urge to respond... In the early
80's (81-83) I was at the OKBR frequently as a young kid walking to/from
school, I became friends with some of the boys. At one point a small boy
confided to
me that he was being raped by another boy in the home. The abusing boy
talked about it openly!
Days later I walked the victim to OPD where we both gave statements. Later that evening I began to receive these incredibly
threatening phone calls from a woman employee of the ranch who's name I
believe was Paulette at my home. She kept calling over and over screaming at
me calling me names. It was horrible. I thought I was helping someone.
Nothing came of it. Then all these years later, it all comes out ... one of
the boys that I had known there left as a young adult and still couldn't get
it together, he eventually killed himself. As an adult now I don't often
think back to those times but it still saddens me. All those boys that
needed a safe nurturing place to be, and how many of them were better off
for having been taken there? It's not about money. It cost these boys their
lives, their souls, their trust. Those people who knew, who didn't care,
they should feel such shame. Just my opinion.
To: ~~~~~~~@aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 28, 1999 7:30 PM
Subject: Re: OKBR
thanks for your e-mail. from what i've read, dshs, the olympia police department, and other "authorities"
didn't consider child on child rape to be against the law. it was considered
"normal experimentation". The "paulette" you mention, may have been
Collette Queener who was an assistant director at the OKBR. Collette, OKBR
Director Tom Van Woerdan, and OKBR counselor Laura Rambo Russell were
ineptly charged by Wa. St. with "criminal mistreatment for failing to stop abuse". The
charges were dismissed by Thurston County Judge Daniel Berschauer on technicalities. The lawyer who
represented Collette Queener said, (Nov. 14, 1996 Olympian), that it was a
"witch hunt", and that " a more innocent person (than Queener) you could not
have for a client. She's an ex-nun ..... I don't see how you could view her
in an evil or negative light."
I congratulate you for doing the right thing, when all those adults looked
the other way. I repeat on most pages that the " OKBR has cost the
Washington State taxpayers over $35 million dollars (so far)", because I
think most people
don't care about the kids involved, but they may care that it has cost them
(taxpayers) money.
louis bloom
There were many obvious and long-term warnings about the 1970-94 child abusing Olympia Kiwanis Boys Ranch.
manaco@whidbey.net