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Brenda
NICHOLAS
Characteristics:
Robbery - “Mastermind” - Brenda Nicholas has a long criminal
history including 50 counts of first-degree theft
Date of murder:
Date of arrest:
October 30, 2012
Victim profile:
Francis “Patrick” Fleming, 70
Location: Seattle,
King County, Washington, USA
A jury convicted Nicholas in April of Murder
First Degree with a deadly weapon enhancement as charged. The
sentence range was 26 to 34 years in prison. The sentence range
included several unrelated thefts committed by the defendant.
Prosecutors recommended a 34-year sentence.
Co-defendant Charles Jungbluth was sentenced in
May to 21 years in prison for his part in the murder. He pleaded
guilty to Murder First Degree with a deadly weapon enhancement.
A
King County Superior Court judge called Brenda Nicholas a “danger
to society,” sentencing the 42-year-old thief and killer to 34
years in prison for the December 2011 stabbing death of Navy
veteran, Francis “Patrick” Fleming.
By Sara Jean Green - Seattle Times staff reporter
August 9, 2013
Brenda Nicholas was the “mastermind” who plotted to kill a
70-year-old Navy veteran and two-time Purple Heart recipient for
months because she wanted to get her hands on his valuable coin
and uncut bill collection, a crime she and two accomplices carried
out with extreme brutality, King County Senior Deputy Prosecutor
Carla Carlstrom said Friday.
“The motive behind this murder was solely greed,” Carlstrom
told Superior Court Judge Theresa Doyle during Nicholas’
sentencing hearing for the December 2011 stabbing death of Francis
“Patrick” Fleming inside his unit at the Four Freedoms senior
apartments in Seattle’s Bitter Lake neighborhood.
In addition to orchestrating Fleming’s slaying, Nicholas
attempted to kill and rob another elderly man on the same day
Fleming was killed, Carlstrom said. She was also charged with more
than 50 criminal counts for a variety of thefts, with most of the
counts related to bilking a woman in her 80s out of $1 million.
Nicholas also stole from at least three landlords she rented
properties from, said Carlstrom.
Before she stood trial for Fleming’s murder, Nicholas pleaded
guilty to first-degree identity theft and two counts of
first-degree theft in a plea deal to resolve the other criminal
counts against her. In March, a jury convicted her of first-degree
murder. She was sentenced Friday for all of her crimes.
Several of Nicholas’ victims were in court on Friday. Two of
them addressed the judge and spoke of the financial devastation
and psychological havoc that was unleashed in their lives through
their association with Nicholas.
Defense attorney Jonathan Newcomb blamed Nicholas’ Romani
upbringing, saying she was “a product of her environment” who was
“frankly, raised to steal, taught to steal.”
Nicholas, a mother of two teenage sons, can’t read and has been
disowned by her extended family since the jury handed down its
guilty verdict in March, Newcomb said.
He said Nicholas was the victim of domestic violence and had
sent most of the money she stole to family members to pay her
mother-in-law’s medical bills.
During trial, Nicholas tried to pin Fleming’s murder on her
boyfriend, but “now she claims her upbringing, her Romani
background, her hard life” is to blame for her slew of crimes,
Carlstrom said.
Nicholas quietly cried through most of the hearing, and told
the judge: “The boys are waiting for me, your honor” — a reference
to her sons.
“I think Ms. Nicholas is a danger to society,” the judge said,
handing down the stiffest punishment she could — a little over 34
years in prison.
She said “the heartlessness, the coldbloodedness, and the
inhumanity” of Fleming’s murder was both striking and disturbing.
The challenges Nicholas may have faced in her life did nothing
to mitigate her crimes, said Doyle, adding that she “basically
ruined” the life of Sylvia Sutton, the woman Nicholas befriended
and manipulated into draining her life’s savings.
Court documents in the theft and murder cases reveal how easily
Nicholas insinuated herself into her victims’ lives:
Nicholas was working as a psychic at a street fair in Seattle’s
International District in summer 2007 when Sutton came into her
booth to have her palm read. She convinced Sutton she had a “gray
aura” about her and offered to help, but told Sutton it would cost
her.
Over the next several years, Sutton made frequent cash
withdrawals at Nicholas’ request.
Once Sutton became completely dependent on her, Nicholas began
moving her to and from various residences, never allowing her to
stay at any one place for more than a few months at a time. The
Four Freedoms House, where Fleming was killed, was one of the
residences.
