A woman who had her medical license suspended after attending the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol was shot and killed by a man serving her papers on Tuesday.
The woman has been identified by King County Medical Examiner as Tamara Towers Parry, known by online communities as Dr. Tammy.
The Seattle Police Department confirmed that Parry was shot and killed by one of two individuals who came to her house on Tuesday intending to serve her papers when she exited the house with a shotgun. The man then shot the 57-year-old with his handgun.
"The shotgun was not fired." said SPD spokesperson Det. Brian Pritchard.
According to Zillow, Parry's house is listed as being in pre-foreclosure/auction status due to a $225,000 unpaid balance. Furthermore, the property was scheduled to be auctioned two weeks ago, in accordance with a "notice of trustee sale" filed with King County in May.
Parry's ex-husband demanded that she refinance her home following their divorce.
"[Towers Parry] has demonstrated that she is unwilling to execute the documents necessary to alleviate me of the debt on the Hudson property," wrote her ex-husband in a declaration filed in King County Superior Court. "She has simply chosen to ignore the issue, and instead traveled to Washington, D.C. to be part of an uprising to overthrow the government."
Neighbors reported frequently seeing signage in support of QAnon displayed in and around the house. Parry had also powerwashed the slogan "Where We Go One, We Go All (WWG1WGA)", popular amongst QAnon believers, into her driveway.
"She was a medical doctor, the family practice and hospitals she worked with had to disassociate themselves from her because of her behavior. Storming the Capitol was not a positive thing to do," said Parry's neighbor Chris Englund told KCPQ.
"I think over the last few years, she definitely was keeping to herself quite a bit more, probably since the last election, to be honest," next-door neighbor Joel Beherndt said.
Parry's medical license was suspended indefinitely by Washington Medical Commission health law judge John F. Kuntz as it was determined that she had violated state law, demonstrating unprofessional conduct.
Originally published on Latin Times.