Jeff Watson was/is an Olympia Kiwanis member and a Thurston County Deputy Prosecutor.
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 the 2011 or 2009 or 2007 or 2005 or 2003 or 2001 or 1999 or 1997 or 1995 or lbloom.net State of Washington Employees Salaries List
1994 Olympia Kiwanis Members List
2007 Thurston County employees list (pop 207,355)(1,332 employees)(includes gross & overtime wages, hire date)
2005 Thurston County employees list (pop 207,355)(1,257 employees)(includes hire date)
2002 Thurston County employees list (pop 207,355)(1,569 employees)
2002 Port Of Olympia employees list (pop 42,514)(40 employees)
2009 Oly Evergreen St Col employees list (938 employees)
Olympian Newspaper 2010 Thurston employees list
2006 Olympia School District employees list (Includes Benefits)
2002 City of Olympia employees list (pop 42,514)(685 employees)
Olympian Newspaper 2010 city of Lacy employees list
2002 City of Lacey employees list (pop 31,226)(226 employees)
2009 South Puget Sound Com Col employees list (1,001 employees)
Name search of Wash. State voters includes our addresses (and birthdays)
Name search of Wash State Court filings Traffic, Criminal, Civil, Domestic, Juvenile Offender, and Probate/Guardianship
Back to the beginning OKBR Home Page(http://lbloom.net/indexok.html)
Longtime prosecutor leaving job
By Brad Shannon
The Olympian
Jan 21, 1996
Saying he's got a job offer
from an old friend that's too good to pass up, Thurston County's
chief deputy prosecutor is quitting to work for a real estate
venture in Arizona.
Jeff Watson, 48, said he will leave
at the end of January to take the job. He spent a total of 17
years in the county Prosecutor's Office. That work was broken
up by three years during the 1980s when
he went to work in Arizona.
"I wasn't looking (for a job)
and got back from vacation. (My friend) made me this offer,"
Watson said. "It's easy to see the grass is greener over
there."
Watson's resignation signals
the latest in a series
of departures by staffers hired by Prosecutor Bernardean Broadous'
predecessor, the late Patrick Sutherland. But both Watson and
Broadous say this departure is on friendly terms.
The son of a former Olympia
mayor, Watson said he will miss Olympia, where he still has family
and where he feels a part
of the Prosecutor's Office. "I've been here long enough
it's my community", he said.
In 1995 when
Broadous became, the first new prosecutor in 20 years, Watson
was involved in most aspects
of the transition, including revamping a juvenile division system
that was considered in shambles.