Ari Lee King Clallam County Sheriff's Office

Ari Lee King Clallam County Sheriff's Office

1st UPDATE: Fugitive accused of woman’s murder found living under Oregon bridge

PORT ANGELES — A Sequim man wanted in connection for the September killing of a woman in Joyce has been found living under a highway bridge in a remote area of eastern Oregon.

Ari Lee King, 45, was being held without bail in the Malheur County jail in Vale, Ore., a jail spokeswoman said, after King was captured with the aid of surveillance videos in Washington state and cafe patrons who had seen him in Oregon.

King had been sought for questioning in the beating death of Diane Cunningham, 65, of Joyce, and was charged in Clallam County Superior Court on Thursday with second-degree murder after he was found about 80 miles west of the Idaho border.

Court papers filed late Thursday said King was living with his dog under the highway bridge.

An interstate arrest warrant was issued Thursday by Clallam County Superior Court that will allow King to be returned to Port Angeles on Friday to face the charge if he waives extradition, Clallam Sheriff’s Chief Criminal Deputy Ron Cameron said.

Cunningham’s daughter and son-in-law found Cunningham’s body Oct. 6 in her mobile home in the Salt Creek RV Park west of Port Angeles after the King County couple had not heard from her for more than a week.

Cunningham’s abandoned 1999 Audi was seen by hunters near the Malheur River about 20 miles west of Vale, Ore., according to a probable cause statement filed Thursday in Superior Court.

In the probable cause statement, authorities gave an account of the circumstances surrounding Cunningham’s death.

Cunningham was seen with King in a surveillance video at 7 Cedars Casino and at the Port Angeles Walmart store on Sept. 27.

She knew her attacker because there was no sign of forced entry. She was killed in her bedroom.

King was with her from Sept. 27 to the following morning, according to witnesses and the surveillance video.

Cunningham had $1,700 in cash while King was with her.

Another surveillance video recorded King driving Cunningham’s car alone through the Washington state ferry terminal on Bainbridge Island at 6:45 p.m. Sept. 28.

A note was found in Cunningham’s car after the vehicle was recovered that said “Mom+Dad+My Sis, I know you will never understand! Hell I don’t even understand! Nothing what I do. I.”

“The handwriting is consistent with Ari’s handwriting,” according to the probable cause statement.

King, whose last known address was Sequim, was located living under the bridge with his dog fewer than 20 miles from where Cunningham’s car was located, Cameron said in a prepared statement.

Sheriff’s detectives learned from workers in a cafe in Juntura, Ore. — a hamlet on U.S. Highway 20 about 80 miles west of the Idaho border — that he had been seen in the area.

Upon his arrest, “King did not appear shocked confused or inquisitive,” the probable cause statement said.

“He instead bowed his head when told he was under arrest for the murder of Diane Cunningham.”

________

Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Clallam fire district eyeing two levies

Funds would support services, Carlsborg station

Artist Christopher Keywood of San Diego creates a mermaid mural on the north side of HarborTowne Mall in downtown Port Angeles on Thursday. Keywood, along with the mall's owner, decided that the blank wall deserved a decoration visible from The Gateway transit center and nearby North Lincoln Street. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
A mermaid’s touch

Artist Christopher Keywood of San Diego creates a mermaid mural on the… Continue reading

Port of Port Angeles commissioners examine replacement of log loader

Officials approve engineering firm for project at Marine Terminals 1 and 3

Habitat for Humanity of East Jefferson County Executive Director Jamie Maciejewski speaks to a crowd of more than 50 people at the future site of Habitat's affordable housing development in Port Hadlock on Thursday. Habitat hopes to build at least 150 permanently affordable homes at the site, known as the Mason Street project, and on Thursday community members were invited to Port Hadlock to celebrate the next phase of the development. (Peter Segall / Peninsula Daily News)
Mason Street project moves into next phase

Habitat for Humanity’s Port Hadlock neighborhood starts permitting process

brewer
Memorial event for former publisher next week

Ask anyone who knew the late John Brewer, and… Continue reading

Peninsula College to celebrate Spring Arts Week

Peninsula College will celebrate Spring Arts Week. The free… Continue reading

High school, college graduation ceremonies set this month

High school and college graduation ceremonies will begin next weekend on the… Continue reading

A work crew from the Texas-based ForeverLawn rolls up a piece of cut playground surface in the parking lot of Erickson Playfield in preparation for installation at the nearby Dream Playground in Port Angeles. The crew was contracted to install the padded play area after a five-day community build last week to replace portions of the playground that were destroyed by arson in December. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
New play surface

A work crew from the Texas-based ForeverLawn rolls up a piece of… Continue reading

Lt. Comm. (Ret.) Doug Adams of the U.S. Navy served as the keynote speaker on Monday during the annual Memorial Day service at Captain Joseph House in Port Angeles. Adams, who now lives in Seattle, was at the same base in Afghanistan on May 29, 2011, when Capt. Joseph Schultz and others were killed. About 75 people attended the ceremony, which included a ceremony for Logan Hall, who died on July 13, 2018. His sister, Savannah Giddings, laid a special wreath to honor him. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Remembering the fallen

Lt. Comm. (Ret.) Doug Adams of the U.S. Navy served as the… Continue reading

Jake Vanderwaal, a maintenance worker with the city of Sequim, places a flower basket on May 22 in downtown Sequim. Program organizers plan to have the baskets out until mid-October. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim hoists flower baskets in annual program

City maintenance crews install bins through mid-October

Stevens upgrade switches gears

Inflation, construction costs push different design