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- Home - Elect Erika Evans
Erika Evans, a seasoned federal prosecutor and former Assistant Seattle City Attorney, has entered the race for Seattle City Attorney, setting up a high-profile challenge to Republican incumbent Ann Davison
- City Attorney Candidate Erika Evans Wants to Fight Trump
Evans, a former assistant U S attorney, prosecuted federal cases before leaving her position to run for Seattle City Attorney with the goal of challenging Trump
- She left her federal job because of Trump. Now she’s running for office . . .
Becoming a federal prosecutor was a longtime professional dream for Erika Evans, one she achieved nearly four years ago But Evans soured on her job as an assistant US attorney in Seattle
- PubliCola Questions: City Attorney Candidate Erika Evans
Evans has also worked as a pro tem municipal court judge outside Seattle, is past president of the Loren Miller Bar Association, and co-chaired the Washington Leadership Institute, which helps lawyers from underrepresented groups develop their careers
- Prosecutor Erika Evans Stresses Federal Experience in Seattle City . . .
Evans has spent her professional career as a prosecutor, first at the office she’s now running to lead and later at the federal level If she prevails, Evans would be the first Black Seattle City Attorney in a country where only 5% of lawyers are Black
- Ex-Justice Department Staff Pursue Local Political Roles - The Seattle . . .
(CNN) — Becoming a federal prosecutor was a longtime professional dream for Erika Evans, one she achieved nearly four years ago But Evans soured on her job as an assistant US attorney in Seattle this year soon after President Donald Trump returned to the White House
- Who’s running in the Seattle City Attorney race? | Cascade PBS
Erika Evans spent almost four years as a federal attorney in the U S Attorney’s Office Prior to that she worked for Seattle as an assistant city attorney and assistant city prosecutor
- About - Elect Erika Evans
These values were instilled in me through the story of my grandmother, a civil rights pioneer and public servant who helped plan human rights demonstrations at the 1968 Olympic Games, and my grandfather, Lee Evans, a track and field gold medalist during those same Olympic Games
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