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Eastern Washington paraeducator jailed, accused of sex crimes against teens

A Riverside Elementary School paraeducator and high school coach admitted to recording himself engaging in sex acts with underage boys and sending the videos to other children, court records say.

The Spokane County Sheriff's Office, with assistance from the FBI, arrested Dallas M. Shuler, 28, on suspicion of sexually exploiting minors and possessing depictions of minors engaged in sexual conduct. He was booked into the Spokane County Jail on Saturday morning after the Spokane County Sheriff's Office arrested him at a residence in Spokane Valley.

He's worked as a paraeducator at Riverside Elementary School in Chattaroy for three years and a coach at Riverside High School for six, said Riverside Superintendent Ken Russell. Shuler graduated from Riverside High.

Shuler told investigators he solicited explicit content from 25 children in the last year because he is "sexually excited by" 11- to 15-year-olds. He has done so for "several years," according to records, and was viewing those videos in the last week.

He allegedly admitted he kept a collection of explicit photos and videos of minors and "traded" them with children for other illicit content.

Shuler also admitted he arranged meetings with 14-year-old boys on two separate occasions last year, according to court documents. He told one teen he was 22 years old and met him in woods near University High School. Shuler recorded the two performing oral sex acts on each other, which he later distributed and exchanged for more sexual videos of minors, court records said.

In his second encounter, he met a juvenile through Snapchat and arranged a meeting at a campground near Newport. In exchange for sex acts, he supplied the teen with vapes, court records said.

Shuler initially denied any sexual activity with minors and "adamantly" denied explicit interactions with local children, according to court records. Shuler has been in "plenty of situations where I could, but I never, never would," he told investigators.

Russell wrote to families in an email that an initial investigation does not indicate any Riverside students were involved in the alleged crimes, though he's not sure what might come out. Shuler told investigators he primarily used Instagram to communicate with kids, and often lied about his age or disguised himself as another juvenile.

The district placed Shuler on administrative leave May 7, immediately after becoming aware of the investigation.

Investigators from the Spokane County Sheriff's Office, with assistance from the FBI, began investigating a sexually explicit video on May 6 of two boys ranging in age from 9 to 11 years old. Shuler was screen-recording the video when he received a call on the app, and investigators were able to obtain an image of his face, court records said, and trace it back to him. He received 14 other explicit videos during that time frame.

Shuler denied being abused as a child, but said he had sexual contact with a neighbor when he was around 4 years old and into his teenage years. He began watching pornography at 12, and "got into things I wish I'd never gotten into," he told investigators, according to court records. When he turned 13, he began watching child sexual abuse content, calling it an "addiction" and "nothing an adult should be into."

He told detectives he knows his attraction is wrong but can't help himself, court records said.

Superior Court Commissioner Eugene Cruz spoke directly to Shuler during his first court appearance Monday. Cruz said even though Shuler doesn't have any criminal history, there are community safety concerns if he was to be released on a lower bond.

"What's more alarming ... is the fact you're employed at Riverside Elementary School," Cruz said. "The young people you're involved with are of the same age group of the minors you were interested in soliciting."

A judge over the weekend set Shuler's bail at $25,000, but Cruz raised bail to $150,000, given the community safety risk. If he posts bail, Shuler is barred from entering any area where children congregate, Cruz said, like playgrounds.

Shuler declined a jailhouse interview Monday. It is unclear if he will face federal charges.

The district hired a substitute to assume Shuler's position as the investigation continues. Russell said he was shocked and devastated when law enforcement told him of the investigation  on May 7.

"As a superintendent, you pray that nothing like this ever happens," Russell said. "And here we are."

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     (c)2024 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.)

     Visit The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.) at www.spokesman.com

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Two of the three candidates for governor named Bob Ferguson drop out of Washington's race

OLYMPIA — Drama that ensued last week when three people named Bob Ferguson all filed to run for Washington's governorship appeared to have  settled down Monday when two of the trio of Bobs dropped out of the race.

On Monday, state Attorney General Bob Ferguson issued a public statement in which he threatened to take legal action if the other two people by the same name did not withdraw their candidacies by the deadline later that day.

"In the final hours of filing week, anti-democracy Republicans orchestrated a cynical, deceptive attack on election integrity," Ferguson said. "To be clear: I do not want these two individuals to be prosecuted so long as they do what is right and withdraw by today's 5 p.m. deadline."

