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Murder Reveals ‘Lord of the Flies’ Street Culture in Olympia

Austin Jenkins
Lt. Paul Lower of the Olympia Police Dept. heads into a former homeless camp in Olympia where a murder took place last fall.

On Washington’s Capitol campus in Olympia, sandstone buildings stand as monuments to the rule of law. But just a few blocks away you can find a street culture where young adults and teenagers live by their own rules—sometimes with tragic consequences. An especially grisly murder last year revealed an underworld in Washington’s capital city that can sound almost like it belongs in “Lord of the Flies.”

Olympia Police Lt. Paul Lower leads me through a blackberry bramble-covered trail to the scene of the crime. It’s a trash-strewn, former homeless camp along Interstate 5 in east Olympia. It’s here that last October a 17-year-old named Forest Snow Bailey, who went by the street name “Sonic”, was stabbed to death.

“They ended up, in the end, trying to hide what they did by burning the victim’s body in a barrel out here,” Lower said.

Police found the burned remains and quickly arrested a prime suspect who was 19 at the time: Christopher Lee Harrison, known as “Skitzo” on the streets of Olympia. Two alleged accomplices, “Red” and “Discord,” were also arrested.

Jessica Alf was in drug rehab when she got the news.

“I got a call saying that Skitzo has killed Sonic. And I flipped out,” she said.

Credit Austin Jenkins
Jessica Alf

Alf, who goes by the street name “Joker”, knew both young men. For her, the murder felt like a crime within the family.

“And it is. It’s a street family. We’re tight,” she said.

Alf is a longtime client of Community Youth Services in Olympia where Charles Shelan is CEO. He says it’s common for runaways and other disaffected youth to replace the family they ran away from with a street family.

“And they will normally call other people their brothers or their mother, or their father, but they won’t be biologically related to them whatsoever. And sometimes that can be very positive. And sometimes that can be a disaster as well,” said Shelan.

On the streets of Washington’s capital city, you can also find more formal alliances. Alf, or “Joker”, is 22. She identifies herself as a Juggalo, or a follower of the Detroit-based rap group Insane Clown Posse.

“We watch each other’s back. We are always with each other. I don’t know if you’ve heard on the street we say ‘whoop, whoop’ which means ‘I can,’” said Alf.

Patrick O’Connor is a public defender who represents the man accused of committing last fall’s homeless camp murder. O’Connor won’t talk about this specific case, but he says over the years he’s defended dozens of young adults living on the streets of Olympia.

“What we’ve seen is that they, in a way, are forming their own society with a kind of a hierarchy of members where some people have some authority in a community to set rules and the younger members follow the rules,” O’Connor said.

O’Connor allows it’s a little like the novel-turned-movie “Lord of the Flies”

“These kids are living outside the bounds of what we would consider society, I guess,” said O’Connor.

It’s not just Olympia. Street youth are fixtures in small Northwest cities from Bellingham to Eugene, to Ashland. In Thurston County, more than one-third of the homeless are 25 or younger. That doesn’t count the young faces you see on the street during the day, but who couch-surf at night.

Olympia especially seems to be a magnet for street youth. It’s a funky, liberal town that’s home to The Evergreen State College where alternative feels like the mainstream. There’s also a myth about Olympia’s artesian water fountain downtown—if you drink from it, you’ll never leave Olympia.

Credit Austin Jenkins
22-year-old “James” from Tillamook, Oregon shows off his graffiti art in an Olympia alleyway.

“It’s the water. That’s what it is. It’s the artesian well water. I blame it on that,” said "James", a 22-year-old graffiti artist from Tillamook, Oregon. I found him in a graffiti-covered alleyway less than a mile from the state Capitol. When I pressed James about why he was really here, he offered a different answer.

“I feel like it’s just really easy to get by here with no struggle. We’ve got places that give us food, clothing when we need it, shelter—if we really do need it, there’s places where you can go. There’s ordinances where you can’t sit on the streets, but there’s way to abide by that where you don’t get bothered,” he said.

Several of the youth I spoke with said they feel safer in a smaller city like Olympia than in Portland or Seattle. But they also complained that trust within the street family has broken down recently, mostly because of rampant drug abuse—meth, and lately, heroin.

Police say they’ve seen more violence, too. Charles Shelan at Community Youth Services says last fall’s homeless camp murder was a galvanizing event. In response, he secured emergency funding to open a seasonal, 10-bed overnight shelter.

“We know if that young man would have had a safe place to stay and had chosen to stay there, he would be alive today,” Shelan said.

That murder hit especially close to home for Shelan and his staff. Court records indicate the accused, Christopher Harrison, was a client at Community Youth Services.

Since January 2004, Austin Jenkins has been the Olympia-based political reporter for the Northwest News Network. In that position, Austin covers Northwest politics and public policy as well as the Washington State legislature. You can also see Austin on television as host of TVW's (the C–SPAN of Washington State) Emmy-nominated public affairs program "Inside Olympia." Prior to joining the Northwest News Network, Austin worked as a television reporter in Seattle, Portland and Boise. Austin is a graduate of Garfield High School in Seattle and Connecticut College in New London, Connecticut. Austin’s reporting has been recognized with awards from the Association of Capitol Reporters and Editors, Public Radio News Directors Incorporated and the Society of Professional Journalists.