Sutton met Fleming after moving into the apartment building in
spring 2011, and introduced Nicholas to him. Fleming, who was
proud of his rare and valuable collection, even showed Nicholas
where he kept the items.
From the moment she met Fleming, Nicholas began plotting to rob
and kill him, Carlstrom and Senior Deputy Prosecutor Page Ulrey
wrote in their sentencing memo.
After an elderly man in Wallingford who had “lent” Nicholas
thousands of dollars became suspicious and contacted police,
Seattle officers questioned Sutton about her relationship with
Nicholas.
Nicholas quickly moved Sutton out of Four Freedoms to distance
herself from Fleming’s apartment building.
To carry out Fleming’s murder, Nicholas enlisted the help of
Gilda Ramirez, a woman she’d met years earlier in New York who
became ostracized from her family after borrowing so much money to
give to Nicholas for her services as a psychic; and Charles
Jungbluth, who was in love with Nicholas, according to the
sentencing memo.
Ramirez and Jungbluth, who both negotiated plea deals for their
involvement in Fleming’s death, testified against Nicholas during
her trial.
Jungbluth pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was
sentenced to 22 years in prison.
After donning disguises purchased by Nicholas, Nicholas and
Jungbluth pushed their way into Fleming’s apartment on Dec. 8,
2011, after he answered their knock; they threw him to the ground
and began stabbing him — and Fleming was alive and screaming
during much of the attack, according to the sentencing memo.
By Levi Pulkkinen - Seattlepi.com
Monday, April 8, 2013
A woman accused of killing an elderly man at a
North Seattle assisted living facility has been convicted of
murder.
Convicted Monday following a jury trial, Brenda
Nicholas was accused of helping to kill Francis P. Fleming at the
Four Freedoms House in Seattle’ Bitter Lake neighborhood.
Nicholas, 46, was convicted of first-degree murder with a deadly
weapon and faces up to 30 years in prison.
Just after 9 p.m. on Dec. 8, 2011, Seattle
police were called to the 700 block of North 135th Street after
Fleming was found dead.
Officers arrived to find Fleming had nearly
been decapitated, then left on the floor of his apartment to die.
Fleming was also stabbed several times in the body “consistent
with (Fleming) having been tortured prior to death,” Detective
Cloyd Steiger told the court.
Speaking with other residents, detectives
learned Fleming was an avid coin collector and had amassed a
collection of valuable gold and silver coins. Much of that
collection was missing, as was Fleming’s briefcase.
Investigators learned a friend of Fleming’s had
recently been scammed by a psychic she’d met at a street fair,
Steiger continued. That woman pointed police to Nicholas.
Kirkland police officers investigating thefts
attributed to the group searched a home where Jungbluth and
Ramirez were living. Doing so, they found a leather briefcase with
papers belonging to Fleming.
Nicholas was accused in the killing alongside
Charles Wayne Jungbluth and Gilda Ivonne Ramirez. Jungbluth
pleaded guilty to the murder, while Ramirez admitted to thefts
surrounding the killing but not the slaying itself.
Writing the court previously, Senior Deputy
Prosecutor Carla Carlstrom claimed the defendants are involved in
a “loosely organized” group of criminals.
“They are known to earn their livelihood by
committing financial crimes, often against vulnerable adults, to
be transitory, and to have multiple identities,” Carlstrom told
the court.
Jungbluth was arrested after being charged in
thefts targeting the elderly. Ramirez was arrested days later.
Confronted with DNA evidence recovered at the
slaying scene, Jungbluth admitted to the murder. Jungbluth said
Nicholas told him of Fleming’s coin collection and suggested he
steal it.
Jungbluth went on to say he, Ramirez and
Nicholas went to Fleming’s apartment armed with large kitchen
knives planning to kill him and take his coins, Steiger continued.
“When Fleming opened the door, they pushed
their way in,” Steiger told the court, recounting Jungbluth’s
statement to police.
“He and (Nicholas) both stuck their knives into
Fleming’s throat, and were cutting him until he stopped moving,”
the detective added.
The robbers loaded Fleming’s coins into two
duffels and fled the apartment.
Ramirez made similar admissions, and said she
was physically ill during the attack. She purportedly said another
man burned their clothing after Fleming was killed.
