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Seattle man charged with murder, 5 years after his girlfriend’s death was attributed to an overdose
May 7, 2020
For more than five years, Elisabeth Wright’s death in the stairwell of an apartment building in Seattle’s Central District was attributed to an accidental overdose, according to King County prosecutors.
Seattle police say that all changed early Tuesday when Wright’s former boyfriend, 32-year-old Leo Driver, walked into the department’s East Precinct and confessed to strangling her to death, according to a first-degree murder charge that was rush-filed by prosecutors Wednesday. Driver was booked into the King County Jail on Tuesday morning and prosecutors are seeking to have him held in lieu of $1 million bail, court records show.
According to charging papers and court records, Driver does not have any prior felony convictions but has misdemeanor domestic-violence convictions for assault, property destruction, criminal trespass and violating court orders protecting his sister and their late mother. At least some of those cases were adjudicated in mental health court, the records show.
May 7, 2020
For more than five years, Elisabeth Wright’s death in the stairwell of an apartment building in Seattle’s Central District was attributed to an accidental overdose, according to King County prosecutors.
Seattle police say that all changed early Tuesday when Wright’s former boyfriend, 32-year-old Leo Driver, walked into the department’s East Precinct and confessed to strangling her to death, according to a first-degree murder charge that was rush-filed by prosecutors Wednesday. Driver was booked into the King County Jail on Tuesday morning and prosecutors are seeking to have him held in lieu of $1 million bail, court records show.
According to charging papers and court records, Driver does not have any prior felony convictions but has misdemeanor domestic-violence convictions for assault, property destruction, criminal trespass and violating court orders protecting his sister and their late mother. At least some of those cases were adjudicated in mental health court, the records show.