Kirkland|News|
Murder, Smugglers, Tragedy and Elections: Top 2012 Stories in Kirkland
Take a look back with the 10 biggest stories posted on Kirkland Patch in 2012.

A refugee from the newspaper industry, Greg Johnston has been a journalist for more than 30 years, most of them with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which vanished into the pages of history in March of 2009. He also served for four years as wire editor/reporter at The Daily World in Aberdeen on the Washington Coast, and worked as a news writer and wirephoto operator at the Associated Press Seattle bureau while attending the University of Washington. Greg graduated from the UW's School of Communications in the Rose Bowl victory year of 1978 – Go Dawgs!
He sees in Patch the opportunity to continue doing what he does: real, honest journalism, now on line, at a hyper-local level, in his hometown. Adventure-oriented since a child, Greg loves to hike, backpack, fish, ride his mountain bike, run, kayak, snowboard and take nature photographs.
He lives on Finn Hill with his wife and has three grown children, one a U.S. Army infantryman and Afghanistan War veteran, and two beautiful grandchildren.
<b>Your Beliefs</b>
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable.
<b>Politics</b>
How would you describe your political beliefs? Are you registered with a certain party?
I am fiscally conservative and socially liberal. I support a strong military, but believe the answer to conflict is tolerance, understanding, diplomacy and dialogue. I dream of the day Americans can withdraw from foreign conflict and look inward to address issues such as unemployment, homelessness, poverty and environmental protection. I am not a member of any party.
<b>Religion</b>
How religious would you consider yourself?
I was baptized a Christian and would call myself spiritual, but not devout. I find peace in nature, in the Pacific Northwest's mountains, forests, rivers and seas and along its magnificent ocean shoreline.
<b>Local Hot-Button Issues</b>
What do you think are the most important issues facing the community?
Where do you stand on each of these issues?
Kirkland is a relatively affluent, largely suburban bedroom community where quality of life issues are important. The challenge will be maintaining a vibrant downtown and neighborhoods while preserving their small-town charm. I think quality of life should not be sacrificed for economic development; rather, I think maintaining a high quality of life is essential to a strong economy.
Take a look back with the 10 biggest stories posted on Kirkland Patch in 2012.

In other items in this week's KPD Blotter, a man reports a small semiautomatic handgun stolen from his home and police investigate burglaries, car prowls and assaults.
You voted and this house was the top local vote-getter in our Deck the House contest.
A woman suffered minor injuries and she and a man who had been sleeping escaped one of the sinking boats early Monday morning. The large craft were apparently swamped by storm-driven waves.
A woman suffered minor injuries as she and a man who had been sleeping escaped one of two sinking boats early Monday morning. The boats were apparently swamped by storm-driven waves.
A woman suffered minor injuries and she and a man who had been sleeping escaped one of the sinking boats early Monday morning. The large craft were apparently swamped by storm-driven waves.
A woman suffered minor injuries and she and a man who had been sleeping escaped one of the sinking boats early Monday morning. The large craft were apparently swamped by storm-driven waves.
A woman suffered minor injuries and she and a man who had been sleeping escaped one of the sinking boats early Monday morning. The large craft were apparently swamped by storm-driven waves.
District officials are offering tips for parents in dealing with children, who might become distraught or lose their sense of security because of the mass shooting at a Connecticut school.
Police and fire response to crashes on NE 70th and Interstate 405 nearby backed up traffic during and after the commute along the arterial between Rose Hill and Houghton. Two drivers suffered non life-threatening injuries.
In other cases, cops nab two thieves trying to enter an apartment with just-stolen keys, an angry landlord assaults a tenant over rent and multiple car thefts and car prowls are reported.
The Kirkland City Council also approved a rezone request for the "Howard Properties" on Juanita Drive at Holmes Point Drive, eliminating a requriement a housing developer include ground floor retail use.
Seven award-winning student musicians from Inglemoor High and one from Juanita High will be playing holiday jazz outside Hector's in Kirkland Dec. 19-23 -- to make a difference.
The 11-foot spruce in the hotel's lobby will be donated after the holidays to Kirkland Parks. In the meantime the public is invited to come and enjoy it.
The Rev. Marian Stewart of Northlake Unitarian Church married seven same-gender couples on the first day in Washington history that they can legally marry.
The Rev. Marian Stewart of Northlake Unitarian Church married seven same-gender couples on Sunday. One couple had waited 29 years.
The Rev. Marian Stewart of Northlake Unitarian Church marries seven same-gender couples on the first day in Washington history that gay couples can legally be married. One couple had waited 29 years.
The aging bridge on 98th Avenue in Juanita was not built to meet current seismic standards and will be upgraded with a $1.4 million Federal Highway Fund grant.
In other cases, a man at a downtown bar assaults a woman by slipping his hand into her underwear, a Rose Hill couple returns from a holiday trip to find their home burglarized and a Bothell man is arrested on Kirkland Ave with car theft tools.
A judge granted a continuance to Jan. 14 in the trial of Nathan Godwin of Redmond, who prosecutors say was speeding and driving under the influence when he hit Bradley Nakatani of Kirkland last December.