At a campaign event Monday in Seattle, the attorney general  told supporters he had sent cease-and-desist letters to the other Bobs over the weekend.

Later on Monday, the secretary of state's office released a statement confirming two of the three people named Bob Ferguson had formally dropped out of the race.

"Voters deserve good-faith candidates who are running on the strength of their ideas to make Washington a better place to live and work, not people who pay a filing fee just to manipulate elections," Secretary of State Steve Hobbs said. "Washington's long history of free and fair elections must be protected and preserved in every year and campaign cycle."

A state law makes it a felony to declare as a candidate for public office under the same name of a fictitious person, a false name or in using the name of an incumbent or candidate who has already filed "with intent to confuse and mislead" the voting public.

Ferguson formally filed his campaign paperwork to run for governor on May 6. Four days later, with hours to spare before the state's filing deadline, two other men named Bob Ferguson threw their hats into the ring in the governor's race. One of the Bobs who entered the election Friday is a military veteran in Graham, and the other is a retired state employee who lives in Yakima.

All three Bobs filed as Democratic candidates. The cost to file campaign paperwork for governor is almost $2,000.

A statement posted on the website titled Neighbors for Bob Ferguson PAC on Monday announced that the man named Bob Ferguson who is a military veteran from Graham was dropping out of the race.

"I was faced with harassment and legal action if I did not withdraw from the race," reads the statement signed by Robert Ferguson. "I was publicly labeled a 'threat to democracy' by another candidate and his supporters."

It turned out that conservative activist Glen Morgan orchestrated the three-Bob chaos and fronted the $2,000 checks for the two Bobs who filed their campaigns Friday. Morgan was  given the Washington State Republican Party's "volunteer of the year" award in 2023.

In a phone interview, Morgan told the Seattle Times he tried to get as many as a dozen people named Bob Ferguson to file paperwork to get their names onto the primary ballot.

A Spokesman-Review reporter's phone calls to phone numbers listed for the Morgan-backed Bob campaigns were not returned Monday.

Also on Monday, Democratic gubernatorial candidate and state Sen. Mark Mullet issued a statement decrying the Bob drama.

"The two Bobs should withdraw before the 5:00 deadline today," Mullet said.

"We don't need anything to confuse voters on the ballot. This is an illegal sideshow that does nothing to improve our electoral process."

This year marks the first incumbent-free contest for governor since Gov. Jay Inslee was elected in 2012. Inslee announced last year that he would not seek re-election for a fourth term.

Thus far, candidates in the governor's race have spent nearly $7 million on their campaigns.

Washington's primary election is Aug. 6.

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     (c)2024 The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.)

     Visit The Spokesman-Review (Spokane, Wash.) at www.spokesman.com

     Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

71-year-old Yakima man killed after dispute with neighbors, police say

Yakima police are investigating the shooting death of a 71-year-old man during a dispute Saturday afternoon.

The accused shooter, a 27-year-old man, is not in custody, according to a YPD news release after police checked with Yakima County prosecutors.

Police were called to the 1400 block of Cherry Avenue for shots fired around 3:30 p.m. They found the deceased 71-year-old man and the man who had shot him, the release said. The older man had a small-caliber pistol, and witnesses said had had come over to the younger man's property and made threats, the release said.

Police said video recordings corroborated the statements of the witnesses.

Yakima County Coroner Jim Curtice said an autopsy is scheduled for Tuesday. Curtice said he will release the man's name after his family has been notified.

The shooting is the third homicide in the city this year, and the sixth in the county.

Anyone with information on the case is asked to call Yakima police Sgt. Noah Johnson at 509-576-6784.

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     (c)2024 Yakima Herald-Republic (Yakima, Wash.)

     Visit Yakima Herald-Republic (Yakima, Wash.) at www.yakima-herald.com

     Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Washington state road deaths jump 10%, reaching 33-year high

Washington recorded another grim milestone this week, with numbers from the Washington Traffic Safety Commission showing yet another year of increasing fatalities on the state's roads.

Statewide, 810 people were killed in crashes involving a motor vehicle in 2023, a 33-year high. That's up from 743 in 2022, and nearly double from 2014, when 462 people were killed in traffic.

