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(Another View- Let donated livers go where the neediest patients are)
(Four people arrested for allegedly threatening witnesses in Kingston High case)
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About 3,000 people die in the United States each year for lack of a liver for transplantation. One in six of those lives could be saved with a simple adjustment in the way the <a href=http://www.alportico.net/gosoc.php> true religion outlet</a>  6,000 or so livers from deceased donors are allocated 鈥?to see that the organs more often go to the Americans who need them most.
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Matthew Smiley, 18, of Kingston, appeared in Kitsap County Superior District Court <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php> cheap gucci</a>  Monday. (Photo: KCPQ-TV)
Under the existing system, managed by the United Network for Organ Sharing, donated livers are prioritized for use in the geographic regions from which they come. In regions where the organs are relatively plentiful, they sometimes go to people who could easily wait longer for a transplant, rather than those who may die without them.
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PORT ORCHARD, Wash. The Kitsap County Sheriff s Office said Tuesday it had arrested four people for allegedly threatening witnesses in their case against 18-year-old Matthew Smiley, who is accused of threatening to shoot up Kingston High School.
A new system would create just four liver-donation regions in place of the 11 smaller ones that exist today. Mathematical models suggest that <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php> cheap gucci</a>  sharing livers within these broader zones would save 554 lives a year.
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Three of the arrests occurred between 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Kingston High School. The fourth arrest occurred in Bremerton around 3:30 p.m., the sheriff s office said.
Liver patients in areas where it s now relatively easy to receive a donated organ fear they would lose out. And it s true that some would have to wait longer for a transplant. But their more robust health would enable them to do so.
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Sheriff鈥檚 detectives became aware of the threats to witnesses from NK School District officials earlier today and initiated the follow-up investigation. Specific threats to harm several individuals were made via social media, the sheriff s office said.
Another objection sometimes raised is that expanding the zones would reduce donations, because people would no longer know that individuals in their own communities would get their donations. Yet 82 percent of respondents to a 2013 survey said they d prefer their organ go to the person in greatest medical need, regardless of location.
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Smiley appeared in Kitsap County District Court on Monday, where a <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php>gucci outlet</a>  judge set bail at $2 million for the former Kingston High student.
That concept should guide the distribution of donated livers nationally. In the age of <a href=http://www.alportico.net/prodotti/christianlouboutin-sale.jkmsw.php>Christian Louboutin Pumps</a>  overnight delivery service, Americans access to lifesaving organs shouldn t depend on where they live.
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According to the sheriff s office, an investigation was started last Thursday after a 911 call made by Kingston High School security officers, who reported that witnesses had contacted them and said a former student had voiced threats to others that, One of these days I m gonna walk in and shoot up the school.  
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The threats to cause violence at KHS were reportedly made on more than one occasion. Witnesses also reported that the young man had access to firearms <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/michaelkorssonline.php>Michael Kors uk</a>  and had displayed these weapons as a point of emphasis, the sheriff s office said.
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Deputies and detectives learned that the suspect, Smiley, had been expelled from the high school during the 2013 鈥?2014 academic year for trying to sell marijuana.
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The suspect was booked into Kitsap County Jail on charges of felony harassment and unlawful possession of a firearm.
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Revision as of 21:11, 1 October 2014

@@@ Matthew Smiley, 18, of Kingston, appeared in Kitsap County Superior District Court <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php> cheap gucci</a> Monday. (Photo: KCPQ-TV)

PORT ORCHARD, Wash. The Kitsap County Sheriff s Office said Tuesday it had arrested four people for allegedly threatening witnesses in their case against 18-year-old Matthew Smiley, who is accused of threatening to shoot up Kingston High School.

Three of the arrests occurred between 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Kingston High School. The fourth arrest occurred in Bremerton around 3:30 p.m., the sheriff s office said.

Sheriff鈥檚 detectives became aware of the threats to witnesses from NK School District officials earlier today and initiated the follow-up investigation. Specific threats to harm several individuals were made via social media, the sheriff s office said.

Smiley appeared in Kitsap County District Court on Monday, where a <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/gucciusaonlineoutlet.php>gucci outlet</a> judge set bail at $2 million for the former Kingston High student. According to the sheriff s office, an investigation was started last Thursday after a 911 call made by Kingston High School security officers, who reported that witnesses had contacted them and said a former student had voiced threats to others that, One of these days I m gonna walk in and shoot up the school.

The threats to cause violence at KHS were reportedly made on more than one occasion. Witnesses also reported that the young man had access to firearms <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/michaelkorssonline.php>Michael Kors uk</a>  and had displayed these weapons as a point of emphasis, the sheriff s office said.

Deputies and detectives learned that the suspect, Smiley, had been expelled from the high school during the 2013 鈥?2014 academic year for trying to sell marijuana. The suspect was booked into Kitsap County Jail on charges of felony harassment and unlawful possession of a firearm.  

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