Kent man receives 18-year prison sentence in downtown shooting death

Published 11:52 am Thursday, December 3, 2015

Kent Police investigate a Sept. 10 shooting in downtown Kent. Matthew Chancellor was sentenced to 18 years in prison on Dec. 1 for the shooting death of James Knowlton.
Kent Police investigate a Sept. 10 shooting in downtown Kent. Matthew Chancellor was sentenced to 18 years in prison on Dec. 1 for the shooting death of James Knowlton.

A 37-year-old Kent man received a prison sentence of 18 years, nine months for the Sept. 10 downtown Kent shooting death of a 42-year-old Kent man.

Matthew C. Chancellor received the sentence on Tuesday in King County Superior Court. He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and first-degree unlawful possession of a firearm on Nov. 17, according to the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. Chancellor initially entered a not guilty plea in September.

Chancellor allegedly chased James Knowlton and shot him once in the chest as he sat in his car along East Saar Street just west of Central Avenue South. Knowlton died at the scene.

During an interview with detectives, Chancellor said Knowlton had disrespected Chancellor’s mother, according to charging papers. A friend of the two men told police he thought the dispute had to do with Knowlton owing a drug debt of $50 to Chancellor.

On the morning of Sept. 10, Chancellor said he saw Knowlton standing out front of a friend’s house in the 100 block of East Willis Street and yelled at him as he pulled up in his truck. Knowlton took off running, so Chancellor parked the truck, retrieved a 9 mm pistol from under the driver’s seat, placed the gun in his waistband and chased Knowlton down a nearby alley.

As Chancellor rounded a corner, he saw Knowlton backing his car out of it where it was parked. Chancellor said he drew his gun in an effort to get Knowlton to stop so they could talk and that the gun accidentally went off. He said he heard Knowlton make a moaning sound, so he ran back to his friend’s house, woke up the friend, told him Knowlton had been hurt and took him to the location of the car before fleeing the area.

Police arrested Chancellor later that night while parked in his truck at a church parking lot near 94th Avenue South and South 248th Street.

According to court documents, Chancellor’s criminal record includes felony convictions for second-degree burglary in 1999 in Pierce County, first-degree burglary in 2002 in Oregon and numerous misdemeanor convictions including drug charges in 2005 and 2007, unlawful possession of a firearm in 2008, violation of a no-contact order three times in 2010, fourth-degree assault in 2009 and 2010, displaying a weapon in 2011, possession of a dangerous weapon in 2010 and possessing a weapon on school grounds in 2015.