The upward trend bucks national behavior, where traffic deaths have fallen two years in row despite an increase in the number of miles driven. Last year, 40,990 people died on U.S. roads, a 3.6% decrease from 2022, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Washington helps lead the pack in double-digit increases in road fatalities. With its more than 10% increase over the previous year, Washington joins Idaho and Rhode Island as the three top states with the most dangerous roads — and both states had far fewer deaths in raw numbers, about 280 and 70, respectively.

Nearly every other state recorded fewer deaths than the year before. California and Texas remain the states with the largest number of road deaths, with more than 4,000 each.

In Washington, King County recorded the most dead, with 167 people killed in traffic, up from 151 in 2022 and more than double the fatalities in 2014, which had 83. Pierce, Spokane and Snohomish counties rounded out the top of the list.

"Every number represents a life lost. A lost family member. A lost co-worker. A lost friend. The people who mourn have had their lives changed forever," said Shelly Baldwin, director of the Washington Traffic Safety Commission, in a statement. "I hold them in my heart as I ask drivers to take the actions we know save lives. Drive sober. Be patient. Stay focused. Buckle up."

Last year, 400 fatalities involved a drug- or alcohol-impaired driver, 251 involved speeding, 171 involved someone not wearing a seat belt or other restraint, and 35 involved a distracted driver.

Roger Millar, who leads the state transportation department, said the state is investing in safer roads, by installing cameras that catch speeders and incorporating Complete Streets policies into its capital programs that create more space and separation for people on bikes and pedestrians. But he called on people to end "erratic driver behavior," which he said "would make a difference immediately."

Kirk Hovenkotter, executive director of the statewide Transportation Choices Coalition, said a solution has less to do with motorist behavior than street design.

"We know what works. It's designing roadways to slow down speeds and promote people walking and riding bikes, and promote transit," he said. "That works, it just takes political will and investment."

Hovenkotter pointed to a 2022 WSDOT report that showed 65% of serious or fatal crashes between drivers and people on bikes or pedestrians were on state highways within cities.

He called on policymakers to treat these dangerous state roads as a "megaproject" in need of an immediate fix. And he applauded the proposed $1.45 billion Seattle transportation levy for focusing on roads like these, notably Aurora Avenue North.

"Make it easier to walk, ride a bike or take transit. We need better sidewalks, better transit stops, and signals. Make it easier for the 25% of Washingtonians who don't drive," Hovenkotter said.

The highest recorded year of traffic fatalities remains 1979, which saw 1,015 deaths. Beginning in the 1980s, American policies on road safety, speeding and drunken driving began to drive down traffic deaths until 2009. That year, fatalities began their rise to today, fueled in part by much larger vehicles and smartphones distracting drivers. The pandemic supercharged this trend.

Despite Seattle's efforts to reverse the increase in road deaths, last year also had the dubious distinction of having the most pedestrians killed than any other year on record, with 157 dead, many in the Seattle area.

In 2015, the city of Seattle adopted its Vision Zero plan to end traffic deaths and serious injuries on city streets by 2030. In the years since, deaths and injuries have only risen, leading Seattle Department of Transportation Director Greg Spotts to call for a review of the program soon after being sworn-in in September 2022.

The review concluded in February 2023, and said the city must lower speed limits, build safety into its capital projects, and fully fund safety projects if it was serious about ending deaths.

The city's proposed $1.45 billion transportation levy, which will be on the November ballot after the City Council reviews and amends it, has $162 million earmarked for Vision Zero safety projects.

With 53 pedestrians killed, King County accounted for more than a third of the state's pedestrian deaths.

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     (c)2024 The Seattle Times

     Visit The Seattle Times at www.seattletimes.com

     Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Five years after fatal encounter, jury to hear murder case against Washington cop

SEATTLE — The evening of May 31, 2019, a troubled 26-year-old man and an Auburn police officer with a violent history came together in a fateful, fatal 67-second encounter outside a neighborhood market.

Now, five years later, a King County jury this week will begin hearing testimony — expected to last at least a month — to decide whether the shooting death of Jesse Sarey by Officer Jeff Nelson was murder or self-defense.

Nelson shot Sarey during a scuffle — the third time Nelson had shot and killed someone during his 12 years as a cop. He is charged with murder and assault, the first King County police officer in nearly half a century to face criminal charges for an on-duty killing.