Ramirez pleaded guilty to first-degree robbery,
first-degree burglary and first-degree trafficking in stolen
property, as well as several theft charges. She faces up to eight
years in prison when sentenced, and remains jailed.
Nicholas and Jungbluth have each been convicted
of first-degree murder. Jungbluth faces up to 28 ½ years in prison
for killing Fleming when he is sentenced later this year. A
sentencing date for Nicholas hasn’t been set.
Kirotv.com
November 8, 2012
Prosecutors said a woman is behind a case that
includes torture, psychic readings, rare coins and ultimately the
slaying of a 70-year-old Seattle man.
Brenda Nicholas has a long criminal history
including 50 counts of first-degree theft. Nicholas is accused of
taking more than $1 million from an 85-year-old woman.
But now she is also charged with first-degree
murder in the slaying of 70-year-old Francis Fleming.
Police said Charles Jungbluth, 51, and Gilda
Ramirez, 49, tortured Fleming in his apartment, stabbed him, slit
his throat and stole his valuable collection of coins. They are
also charged in the case. But prosecutors said Nicholas was the
brains behind the plan that led to the victim’s death.
“She was the mastermind behind murdering
70-year-old Francis Fleming in order to steal from him,” said
Senior Deputy Prosecutor Carla Carlstrom in King County court on
Thursday.
Fleming lived at the Four Freedoms House in
North Seattle when he was killed last December.
Charging documents said Nicholas befriended a
woman who used to live there, and through that woman, met Fleming
and became aware of his rare coin collection. Prosecutors said it
was that coin collection that led to Fleming’s slaying.
Police said Fleming was nearly decapitated and
there were signs he'd been tortured.
After his death on Dec. 8, Fleming's friends
said he loved to show off the coin collection, which was insured
for $60,000.
Prosecutors said Nicholas preyed on senior
citizens, at times claiming to be psychic. She would gain their
trust and then convince them to let her handle their money,
prosecutors said.
Judith Perkins came to court Thursday to see
Nicholas in person. She told KIRO 7 Eyewitness News reporter
Michelle Millman her healthy, 60-year-old brother-in-law rented a
home to Nicholas last year, and within a few weeks he had a stroke
and was dead.
“My brother-in-law trusted her. I don’t know if
she had anything to do with his death but I spent a year looking
into it,” said Perkins.
Nicholas has not been charged in connection
with that death.
She pleaded not guilty to murder Thursday.
If convicted, she could be sentenced to about
40 years in prison.
2nd woman charged in Bitter Lake slaying
By Levi Pulkkinen - Seattlepi.com
Thursday, November 1, 2012
A woman long suspected in a Dec. 8 killing at a
North Seattle assisted living facility has been charged with
murder, the King County Prosecutor’s Office reported Thursday.
Brenda Nicholas was suspected of helping to
kill Francis P. Fleming when two others were charged in the
slaying, which occurred at the Four Freedoms House in Seattle’
Bitter Lake neighborhood. On Tuesday, prosecutors charged
Nicholas, 46, with first-degree murder in Fleming’s stabbing.
Charles Wayne Jungbluth remains implicated in
the slaying, while former-codefendant Gilda Ivonne Ramirez has
since pleaded guilty to reduced charges. Jungbluth and Ramirez
already faced a series of theft charges for a purported scheme in
which Nicholas is also implicated.
Writing the court when charges were initially
filed in August, Senior Deputy Prosecutor Carla Carlstrom claimed
the defendants are involved in a “loosely organized” group of
criminals.
“They are known to earn their livelihood by
committing financial crimes, often against vulnerable adults, to
be transitory, and to have multiple identities,” Carlstrom told
the court.
Just after 9 p.m. the day of the killing,
Seattle police were called to the 700 block of North 135th Street
after Fleming was found dead.
Officers arrived to find Fleming had nearly
been decapitated, then left on the floor of his apartment to die.
Fleming was also stabbed several times in the body “consistent
with (Fleming) having been tortured prior to death,” Detective
Cloyd Steiger told the court.
Speaking with other residents, detectives
learned Fleming was an avid coin collector and had amassed a
collection of valuable gold and silver coins, Steiger told the
court. Much of that collection was missing, as was Fleming’s
briefcase.
Investigators learned a friend of Fleming’s had
recently been scammed by a psychic she’d met at a street fair,
Steiger continued. That woman pointed police to Nicholas.
