Coupeville Graduate Killed in Poulsbo Shooting, Brother Held on Murder Suspicion
Tim Quinn, 30, a Coupeville High School soccer alum, was shot and killed at his Poulsbo home Sunday; his older brother Riley Quinn is held on $500,000 bail.

At Coupeville High School, Tim Quinn pushed the ball up the field for the school's soccer program before graduating in 2013, three years after his older brother Riley Quinn walked the same hallways as part of the class of 2010. On Sunday evening, March 22, Riley Quinn allegedly shot and killed Tim at a home in Poulsbo, a loss that has reverberated across Whidbey Island since the first reports emerged days later.
Tim Quinn was 30. Riley Quinn, 34, was arrested at the scene after calling 911 and telling dispatchers he had shot his brother. Court documents indicate Riley described a violent altercation in which Tim had pinned him down, choked him, and threatened to kill him. The Kitsap County Medical Examiner later determined that one of the gunshot wounds was inflicted after Tim Quinn had already died.
Law enforcement responded to a split-level residence in the 20000 block of NW Circle Drive around 10:15 p.m. Sunday. Riley Quinn was booked on suspicion of second-degree murder and appeared in Kitsap County Superior Court on March 24, where a judge set bail at $500,000. Court records show he has no prior criminal history.
Because the shooting occurred in Poulsbo, the investigation and pending prosecution will move through Kitsap County courts. Riley Quinn was arraigned in the days following his arrest. No trial date has been set. Criminal charges are allegations; he retains the right to full legal process.

For the Coupeville community, the weight of this case lies in its closeness: both brothers grew up on Whidbey Island, attended the same high school, and moved through the same circle of teammates, classmates, and neighbors. Tim Quinn's death at 30 leaves an abrupt absence in that network, one felt particularly by the former players and families who knew him through CHS soccer.
Anyone in the community struggling in the aftermath can reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988.
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