The case marks the second time this year that police in Washington have gone on trial for murder, once a virtual impossibility under a previous statute. However, passage of Initiative 940 in 2018 removed those legal barriers as well as required police to emphasize de-escalation and accountability.

The first test of the law — the prosecution this past spring of three Tacoma officers for the suffocation death of Manuel "Manny" Ellis — ended in acquittals and left police reformers stunned and disappointed. They are hoping for a different outcome in the Nelson case — a verdict that shows police can be held accountable when they kill unnecessarily.

Delays in the Nelson case have prompted anger and years of anguish among Sarey's friends and family while Nelson has been on house arrest, on leave and subject to an ankle monitor, continuing to collect his salary of more than $100,000 a year since the charges were filed in 2020.

"This family and this community have waited and waited," said Elaine Simons, foster mother to Sarey and his younger brother, who spent months pressing for criminal charges, and attended every hearing on her way to becoming a strong voice in police accountability circles.

Prosecutors say Nelson confronted Sarey, who was in crisis, outside an Auburn market and unnecessarily escalated a routine misdemeanor arrest.

Nelson says Sarey grabbed at his gun and tried to get at a knife he carried on his protective vest, and that he shot Sarey in self-defense.

In court filings, prosecutors have said they intend to call as many as 56 witnesses, including 11 experts to testify about police practices and the analysis of audio and video from Nelson's dash camera and nearby businesses. Nelson's defense has listed 29 witnesses, including 13 experts.

Discovery has exceeded 30,000 pages of documents and 14 gigabytes of data, according to the pleadings.

All of this — along with more than a dozen court hearings — is focused on a confrontation between Nelson and Sarey that lasted, from started to finish, just 1 minute and 7 seconds.

 

"Escalating interactions"

Nelson had responded to a 911 call from businesses in the area of 15th Street Northeast and Auburn Way North of a man pounding on windows, throwing items at cars and kicking buildings.

Nelson, 44, a K-9 officer who joined the Auburn department in 2008, responded and located Sarey, whom he warned to stop bothering people or he'd be arrested. Nelson left, and Sarey jaywalked through traffic to the Sunshine Grocery, according to the criminal charges.

Nelson circled around and parked, deciding to arrest Sarey for misdemeanor misconduct. He approached Sarey in front of the store, near an ice machine. The complaint notes that Nelson was 6-foot and 223 pounds. Sarey was 5-foot-5 and 146 pounds.

According to the charges — based on dash-camera video, witness statements and surveillance video from nearby businesses — Nelson went hands-on with Sarey "in a series of quick, escalating interactions" that ended when Nelson drew his handgun and shot Sarey twice.

The first round struck him in the abdomen and Sarey slumped against the ice machine — which still bears a dent from the round after it passed through Sarey's torso.

According to witnesses and the charges, Sarey slid down the side of the ice machine into a sitting position as Nelson clear a jammed casing from his .45-caliber handgun and shot Sarey a second time, in the head, from several feet away, about three seconds after the first shot.

The pleadings have identified two eyewitnesses, and both have questioned the need for the shooting. One told investigators, "After the first shot, [Sarey] was done."

The Medical Examiner's Office concluded the first shot would not have been immediately fatal, which is why Nelson is also charged with assault.

"I understand being an officer, you just shot somebody and your adrenaline is going and maybe you're scared or something and you don't know what's going to happen so you shoot him. But I don't know, man, I just don't know about that one," the witness said in a recorded interview.

A month after the shooting, long before Nelson was arrested, he sat down with investigators and his attorney and provided a written statement.

"The subject then changed hands and secured my jumpsuit with his left hand and removed my utility knife with his right hand," said Nelson's statement. "I observed the silver blade become visible and it occurred to me in that instant the subject had not only removed my knife but had apparently chosen to open it."

Nelson said he expected Sarey to stab him so he drew his sidearm and shot him.

"At the moment I fired I believed that at this point in the struggle I had no other reasonable alternative regarding the use of force, and that the use of deadly force was appropriate to avoid being killed or seriously injured," Nelson said.

According to the charges, one of the witnesses picked up the folding knife before the shots were fired, and it was closed.

Fourteen months after the shooting then-King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg charged Nelson with second-degree murder and assault.

It was the first time a police officer in King County had been prosecuted for an on-duty killing since 1971, when a Seattle officer was charged — and later acquitted — of manslaughter.