Kirkland police officers investigating thefts
attributed to the group searched a home where Jungbluth and
Ramirez were living. Doing so, Steiger told the court, they found
a leather briefcase with papers belonging to Fleming.
Jungbluth was arrested June 27 after being
charged in thefts targeting the elderly. Ramirez was arrested days
later.
Confronted with DNA evidence recovered at the
slaying scene, Jungbluth admitted to the murder, Steiger said in
court documents.
According to police, Jungbluth said Nicholas
told him of Fleming’s coin collection and suggested he steal it.
Jungbluth went on to say he, Ramirez and
Nicholas went to Fleming’s apartment armed with large kitchen
knives planning to kill him and take his coins, Steiger continued.
“When Fleming opened the door, they pushed
their way in,” Steiger told the court, recounting Jungbluth’s
statement to police.
“He and (Nicholas) both stuck their knives into
Fleming’s throat, and were cutting him until he stopped moving,”
the detective added.
The robbers loaded Fleming’s coins into two
duffels and fled the apartment, Steiger continued.
Ramirez made similar admissions, according to
charging documents, and said she was physically ill during the
attack. She purportedly said another man burned their clothing
after Fleming was killed.
Nicholas and Jungbluth have each been charged
with first-degree murder. Nicholas is expected to be arraigned on
Nov. 8 and remains jailed on $2 million.
Ramirez pleaded guilty to first-degree robbery,
first-degree burglary and first-degree trafficking in stolen
property, as well as several theft charges. She faces up to eight
years in prison when sentenced, and remains jailed.
Murder charge filed against woman in case of
Navy veteran killed for coin collection
Patrick Fleming was killed at the Four Freedoms
senior apartments on Dec. 8, 2011
David Rose - Coastlinepilot.com
November 1, 2012
UPDATE: A charge of murder has been
filed against Brenda Nicholas in the stabbing death of 70-year-old
Navy veteran Francis Patrick Fleming in a seniors-oriented
apartment building in Seattle's Bitter Lake neighborhood last
year.
The charge was filed Tuesday, but announced
Thursday by the King County Prosecutor's Office.
Nicholas and co-defendants Charles Jungbluth,
51, and Gilda Ramirez, 49, remain in the King County Jail on $2
million bail. Jungbluth was charged with murder in the case Aug.
22 in the Dec. 8, 2011, slaying of Fleming.
Ramirez was originally charged with murder, but
has since pleaded guilty to robbery, burglary and trafficking in
stolen property that could get her 57 to 99 months in prison.
Nicholas previously had been charged with more
than 55 counts of theft and one count of unlawful possesion of a
firearm. Police said Jungbluth and Ramirez both stated that
Nicholas committed the murder with them, and police said the
investigation into Nicholas' involvement is ongoing.
In the charging documents, King County
prosecutors said Jungbluth and Ramirez had no known criminal
history prior to the murder charge, but that Ramirez and Nicholas
"are believed to be part of a loosely organized crime group known
as the Romas ... that are known to earn their livelihood by
committing financial crimes" against vulnerable adults.
Fleming, a war hero, was attacked and killed at
the Four Freedoms senior apartments. After he was found slain in
his apartment, police learned that his extensive, and rare, coin
collection was also missing.
DNA evidence led police to the first suspect,
who was arrested Aug. 16, 2012, by Snohomish County sheriff's
deputies.
ORIGINAL STORY: Seniors who live in this
Seattle apartment are still waiting for news of an arrest after a
highly decorated war hero was murdered here Dec. 8, 2011.
Detectives said retired sailor Patrick Fleming
put up a good fight against his attacker, but unfortunately,
investigators said he took his last breath sometime between 7 and
9pm that evening. He was killed for his valuable coin collection.
Police need the public’s help in finding the
person or persons who murdered Fleming.
"This is our room. Patrick painted it himself,"
Patrick's wife, Melba said. "This is his urn."
Melba met Patrick, a tough-looking Navy veteran
25 years ago. And he was a man who kept his apartment ship-shape.
Patrick was a two-time Purple Heart recipient
and received Gold and Bronze Stars for bravery as a riverboat
gunner after more than 200 combat patrols in the Mekong Delta of
Vietnam.
He survived shrapnel wounds from enemy rocket
fire and is credited with knocking out an entire base with a
50-caliber machine gun. His death at the hands of a common
criminal or criminals is a hard reality for his wife to accept.
