The Lynnwood man accused of crashing into and killing a state trooper on Interstate 5 in Marysville, admitted to smoking marijuana before the crash, according to a new police report.
Washington State Patrol trooper Chris Gadd, 27, had stopped along the right shoulder of I-5 near 136th Street NE, while on routine patrol for DUI drivers just before 3 a.m. Saturday, March 2.
A witness reported Gadd was parked in a marked patrol vehicle with his lights off, according to the police report filed in Everett District Court. The witness reportedly had dashboard camera footage of the crash.
A black SUV, traveling at a “high rate of speed,” swerved and struck the trooper’s car, police said. Gadd was pronounced dead at the scene.
A white van traveling south also collided with the black SUV, police said. The driver of the van was taken to the hospital with a broken leg and wrist. Five passengers in the van were not injured, according to the sheriff’s office.
The SUV driver, 32, of Lynnwood, stayed at the scene. Police arrested the man for investigation of vehicular homicide. Authorities took him to Providence Regional Medical Center Everett for an evaluation, then booked him into the Snohomish County Jail, according to police. A judge approved a warrant to get a sample of the driver’s blood to test for impairment, the report said.
The man reported smoking marijuana and drinking a Coors Light before the early morning crash, according to the report. A breathalyzer test, given about 3½ hours after the crash, reportedly had a reading of 0.047.
On Saturday morning, law enforcement held a motorcade from the crash site to the Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s Office. Southbound I-5 remained closed for about nine hours north of Marysville. The freeway reopened around noon.
Gadd was born in Pasco and graduated from Kentlake High School in Kent, according to a state patrol press release. He went on to attend Green River College and Tacoma Community College, earning his EMT certification. He was married with a 2-year-old daughter, according to the Washington State Patrol.
He began working for the agency in September 2021 as a trooper cadet assigned to Grandview, Yakima County. His father, David Gadd, is also a state trooper in King County. His sister, Jacqueline Gadd, is a state trooper in Texas.
Gadd was part of the 116th Trooper Basic Training class. Upon graduation in November 2022, he received two honors: the Top Collision Investigation Award and the Top Academic Award. After graduation, he was assigned to Marysville.
Gadd is survived by his wife Cammryn, daughter Kaelyn, father David, mother Gillian and sister Jacqueline.
The Lynnwood man was scheduled to make his first appearance in court Monday. Generally, The Daily Herald does not identify criminal suspects until they’ve appeared in front of a judge.
Jonathan Tall: 425-339-3486; jonathan.tall@heraldnet.com; Twitter: @snocojon.
The Herald in Everett is a sister publication of the Kent Reporter, part of Sound Publishing.
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