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This profile was automatically generated using 9 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 9 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 9 references Web References
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1. MEET GOLDEN OFFICER TEX - AT THE LAND OF PUREGOLD
www.landofpuregold.com/news93. - [Cached]Published on: 12/28/2000 Last Visited: 6/20/2002
by Louis T. Corsaletti, Seattle Times Eastside Bureau, August 16, 1999 -
2. Allen, Hansen & Maybrown P.S. - News & Media
www.ahmlawyers.com/pages-2005/ - [Cached]Last Visited: 12/17/2007
Louis T. Corsaletti, Seattle Times Eastside Bureau
"Court To Hear Mother's Appeal -- Murderer Jeremy Sagastegui Insists He Wants To Be Put To Death, But Now Others Are Stepping In To Plead His Case"
Click here for story -
3. Welcome to Journal-News!
www.journal-news.com/news/cont - [Cached]Published on: 10/9/2002 Last Visited: 10/9/2002
Louis T. Corsaletti
AUBURN, Wash. (AP)--Louis T. Corsaletti, a one-time chauffeur for Marilyn Monroe who worked as a reporter at The Seattle Times for 33 years, died Monday after a long battle with cancer. He was 69.
Corsaletti retired last year after a career that included a number of scoops during the city's police payoff scandals in the early 1970s. Corsaletti became known for memorizing the names and telephone numbers of dozens of officers.
Born and reared in West Pittston, Pa., Corsaletti served in the Army as a tank driver in the Korean War. In February 1954, he was assigned to chauffeur duty for Monroe when the actress went to Korea to entertain the troops. A snapshot showing her with her arm around him graced his desk at the Times.
After the war, he worked briefly as editor of the Auburn Globe News, a weekly between Seattle and Tacoma, and at the daily Tacoma News Tribune, now The News Tribune, before joining the Times in June 1967.
During a probe into the "tolerance rackets" that rocked the police force, he and fellow reporter Dee Norton often wrote about developments even before they were presented to the grand jury behind closed doors.
His survivors include his wife, Dianna; three sons; a daughter and six grandchildren.

