Former Sheriff's Major Pleads Guilty to Drunk Driving Crash Causing Injuries A former major with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office has pleaded guilty to vehicular assault and obstructing a law enforcement officer, admitting to causing a drunk driving crash that injured several people, including children. The plea results in a felony conviction and loss of firearm rights. The incident has also led to an internal review of deputy response protocols and a clarification of body camera policies. A former Pierce County Sheriff’s Office major has admitted to causing a drunk driving crash that injured multiple people, including children, in Graham last year. The former official, whose name has been withheld by some outlets but is readily available in court records, pleaded guilty Tuesday to a felony charge of vehicular assault and a misdemeanor charge of obstructing a law enforcement officer. The plea agreement means Dickerson will now be a convicted felon, permanently losing his right to possess firearms. He was taken into custody immediately following Tuesday morning’s hearing. The incident occurred after Dickerson had reportedly been drinking at a local golf course before driving and subsequently colliding with an SUV. The crash resulted in injuries to several individuals, including children. This development has also prompted scrutiny within the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff Keith Swank acknowledged that an internal investigation uncovered potential policy violations by the deputies who initially responded to the crash scene. However, a press release from the Sheriff's Guild indicated the deputies involved had been cleared of any wrongdoing, a move Sheriff Swank later described as premature, citing ambiguities in the department's existing policy. Sheriff Swank stated that while the responding deputies failed to activate their body cameras, the policy at the time did not provide sufficient grounds to sustain a complaint against them. He emphasized that the department has since clarified its body camera policy to mandate activation for all emergency calls, asserting his role in rectifying the situation. Swank also maintained that Dickerson did not receive preferential treatment, suggesting his plea agreement reflects a sentence comparable to, or perhaps even more severe than, what an individual with no prior criminal history might receive. Separately, the Law Enforcement Training and Community Safety Act requires 40 hours of ongoing training in areas such as violence de-escalation and mental health, a measure impacting law enforcement across the state. This situation also occurred in parallel with increased cleanup efforts in Seattle in anticipation of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and separate reports of prostitution-related investigations at Bothell massage parlors and a Chinese tanker passing through the Strait of Hormuz.