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Family urges Everett council to review police response after delayed welfare checks in missing-person mental-health case

2607364 · March 13, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Julie Smith, a longtime Everett resident, told the March 12 City Council that delayed and inadequate responses from multiple law-enforcement agencies following a reported mental‑health crisis may have contributed to the death of her fiance and urged the council to address policy and resource gaps.

Julie Smith, a longtime Everett resident and former chair of the Everett Salary Commission, told the City Council on March 12 that failures by multiple law-enforcement agencies and gaps in procedure contributed to a delayed response in a missing-person and active mental-health crisis that ended in her fiance’s death.

Smith said her fiance, named in her remarks as Angela ("Ange") Kaylee Lonnie Silva, left their home March 2 at 4:22 p.m. during an acute mental-health crisis. Smith told the council she called the Everett Police Department and told dispatchers her fiance had expressed intent to kill herself and had access to a firearm. Smith said a rookie officer, Tyson Johnson, called her back but declined to initiate an immediate search and told her searching would not begin for a…

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