"He fought for our country and he just died in
a way that really sad,” she said. “I really miss him."
"He was laying on his bed, watching his TV in
his pajamas when somebody came in and attacked him,” detective
Cloyd Steiger of the Seattle Police Department. “It was obvious it
was a blitz type of attack, a brutal attack and there is some
evidence he was tortured a little bit."
Steiger said neighbors at the Four Freedoms
House are understandably upset.
"That's a big facility with a lot of people in
it and it's shocked it to its core, people are terrified in that
building of this guy being murdered right amongst them," Steiger
said.
Steiger said Patrick was targeted for his vast
collection of mint-proof coin sets, presidential dollars and uncut
sheets of U.S. currency which are worth about $60,0000. His two
Purple Heart medals and Gold and Bronze Stars were also stolen;
Purple Hearts are awarded to service members by the president.
“One of the things we found out is that he
liked to talk to people about his coin collections. Everybody in
the building knew he had them,” Steiger said. "This is his
passion, collecting coins.”
Melba always worried Patrick's hobby might lead
to trouble.
"I told him, ‘Why don't you put those coins in
the safety deposit box at the bank?’ He said, ‘Well, if they come
here, they are my enemies’,” she said.
More than once he told Melba his coins would
only be taken over his dead body. “I will snap, they can kill me
first before they can get my coins," he told her.
He was as good as his word -- crime scene
evidence clearly indicates Patrick put up a fight, but the robber
was armed and Patrick wasn't. Now, police are tracking his stolen
property.
"Somebody may have bought coins or sheets of
U.S. currency and didn't know they were stolen, and either they
belonged to a coin shop or maybe they bought them off Craigslist
or something like that,” Steiger said. “Maybe if they see this, it
will tip their recollection and point us in the right direction."
Melba is still working up to taking Patrick’s
ashes to Arlington National Cemetery to be laid to rest, but she's
having a hard time saying goodbye with his killer still free.
“I hope people who see this video will help us
find the criminals,” she said.
Crime Stoppers of Puget Sound is offering a
cash reward for information that leads to the arrest of Patrick's
killer.
If you trade or sell coins, take a look at our
photo gallery that shows some of the coins and currency that were
stolen from Patrick. Investigators hope somebody at a gold, coin
or pawn shop remembers a seller coming in after December 8 with
the coins and currency, or maybe someone bought them off
Craigslist.
Not guilty pleas in throat-slashing murder
of Navy veteran
KomoNews.com
August 30, 2012
SEATTLE - Two suspects have pleaded not guilty
to the brutal torture killing of a 70-year-old Navy veteran at a
Bitter Lake assisted living facility last year.
Charles Jungbluth and Gilda Ramirez both
entered not guilty pleas Thursday in King County Superior Court to
charges of first-degree murder in furtherance of robbery.
The victim, Francis Patrick Fleming, 70, a
resident of the Four Freedoms House of Seattle, was found dead by
a friend at the facility on Dec. 8, 2011.
The friend called police, who determined that
Fleming had been tortured, his throat cut and his apartment
ransacked. Investigators then found that Fleming's extensive
collection of rare coins was missing, said Seattle police
spokesman Jonah Spangenthal-Lee.
DNA evidence found inside Fleming's
blood-spattered apartment during the initial investigation
eventually led police to Jungbluth, 51. He was arrested by
Snohomish County Sheriff's deputies earlier this month at the
request of Seattle police homicide detectives.
Ramirez was arrested soon afterward.
Rosemary Garnett, a close friend of Fleming's
who found his body and called police, said after Thursday's court
hearing that it was a senseless murder.
She said Fleming, who went by his middle name
of Patrick, was "a very fine person, a hero" who earned a number
of medals for bravery during his military service in Vietnam.
"Patrick was a wonderful, generous man,"
Garnett said. "And he would have given this man money had he known
he wanted it or needed it. He didn't have to kill him for it."
She said she had been visiting Fleming earlier
in the evening, and when she returned to get something she had
left there about two hours later, she found Fleming lying on the
floor, with blood on the floor under him.
"I still have flashbacks to the scene of
finding Patrick's body," she said. "My priest is helping me
tremendously with that in grief therapy, so I will get through
it."
King County prosecutors have filed 54 criminal
charges against Brenda Nicholas, most in connection to her alleged
theft of more than $1 million from an elderly Seattle woman.
