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Amy Radil

Reporter

About

Amy Radil is a reporter at KUOW covering politics, government, and law enforcement, along with the occasional arts story. She got her start at Minnesota Public Radio in Duluth, and freelanced for Marketplace and other programs from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Amy grew up in Omaha, Nebraska. She graduated from Williams College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

Location: Seattle

Languages Spoken: English

Pronouns: she/her

Stories

  • caption: In this Feb. 18, 2020, file photo, then-Pierce County Sheriff's Dept. spokesman Det. Ed Troyer answers questions during a news conference in Tacoma, Wash. The Washington state attorney general on Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021, filed two misdemeanor criminal charges against Troyer, now the Pierce County sheriff, stemming from his confrontation with a Black newspaper carrier in January. Troyer has denied wrongdoing. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

    Jury finds Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer not guilty

    The state attorney general's office had charged Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer with false reporting and making a false or misleading statement to a public servant. On Wednesday, a jury acquitted him on both counts.

  • caption: Defense attorney Anne Bremner delivers closing arguments to jurors, who are to the left of the camera, in the trial of Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer.

    Case against Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer goes to jury

    Jurors are poised to deliberate in the trial of Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer, after hearing closing arguments from attorneys on Wednesday. The prosecutor maintained that Troyer lied to a 911 dispatcher, well knowing the type of response his claim of being threatened would initiate. His defense lawyer Anne Bremner called the case a wrongful prosecution that was politically motivated by racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.

  • caption: Bellevue police arrested an 18-year old Seattle student Friday who is charged with felony harassment for threatening to conduct a shooting at Bellevue's Sammamish High School.

    Seattle teen faces felony charges for threat of mass school shooting

    An 18-year old Seattle student has been arrested and charged with two counts of felony harassment for threatening to shoot students at Sammamish High School in Bellevue. The recipient of the threats notified the school principal, and Bellevue School District initiated a lockdown for three hours Friday morning until the student who made the threats was arrested by Bellevue police at his home.

  • caption: Former Tacoma police officer Corey Ventura testified as a witness in the trial of Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer on Dec. 1, 2022.

    At trial, police say Sheriff Ed Troyer summoned them, again, that same night

    Testimony in the trial of Pierce County Sheriff Ed Troyer sometimes veered into the absurd Thursday, as police witnesses described investigating the possible “malicious” throwing of a newspaper, and another officer admitted to called the sheriff “a douchebag” for dragging them into a high-profile incident.

  • caption: D'Vonne Pickett's wife KeAnna  speaks at his memorial accompanied by their three children, at Climate Pledge Arena on Nov. 10, 2022.

    Mourners gather at Seattle arena to remember D’Vonne Pickett Jr.

    People gathered at Seattle’s Climate Pledge arena Thursday to mourn the death of D’Vonne Pickett Jr, the sports coach and business owner who was shot and killed three weeks ago. Pickett’s casket was draped in thousands of flowers as hundreds of people dressed in black gathered in the arena to celebrate his life.

  • caption: The King County Jail is shown on Thursday, September 17, 2020, on 5th Avenue in Seattle.

    Family visits resume at King County jails, but staffing shortages remain a major hurdle

    In-person visits are scheduled to begin again Monday for people held at King County’s jail in downtown Seattle. It’s the first time family members have been able to visit face-to-face at that facility since the Covid pandemic began. In October, the county resumed family visits at the second adult jail in Kent. But critics and jail officials say short staffing is still constraining their operations.