News brief: Emergency dispatchers to put spotlight on missing children with balloon release

May 22nd, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County 911 dispatchers will gather at a Chehalis park today and do a balloon release to bring attention to the issue of missing children.

Saturday is National Missing Children’s Day and employees of the county department recently became certified with National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

“Putting that highlight back on missing kids is what we’re trying to do,” said employee Laura Hanson.

They’ve scheduled a news conference from 1:30 p.m. until 2:30 p.m. at Stan Hedwall Park on Rice Road in which representatives from the Washington State Patrol and Lewis County 911 will discuss what more folks can do about missing children.

Gordon Trucking will bring one of its semi trucks which features a poster-sized face of the missing Lewis County girl,  Kayla Croft-Payne, Hanson said.

Croft-Payne is among those on Washington state’s missing children list. She was 18 and living outside Chehalis when she was reported missing on May 5, 2010.
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National Center for Missing and Exploited Children: Twenty-five ways to make kids safer, here

News brief: Empty suitcase empties Centralia Post Office lobby

May 21st, 2013

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Streets around the Centralia Post Office were blocked off for about three hours this evening after police responded to an unattended suitcase found sitting in the lobby.

It was empty.

Centralia police were called at 5:03 p.m. to the building on the 200 block of Centralia College Boulevard because the lone piece of luggage was suspicious, according to the Centralia Police Department.

The Washington State Patrol Bomb Squad was summoned and after an examination, concluded it contained nothing, Officer John Panco said.

It was a small gray soft-sided bag, according to Panco.

Thy opened it up, it was empty and there was no information indicating who it might have belonged to, he said.

It was just one month ago when a shoe box found sitting on the sidewalk next to the police department brought a response from bomb technicians. It too was empty.

Kelso man detained after Chehalis bank robbed

May 21st, 2013

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 54-year-old man was picked up on Interstate 5 just north of Kelso following a bank robbery in Chehalis this afternoon.

Police were called just before 3:30 p.m. to Chase Bank on the 600 block of South Market Boulevard. An employee told officers a man in his 50s handed a teller a note demanding money and left in a gold colored PT Cruiser, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

No weapon was displayed and nobody was injured, according to police.

Shortly after the 911 call, a Lewis County sheriff’s detective spotted a vehicle and driver matching the given description traveling southbound on the freeway, police stated in a news release. The car was stopped near milepost 42 and police concluded he was their suspect.

The suspect is identified by police as Jerrell S. Redmill, 54, of Kelso, according to police. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree robbery.

How much money was stolen or if it was recovered was not reported by police.

The same bank was robbed in March of last year, by a pair of local men who got away briefly with less than $2,500 from Chase, moments after a failed attempt at the nearby Twin Star Credit Union – which keeps no cash in its drawers.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

May 21st, 2013

Updated at 1:43 p.m.

THEFT AND METH

• Two people were arrested this morning for allegedly stealing a car hoist from a Chehalis business, cutting it up into pieces and selling it to a local scrap yard. Police had been looking for Jeanelle L. Matson and Charles R. Smith since last week when the item was discovered missing from behind an auto shop on Northwest State Avenue, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Sgt. Gary WIlson said he understood they got about $50 scrap value from the $4,000 hoist. He said the Olympia residents – both 48 years old – have been driving around in a U-Haul van. They were picked up about 5 o’clock this morning when Centralia police spotted a woman push open the door to a vacant house on the 1000 block of Eckerson Road. Both were booked into the Lewis County Jail for possession of stolen property, he said. Matson was arrested also because she was found in possession of suspected methamphetamine, according to Centralia police.

CYBER “STALKER” REMAINS ANONYMOUS

• Police contacted by a student at W.F. West High School yesterday concerned she was being stalked by an anonymous texter concluded the messages were coming from an unknown person in Memphis, Tennessee. Chehalis detective Sgt. Gary Wilson described it as a random, out-of-the-blue situation and said the girl was advised to block the number.

MORE THEFT

• Centralia police arrested a 33-year-old man yesterday afternoon in connection with a burglary at an apartment complex on Reynolds Avenue in Centralia where he worked as a maintenance man. Police said Joshua J. Meyers used a key to get access and took drills, activity which was captured on security video. Officers continue to investigate since other items have been reported missing from a complex owned by the same person on the 2900 block of Mount Vista Road, according to Sgt. Kurt Reichert. Meyers, of Centralia, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree burglary, according to the Centralia Police Department.

BRUSH FIRE IN DITCH

• Firefighters responded about 2 p.m. yesterday for a brush fire off Coma Road west of Vader. “It was burning in a ditch, starting to get into the timber,” Lewis County Fire District 15 Firefighter Patrick Jacobson said. He estimated the size at 100 feet by 50 feet. Crews from Winlock and Vader extinguished it, he said. Jacobson said he’d only be guessing as to the cause.

WRECKS

• Deputies and aid were called about 9:45 p.m. yesterday to the 300 block of Hewitt Road southeast of Chehalis where a motorcycle struck a deer. The 21-year-old driver from Salkum spoke of leg and arm pain but declined to be taken to the hospital, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. His 2001 Suzuki sustained major damage and was towed, the sheriff’s office said. He was cited for driving without a motorcycle endorsement on his license, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

• Two occupants of a passenger car escaped serious injury yesterday when they blew a stop sign entering U.S. Highway 12 west of Rochester and were hit by a semi truck. Trooper called at 3:30 p.m. to the scene at Moon Road reported the eastbound big rig had begun to slow because its driver watched one vehicle turn right off Moon Road without stopping and suddenly the second car did the same thing, Trooper Guy Gill said. The pair in the car were taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with minor injuries and have been released, Gill said. The driver was cited for second-degree negligent driving he said. Her car was heavily damaged on it left side, according to Gill.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for driving with a suspended license; responses for misdemeanor theft, receipt of a counterfeit bill, suspicious circumstances, complaints of drunken yelling man, noisy dogs … and more.

