Division over nurse training, families fight for justice for murdered loved ones, and other headlines

ON INLANDER.COM

NEWS:
While Greyhound has maintained it hates Border Patrol searching its passengers, it turns out the company can change that by just telling agents they can’t search buses without reasonable cause.

ARTS & CULTURE: Emerge art space was lucky enough to save much of its artwork and computers during a fire that ravaged downtown Coeur d’Alene. Now, they rebuild.

IN OTHER NEWS...

Parents of murdered Pullman woman fight campus discrimination
Before she was murdered, Lauren McCluskey told police at the University of Utah that her ex-boyfriend had lied, threatened her and appeared to be a sexual predator. Yet they said he seemed like a good guy, the Spokesman-Review reports. Now her parents are fighting the school with a lawsuit in hopes that women are better protected nation-wide.

Spokane woman fights for her brother, other cold cases
As the death of her 13-year-old brother remains unsolved three decades later, a Spokane woman is fighting for his and other cases that were never solved, leaving families waiting for justice, KXLY reports.

Washington divided on who should train needed sexual assault nurses
With a proposal to possibly train rural sexual assault nurse examiners through Washington State University, UW's Harborview Medical Center, which has been the main training center for those nurses, claims that could jeopardize its own program, the Seattle-Times reports. 
Mark as Favorite

It Happened Here: Expo '74 Fifty Years Later @ Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture

Tuesdays-Sundays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Continues through Jan. 26
  • or

Samantha Wohlfeil

Samantha Wohlfeil is the News Editor and covers the environment, rural communities and cultural issues for the Inlander. She's been with the paper since 2017.