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Knife found in waikerie murder weapon search
Investigators with the FBI's Seattle field office have released a photo of what the FBI believes is the blade used in the stabbing of a woman at a downtown Seattle bar in 2016.
An FBI report obtained by KING said investigators believed the knife was stolen from a woman's handbag at the Red Lion Lounge on Washington Street in August 2016.
The woman, who was not identified by police, was stabbed several times in the chest, face and back.
The blade allegedly is related to the knife that was used in a fatal stabbing at a Washington Square bar in July 2016, according to the FBI.
A man was convicted of stabbing the 22-year-old woman, who had been drinking, to death in August 2016. The woman is considered armed and dangerous to self-defense.
The FBI has provided a photo of the knife found in evidence at the crime scene to the King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office to be released publicly.
The investigation is ongoing, according to the report.
Anyone with information that could help solve this case is asked to call Detective Michael O'Loughlin at (206) 233-5675. Tips can also be submitted anonymously by sending a text message to TIP411, and submitting their tip on this page. You can also leave a tip on The Seattle Times Crime Ink.
Crime Ink will be publishing a photo of the weapon Wednesday morning after the publication opens.
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Endangered giraffe born mogo zoo: "We are not a zoo"
Paleontologist Professor Peter Gray, who discovered the giraffes in Tanzania, has warned that while lions, tigers and even bears are the world's apex predators, many species may be facing extinction.
His controversial findings have caused a worldwide furor.
Lions have been described as "a menace to humanity" by a leading scientific adviser to Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
Dr Gray, emeritus emeritus professor of paleontology, is among those who have been questioned by some politicians over the study.
He told British television channel BBC2: "I have been invited to comment on an article in the Sunday Times about the lions and the African elephants and it is very easy for me to do that.
"And I must warn, if I do not make any comments, then I am being accused of trying to suppress the truth."
Professor Gray says there are up to 1,400 lions - the largest carnivores on earth - but says: "In the wild there is no significant level of extinction.
"There are only small populations of the largest carnivores that live in countries like Botswana and Zambia. They have been largely eradicated in those countries.
"They range all over South and South-East Africa and the rest of West Africa."
There is concern that an unprecedented number of giraffe numbers are being killed by poaching, with over 7,500 of these being killed by poachers every day.
There is also concern about the future of the world's great ape, as many are now being killed as they come off the continent.
The BBC says: "Professor Gray, emeritus professor of paleontology and expert on African elephants, has argued that the global human population will reach 7 billion in the next 150 years and predicts that, in the coming decades, almost 90% of Earth will be in a state where we can no longer live in it."
Professor Gray believes that because of the world's economic crisis there is an increasing need for conservation.
But he claims that lions are not being protected well enough, and adds: "We are not trying to do anything for these animals. We are simply taking them out of their natural habitats."
But he stresses: "Lions, tigers and bears are an example of a species that were threatened by humans, and are now being managed in the most beautiful way.
"Some areas are full of them, some of them are still there but the lions are being managed in an excellent way."
He adds that there is more to be done to stop the extinction of other predators, including crocodiles, the giant sloths and bears.