The World saw one of these flyers
The World saw one of these flyers and contacted him. He responded by pay phone.
"The whole secret identity thing," he said. "You can't be too careful."
Deadpool admits to being a Wenatchee resident between the ages of 20 and 30. He's got a whole other life that's regular, he said, but he won't go into that. Deadpool said the idea to dress up and help people "just came to me one day."
He acknowledged, however, that the costume thing has its drawbacks. It makes him hot when the sun's out, and it seems to put some people off.
"I tried to help a woman out of the rain the other day and she didn't really want to take my umbrella," he said. "I think she was kind of intimidated."
Wenatchee police have had no complaints about Deadpool, said the department's Capt. Doug Jones. "Anyone doing good deeds is encouraged unless they get too pushy," he said. "If he grabs someone's arm that doesn't want it grabbed, that could be a problem."
Wenatchee is not the first city to have a superhero. Seattle has its Phoenix Jones, but he actively fights crime and had his nose broken in an altercation in January.
Wenatchee's Deadpool, on the other hand, said he is "not actively seeking out crime. Should I witness a crime in progress or one that just occurred, I will do my civil duty by calling the police and placing the criminal under citizen's arrest until the police have arrived. I only mean to help the community, not to stir up more trouble than I seek to relieve. The police have enough trouble without a superhero taking the law into his own hands."
The World saw one of these flyers and contacted him. He responded by pay phone.
"The whole secret identity thing," he said. "You can't be too careful."
Deadpool admits to being a Wenatchee resident between the ages of 20 and 30. He's got a whole other life that's regular, he said, but he won't go into that. Deadpool said the idea to dress up and help people "just came to me one day."
He acknowledged, however, that the costume thing has its drawbacks. It makes him hot when the sun's out, and it seems to put some people off.
"I tried to help a woman out of the rain the other day and she didn't really want to take my umbrella," he said. "I think she was kind of intimidated."
Wenatchee police have had no complaints about Deadpool, said the department's Capt. Doug Jones. "Anyone doing good deeds is encouraged unless they get too pushy," he said. "If he grabs someone's arm that doesn't want it grabbed, that could be a problem."
Wenatchee is not the first city to have a superhero. Seattle has its Phoenix Jones, but he actively fights crime and had his nose broken in an altercation in January.
Wenatchee's Deadpool, on the other hand, said he is "not actively seeking out crime. Should I witness a crime in progress or one that just occurred, I will do my civil duty by calling the police and placing the criminal under citizen's arrest until the police have arrived. I only mean to help the community, not to stir up more trouble than I seek to relieve. The police have enough trouble without a superhero taking the law into his own hands."