News brief: Two Winlock residents seriously injured in morning wreck

January 18th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 49-year-old father and his 16-year-old son were airlifted after a single-vehicle accident south of Winlock this morning.

A deputy was called about 11:20 a.m. to the 1100 block of Winlock-Vader Road found the driver of a truck somehow lost control, hit the ditch, rolled over and landed on its top, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

The Winlock residents were both wearing seat belts but sustained serious head injuries, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

They were flown by helicopter to Southwest Washington Medical Center in Vancouver, Brown said. Their names were not released.

The 1996 Toyota 4by4 was totaled, she said.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

January 18th, 2013

Updated at 12:34 p.m.

GUNS AND TRUCK STOLEN FROM MIDDLE FORK ROAD

• A deputy responding to the 1300 block of Middle Fork Road near Onalaska yesterday evening took a report someone stole a man’s pickup truck and burglarized his home making off with several firearms, credit cards, checkbooks and documents such as a birth certificate and a passport. The 55-year-old victim said it had occurred sometime since Saturday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Among the missing weapons is a shotgun, a Remington 22 semi-automatic rifle and at least one other handgun, according to the sheriff’s office. There’s no indication how the intruder got inside, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown. The missing vehicle is described as a red and gray 1989 Ford F250 with a black lumber rack and toolbox in the bed of the truck, Brown said.

FIREARMS PILFERED FROM VEHICLE

• A Ruger 22 rifle and a 44 Magnum pistol vanished from the back seat of a pickup truck parked at a residence on the 900 block of E. Street in Centralia overnight, according to a report made to police yesterday morning. The owner said his vehicle had been locked but he found the driver’s door ajar, according to the Centralia Police Department.

ANOTHER AUTO THEFT IN CENTRALIA

• Centralia police took a report about 8:20 a.m. yesterday of a locked car stolen from the driveway in front of a residence on the 200 block of Tilley Avenue. The silver 1997 Honda Civic has a personalized license plate reading WWU 0905, according to the Centralia Police Department. Numerous Hondas and similar vehicles have gone missing locally in the past few days possibly because someone is using a “shaved” key to gain access, according to police. Sgt. Carl Buster said this morning that another officer discovered property stolen from one of the cars in the possession of a man he arrested in an unrelated case. “They’re digging into that now,” Buster said.

STUDENT BRUISED, WINDOW BROKEN IN SCHOOL BUS FIGHT

• Chehalis police were contacted yesterday by a mother who reported her teenage son was assaulted on his school bus the day before; struck in the stomach and the ear, as well as in the head hard enough his head broke a window on the bus. An officer investigated the alleged attack of the 14-year-old and found bruising and a swollen eye, according to Deputy Police Chief Randy Kaut. The suspect, also 14, faces a possible charge of fourth-degree assault, according to Kaut.

OOPS

• A woman presumably trying to stay out of trouble for driving with a suspended license when she was pulled over by a sheriff’s deputy last night allegedly gave her sister’s name as her own, but ended up in jail for making a false statement because the deputy recognized her, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Jennifer A. Haggard, of Onalaska, was stopped on the 300 block of Napavine Road East in Chehalis because of expired car tabs, according to the sheriff’s office. She was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail for the false statement and first-degree driving on a suspended license, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

$100 GAS DRIVE OFF

• Police were called about 1:30 p.m. yesterday when someone in an older brown Suburban pumped about $100 worth of fuel at a service station on West Main Street and then left without paying for it. No arrest was made.

VANDALISM

• Chehalis police were called yesterday morning to a church on the 1800 block of Snively Avenue where someone had kicked in the door to a storage shed. Nothing appeared to be missing, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

• Police took a report yesterday morning of tires slashed on a vehicle during the night at the 3100 block of Galvin Road in Centralia.

• A 28-year-old homeless man was arrested about 1:30 p.m. yesterday when  Chehalis police detective spotted him spray painting on a storage container at Northwest Prindle and Front streets.  Matthew E. Eastman was arrested for third-degree malicious mischief and then released, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

• Centralia police were contacted yesterday afternoon about gang-style graffiti spray painted onto a sidewalk on the 1500 block of Oxford Avenue.