News brief: Rochester logger killed by falling tree

May 21st, 2013

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 28-year-old Rochester resident was killed in a logging accident yesterday morning in Cowlitz County

The Cowlitz County Sheriff’s Office reports deputies and aid called about 9 a.m. to the site roughly two miles west of Cougar learned that Kyle M. Schlesser died instantly when he was struck by a falling tree.

Schlesser and his partner, 43-year-old Owen Fickett of Onalaska, were falling separate trees when it happened, according to the sheriff’s office.

Fickett said he called out prior to dropping his tree to make sure Schlesser knew, and that the tree Fickett dropped hit a second tree which fell onto Schlesser.

The sheriff’s office said in a news release all indications are it was a very tragic accident.

Deputies were told Fickett has 23 years of logging experience without ever causing injury to himself or others. Schlesser has been logging nine years, the sheriff’s office stated.

He is the son of the owner of the logging company, James Schlesser, according to Chief Criminal Deputy Charlie Rozenzweig.

News brief: Centralia marijuana dispensary trial ends with hung jury

May 20th, 2013

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Lewis County jury deadlocked on whether 47-year-old Lauri Spangler committed a crime in connection with what police said was a medical marijuana dispensary they raided  two years ago shortly after it opened in downtown Centralia.

Spangler was the only one of four individuals in the case to go to trial. The others’ cases are already settled with plea agreements.

She was charged with maintaining a premises for using controlled substances, but her attorney told jurors last week all she did was get the business license and set up the checking account for her boyfriend Colby Cave.

Hub City Natural Medicine opened on Tower Avenue in early 2011 with a city-granted business license which the city said accidentally slid below its radar.

Jurors deliberated about five hours following the two-day trial last week in Lewis County Superior Court.

Lewis County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher said jurors didn’t stick around on Friday to talk so that he or the defense attorney might learn what their issues were.

However, documents now available in the court file offer some clues.

Jurors sent a question to the judge on Friday after lunch, asking for the definition of “knowingly”.

The judge’s written answer delivered back to the jury room essentially said he couldn’t answer that, they should refer to their jury instructions.

Within a half an hour, jurors sent out another note, informing the judge they couldn’t reach a unanimous verdict.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt queried them individually in open court, asking if they were certain they couldn’t reach a unanimous decision in a reasonable amount of time.

The jurors were all in agreement that they couldn’t reach an agreement.

The judge declared a mistrial.

Meagher said today he hasn’t made a decision on whether to retry Spangler, however, on Thursday he will go ahead and schedule another trial.

“We’ll make our formal decision later,” he said.
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For background, read “Centralia marijuana store case goes to trial” from Wednesday May 15, 2013, here

Early May north Centralia church fire could also be arson, officials now say

May 20th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Investigators are re-thinking the string of fires that struck Centralia churches and other buildings two weeks ago, classifying all of them now as either arson or undetermined.

2013.0503.arson.centerville_3

Centerville Western Store on May 3

In a three-hour span during the early morning hours of May 3, crews were called to four structure fires and then after daylight, learned of a failed attempt at a fifth location.

They still have no suspects or motive.

Initially, a 4 a.m. fire that damaged a wall at Calvary Chapel on Seward Avenue in north Centralia was believed to be caused by an electrical issue, but authorities are reexamining that conclusion in part because of the timing, according to Riverside Fire Authority Assistant Chief Rick Mack.

“It strains credulity to think that it isn’t somehow involved,” Mack said today.

The other undetermined fire is one that struck a coffee stand in north Chehalis at 1 o’clock that morning. Flames were quickly knocked down and while an investigator was considering the possibility of a cigarette butt in a trash can, Mack said they just don’t have enough information to say if it was one thing or another.

Clearly arson and attempted arson were Centralia fires that did minor to moderate damage at the rectory-turned teen center of the Centralia Church of the Nazarene, Cooks Hill Community Church  and Centerville, the western store at the north end of the Centralia Outlets, according to Mack.

Authorities are once again seeking the public’s assistance to find who is responsible.

None of the targets have suggested a person they think police should talk to, Mack said.

Mack spoke of chatter on social media that might reveal clues.

“We just encourage people, if they hear anything even if it seems unlikely or remote, we’d like to hear about it,” Mack said today.

No suspicious fires have been reported in the area since that night, but Mack pointed out the burned siding on Cooks Hill Community Church that wasn’t spotted until 10 a.m. that day.

“There may be fires that were set but not discovered,” he said.

He suggested some folks might want to take a look around the exterior of their buildings.

Mack said he, Fire Chief Jim Walkowski and the Centralia Police Department would each be happy to hear from anyone with information.

Crime Stoppers of Lewis County is also calling upon anyone with information to consider making an anonymous phone call to them, at 1-800-748-6422 or leaving a tip online at  www.lewiscountycrimestoppers.org

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For background, read “Arson: String of Centralia fires under investigation” from Friday May 3, 2013, here