In the Sarey shooting, experts hired by King County concluded Nelson's written statement of events was inconsistent with video surveillance footage from the scene.

Additionally, police use-of-force experts consulted by prosecutors concluded Nelson violated his training by not waiting for backup — another officer was on his way, according to court pleadings. They said Nelson had no reason to believe Sarey posed a threat because he was not armed and he was clearly in crisis.

The laws enacted as a result of I-940 require police to emphasize de-escalation and crisis intervention to prevent unnecessary use of force.

"By failing to employ reasonable, proper tactics and de-escalation techniques common to modern policing and part of the Auburn Police Department's policy and training, Officer Nelson created the very situation that brought about his use of force," according to the criminal charges.

Prosecutors question the need for the fatal second shot to the head, which occurred 3.4 seconds after the first shot, and was fired after Sarey had collapsed, according to pleadings.

 

Accountability initiative

"There were lots of rumblings after the [Tacoma] officers were acquitted, that 940 was a failure," said Leslie Cushman, the Olympia attorney who authored the initiative and who remains at the forefront of the police accountability movement in Washington.

The initiative focused on improved training, de-escalation and removed language that acted as a barrier for charging police officers in cases whether they used questionable deadly force.

The old law required a finding of "malice" when an officer killed someone — a level of proof prosecutors have said was impossible to meet. Data compiled by The Seattle Times in 2015 showed that of 213 people killed by police between 2005 and 2014, only a single Washington police officer had been charged for killing someone.

"Getting rid of the 'malice and good faith' clause from the prior law did not guarantee anything beyond making criminal prosecutions possible," Cushman said. "Judges and juries have big roles, and rules of evidence can produce results that seem absurd."

In Tacoma, the judge's rulings limited evidence of the officers' pasts and allowed the defense to explore Ellis' drug use and troubled history, according to news accounts. This led to sharp exchanges between the judge and Patty Eakes — a seasoned former prosecutor who was hired by the state attorney general to oversee the Tacoma trial and who is also on contract with King County to prosecute Nelson.

Ellis' family complained that the judge's rulings put him on trial, not the officers.

Sarey's family has expressed similar concerns. Simons, his foster mother, says early rulings in Nelson's case favor the defense.

"I still don't know how Jesse is going to be portrayed," she said.

"I saw what happened in Tacoma with Manny Ellis's family, so I know this is going to bring up a lot of emotions," said Simons, who also was a foster parent to Sarey's brother, Torell, who was killed in a shooting in 2022.

Nelson's attorneys, in motions filed last week, asked the trial judge, King County Superior Court Judge Nicole Gaines Phelps, to keep a tight rein on Eakes and her partner, former federal prosecutor Angelo Calfo, suggesting they may try to sabotage the trial if only to make more money.

Records obtained by The Seattle Times show the county has issued contracts totaling $2 million to finance the outside prosecutors.

Satterberg hired the private attorneys after the retirement of a senior deputy prosecutor who initially oversaw the investigation and charges. At the time, Satterberg said his office was overwhelmed with cases and wasn't in a position to take on a prosecution of this magnitude.

Eakes is an experienced former King County prosecutor and trial lawyer who was co-counsel on the prosecution of Green River serial killer Gary L. Ridgway. Calfo served as a white-collar criminal prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney's Office before entering private practice.

Nelson's lead attorney is Emma Scanlan, who worked closely on the defense of Colton Harris Moore, the fabled teen "Barefoot Bandit" who eluded police for two years during an audacious crime spree that involved the theft of planes, boats and vehicles. Scanlan also defended former Army Ranger Sgt. Robert Bales, a soldier from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, who pleaded guilty and was spared the death penalty for a 2012 rampage through a Kandahar province village in Afghanistan, killing 16 unarmed civilians.

Like the judge in the Ellis case, Phelps has similarly limited testimony about Nelson's disturbing history of using force, including his two other fatal shootings and incidents that involved discipline.  Phelps is a former King County prosecutor who won the seat by election in 2017.

At this point, Jurors will not be shown photos of extensive tattooing that prosecutors alleged underscored Nelson's "aggressive, shoot-first posture toward policing" nor will they hear details of statements Nelson, an Army combat veteran, reportedly made at the academy, where  he purportedly told his fellow cadets that "you're not an American unless you've killed for this country."