Nicholas, 46, and two co-defendants have also been charged for
allegedly duping three Seattle-area landlords, then failing to pay
rent and stealing pricey items from the rental residences.
By Sara Jean Green - Seattle Times staff
reporter
July 3, 2012
Brenda Nicholas, a 46-year-old woman who
prosecutors say is involved in a loosely organized crime group,
was charged Monday in King County Superior Court with more than 50
criminal counts, most connected to her alleged bilking of an
elderly Seattle woman out of $1 million.
Nicholas, who was arrested Monday by U.S.
marshals on a Seattle Police Department warrant, also was charged
along with two co-defendants in an alleged scheme in which she is
accused of failing to pay rent, then stealing pricey items
belonging to three different landlords when she vacated the rental
residences, according to a 26-page charging document outlining
four separate police investigations into her alleged crimes.
Nicholas, who is under community supervision by
the state Department of Corrections for a grand-theft conviction
in California, has been charged with 52 counts of first-degree
theft, one count of second-degree theft and one count of
first-degree unlawful possession of a firearm, according to
charging documents. Also wanted in New York on an outstanding
warrant for second-degree burglary, Nicholas is being held in the
King County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bail.
In addition to the theft charges, King County
prosecutors have filed an "aggravator," accusing Nicholas of
committing theft by deception against a particularly vulnerable
victim. Should she be convicted as charged, Nicholas could face a
standard sentence of 3 ½ to 4 ¾ years in prison.
However, the aggravator gives prosecutors a
basis to seek an exceptional sentence — in this case, up to a
10-year prison sentence, the maximum allowed for a Class B felony
— said Dan Donohoe, spokesman for King County Prosecutor Dan
Satterberg.
Also charged in the case involving the
landlords are Gilda Ramirez, 49, and Charles Jungbluth, 50,
according to charging documents.
Ramirez, who was booked into the King County
Jail on Monday and is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail, has
been charged with first-degree theft and trafficking in stolen
property, according to jail and court records. Court documents
show that Ramirez and Nicholas were living at the same Lynnwood
address at the time of their arrests.
Jungbluth was charged with first-degree theft
and second-degree theft; he was arrested and booked into jail last
week and is being held in lieu of $10,000 bail, the records show.
All three defendants are to be arraigned July
16.
The case involving a now-85-year-old Seattle
woman began in summer 2007, when the woman went to a street fair
and paid Nicholas $30 to read her palm, according to charging
documents. Nicholas told the woman she had a "gray aura" and was
not doing well, then offered to help make the woman feel better,
the papers say.
Over the next three years, the alleged victim,
a widow who was estranged from her children, became isolated,
confused and "completely dependent" on Nicholas, charging papers
say. It is unclear who contacted Seattle police, but a criminal
investigation was launched in late November 2011.
Up until December 2011, Nicholas had the woman
make frequent withdrawals from her bank accounts and turn the cash
over to Nicholas, according to charging documents. Between Sept.
14, 2007, and April 27, 2009, the woman withdrew a total of
$1,088,500, money which she gave to Nicholas, usually in
increments of $1,000 to $9,900, the papers say.
The elderly woman believed that Nicholas was
using the money to take care of her and her affairs, as well as to
pay a man named "Father Thomas," who Nicholas allegedly claimed
was famous for his healing powers.
In the rental cases, Nicholas allegedly rented
a house in March 2011 from a Seattle man who was planning a trip
to France but who died the following month, charging papers say.
The total loss to his estate is an estimated $13,000, a sum that
includes nonpayment of rent, attorney fees to evict Nicholas,
items stolen from the house and damaged property, the papers say.
Then in January 2012, the charging papers say,
two other landlords — one in West Seattle and one in Kirkland —
were also duped by Nicholas, who allegedly claimed she needed a
place in the Seattle area to be close to her cancer-stricken
mother.
The West Seattle landlord suffered a loss of
$2,300, while the Kirkland landlord reported $51,000 worth of
goods — including flat-screen TVs, furniture and art — had been
taken from his rental residence, according to charging papers.
Nicholas' two teenage sons had lived with her in the homes, the
papers say.
Jungbluth was charged in connection with thefts
from the two Seattle landlords, while Ramirez was charged with
involvement in thefts from the landlords in West Seattle and
Kirkland, charging papers say.