
Anyone with information on the whereabouts of K Lodge Lodge is asked to contact Detective Corporal James Porter at james.porter@cityofvancouver.us
VANCOUVER – On Nov. 15, 2025, Vancouver Police responded to a call involving a rideshare driver whose vehicle had been rammed multiple times by a male the female passenger knew as K Lodge Lodge. The driver and her passenger were able to flee from the male and drove to a Vancouver Police precinct to seek help.
Since the incident, detectives from the Vancouver Police Department Domestic Violence Unit and the Pacific Northwest Violent Offender Task Force have attempted to locate Lodge without success.
Anyone with information on the whereabouts of K Lodge Lodge is asked to contact Detective Corporal James Porter at james.porter@cityofvancouver.us.
Information provided by the Vancouver Police Department.
Also read:
- Semi-truck brings 40,000 pounds of donations to Clark County Food Bank40,000 pounds of donated food arrived at the Clark County Food Bank, enough to feed about 1,400 people for a week.
- ‘Light rail to nowhere’? Surging costs undercut I-5 bridge transit planVancouver’s promised light rail extension to Library Square has no timeline, and the waterfront station would sit 90 feet above ground.
- Raptors, Ridgefield welcome another season of West Coast League baseballMayor Matt Cole threw the ceremonial first pitch as the Raptors opened their 2026 season with a 9-0 win.
- POLL: Do patriotic displays like Yacolt’s road striping help strengthen community spirit?A Yacolt road striping project tied to America’s 250th anniversary is dividing opinion in Clark County.
- Opinion: The challenges of getting the Brockmann mental health facility openA $42 million, 48-bed mental health campus near WSU Vancouver was completed in 2025 but never opened due to lack of state funding.
- Parents call for resignation of Longview School Board amid sex assault investigationSuperintendent Karen Cloninger faces felony witness tampering charges tied to a student sex assault case at Mark Morris High School.
- Opinion: Washington’s business exodus accelerates due to high taxes, regulations driving companies awayWashington’s business relocation rate has nearly tripled since winter 2025, per an AWB survey.








