Source: The Herald Everett, WA Contact: Pubdate: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 Local News Everett ban for suspected trafficker By SCOTT NORTH Herald Writer EVERETT A suspected drug trafficker has been banned from part of the city's downtown once he is released from prison. Dion K. Humphrey, 29, was sentenced to 18 months behind bars Thursday. As part of the sentence, Snohomish County Superior Court Judge James Allendoerfer also ordered him to stay away from the Everett's downtown transit center at Hewitt and Hoyt avenues for a full year after his release from prison. Humphrey, of Bellingham, was convicted in August of delivery of a substance in lieu of a controlled substance, a felony. He was arrested June 2 after Everett police spotted him engaged in what they believed was a crack cocaine deal while he sat on the benches at the bus center. The arresting officers included Deputy Chief Patric Slack and some of the department's other top brass. They had been eating lunch across the street at the time. Tests later showed the suspected crack was actually an overthecounter pain reliever altered to appear like rocks of cocaine. Humphrey's attorney, public defender Chad Dold, said his client likely would not have faced felony charges were it not for the Everett Police Department's highprofile attempts over the past year to crack down on street crime. He also said Humphrey, who has five prior felony convictions, suffers from mental disorders that over the years have put him into regular confrontations with police. Deputy prosecutor William Joice said police noticed a drop in streetlevel drug activity after Humphrey's arrest, and that officers wanted the judge to effectively ban Humphrey from much of Everett's downtown area. Allendoerfer granted the request in part, banning Humphrey only from the area around the city's downtown transit center. The city earlier this year designated several areas as being "Protected Against Drug Trafficking," including downtown, north Broadway and south Evergreen Way. The city hopes to seek court orders that will keep convicted drug offenders out of those areas in the future, or risk arrest on sight. Copyright © 1997 The Daily Herald Co.