Nor will jurors be told that the city of Auburn has paid $5.7 million to settle civil lawsuits resulting from Nelson's actions in three cases, including a $4 million payout to Sarey's family.

Phelps also ruled that the defense will not be able to introduce evidence that Sarey was under the influence of methamphetamine when he was killed, stating that Nelson could not have known that when he approached him.

Nelson is not listed as a witness, although that does not mean he won't take the stand. According to court pleadings, he declined to be interviewed by independent investigators and has provided only a written statement prepared with the help of a lawyer.

The admissibility of that statement remains hotly contested.

Prosecutors have objected, saying it is hearsay and that, if Nelson's lawyers seek to introduce it, he should have to answer questions about it, which could open another avenue for evidence the judge has previously disallowed to make its way to the jury, including Nelson's history of using force.

Cushman has been more impressed by the Nelson prosecution in King County than she was with the investigation into and the prosecution of the Tacoma officers. Charges there were brought by the Attorney General's Office after local prosecutors passed.

"I have been watching how local prosecutors have been evaluating cases since I-940 was enacted," she said. "In my opinion, the legal analysis by the King County prosecutor puts the right emphasis on what we consider the linchpin in 940 —  was the use of deadly force necessary."

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©2024 The Seattle Times. Visit seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Missed the aurora borealis? Watch for these upcoming celestial sights

Like a thief in the night, the aurora borealis arrived suddenly — and seemingly unannounced, if you weren't paying close attention — across the upper half of the globe this past weekend.

The strongest geomagnetic storm since 2003 pulled the dancing hues of pink, green and purple nearly halfway to the equator, allowing those in latitudes as low as Mexico, Chile and even Australia to look up in awe.

The dance waned through the weekend, so if you didn't catch the northern lights this time, you might be stuck with a feeling similar to the regret of not traveling for last month's total solar eclipse or the despair of just missing the sight of a shooting star.

But don't fret! Earth's phenomena are plentiful. Here are five upcoming celestial treats to train your eyes to the sky for this summer.

 

July 7: The crescent moon makes a friend

When to look: 40 minutes after sunset

Where to look: West

Mercury is the closest planet to the sun, and "consequently, it never appears far above either the morning or evening twilight," according to EarthSky writer John Jardine Goss.

But a whisker-thin crescent moon will be lying low in the twilight sky in early July, acting as a guide for finding little Mercury.

"Most people have never seen the planet Mercury, because it's kind of hard to find," Goss said. "In fact, most astronomers — I'll probably get yelled at if I say this — have never seen Mercury because you have to be in the right spot at the right time."

The elusive planet will appear between the moon and the horizon.

 

July 30 and 31: An astronomical breakfast buffet

When to look: 4-4:30 a.m.

Where to look: East

On the last two mornings of July, enjoy a smattering of planets, stars and the moon.

On July 30, the crescent moon will float among shining Jupiter, red Mars, the bright star Aldebaran and the pretty Pleiades star cluster (also known as the Seven Sisters) before sunrise.

 

Aug. 12-13: Prime time for the Perseids

When to look: 11 p.m. onward

Where to look: Northeast

The Perseid meteor shower in August might just be the most famous of shooting star shows, as summer weather conditions are typically ideal for viewing.

Every year in mid-August, the shower peaks, producing up to 100 meteors an hour, according to NASA. The moon will set near midnight, allowing even the dimmest of shooting stars to shine in 2024.

On Aug. 12 and 13, the shower is expected to be best viewed starting around midnight until dawn in Seattle, according to EarthSky.

 

Aug. 14: The god of war narrowly misses the king of planets

When to look: 2-5 a.m.

Where to look: East

After inching closer to each other in the eastern sky each evening from mid-July to mid-August, Mars will brush past Jupiter by less than the width of a full moon.

The brightness of both planets, the distance between them and their visibility to the unaided eye will make this the best planetary conjunction of the year.

 

Sept. 17: Darkness descends on the moon

When to look: 7:13-8:16 p.m.

Where to look: The moon

The Earth's shadow will take a nibble out of the moon at sunset, treating Seattle-area viewers to a very partial lunar eclipse, if the sky is clear.

The moon will be only about 9% covered by Earth's shadow, according to Goss.

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     (c)2024 The Seattle Times

     Visit The Seattle Times at www.seattletimes.com

     Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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