WRECK

• A 21-year-old Winlock resident t was hospitalized yesterday after a two-vehicle collision at the 800 block of Highway 603 west of Chehalis. A deputy responding about 4 p.m. learned a Toyota Forerunner made a left turn in front of the Winlock man’s Mazda, totaling the Mazda, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The Mazda driver had shoulder and leg pain and was taken by ambulance to Providence Centralia Hospital, according to the sheriff’s office. The Forerunner had only minor damage and it’s 20-year-old driver from Lacey was reportedly uninjured, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown. He was cited for failing to yield and having no insurance, Brown said.

Michael Patton: Gift of reflective vest couldn’t save confused pedestrian from freight train

January 17th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – Why was a grown man who lived 13 miles out of town, and no longer drove, standing near the outside rail of the tracks in downtown Centralia in the middle of the night?

Nobody knows for sure, because he was struck and killed by a freight train last week.

But his ex-wife has a pretty good idea.

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Michael T. Patton

Michael T. Patton, 58, lived alone in a house he built on Centralia-Alpha Road in Chehalis. Alzheimer’s ran in his family.

Some months ago, he’d developed a routine of walking to Centralia every day to visit his ex-wife, Gene Inmon.

Inmon was the one who took him to the Veteran’s Hospital in Seattle last May, where the doctor who took a brain scan told her he didn’t know how Patton was even functioning.

“I was around him every day so I didn’t notice it like other people did,” Inmon said. “But it was like every day, there was another piece of him gone.

“It’s a terrible disease.”

Thankfully his truck finally broke down, so he had to quit driving, Inmon said on a recent day as she recounted the downward spiral she witnessed in her former husband.

Sometimes he was giggly, as though he were a kid again, she said.

Adult Protective Services had begun the process to get him a guardian to mange his affairs, she said. He didn’t even know how old he was, she said, he needed to go into a some kind of home.

“I was terrified something was going to happen to him, because he was so confused,” she said.

Inmon, a sometimes substitute teacher who also works in an office in Tenino, said the disease came on fast and progressed rapidly, leaving few traces of the former “Pe Ell boy.”

Patton was single father who raised his three children in Pe Ell, she said. When he was younger, he was a a medic in the Army and served in Germany, she said.

For 35 years, Patton worked for Weyerhaeuser harvesting pine cone seeds during the season and then as a contractor in the off-season.

Inmon and Patton lived in Doty during their five-year marriage, after his daughter and two sons were mostly grown.

He was a fix-it guy, that little old ladies loved and a guitar player who composed songs he shared with friends, at home and at church, she said.

He attended Centralia Bible Chapel every Sunday before he got sick, she said.

Early last week, Patton arrived in Centralia with an orange reflective vest. Someone had stopped him on the road and given it to him, Inmon said. She doesn’t know who. He just told her it was a “gift.”

Inmon said it was his habit to stop and sort of hunker down into his shoulders when traffic would go by.

The day before he was killed, Patton wore his vest. He and Inmon did some shopping, had lunch, and she got him some movies before driving him home.

That night, she got a phone call from a process server looking for Patton’s address so he could deliver the guardianship papers.

It was 9 o’clock, she said.

“I told him, he’s asleep, he’s sick, don’t get him all riled up,” she said. “And that’s exactly what happened. I’m sure he was heading here.”

Patton died hours later.

Centralia police were called about 12:30 a.m. on January 9 to the area near Chestnut Street and South Tower Avenue.

Police were told by the engineer and conductor of the Union Pacific train they were near the Gold Street viaduct when they saw him and began sounding the horn.

According to the police report, the man was facing west with his hands in his pockets and just stood there.

He turned his head toward the train just before impact, police wrote.

Patton’s body landed only about 10 feet from the tracks. He was wearing the reflective vest over his leather coat, according to detective Rick Hughes. With him was a newly purchased pack of cigarettes and an unscratched lottery ticket, Hughes wrote.

The locomotive was stopped in the middle of the intersection at Maple Street. The engineer said he believed the train was slowed down to less than 40 mph.

Patton probably didn’t even know what the train’s headlight was, Inmon said.

His death was determined to have been accidental.

“It’s all very sad, and it should not have happened,” Inmon said. “There’s a side of me that’s angry and sad, and a part of me that thinks he’s released from that.”

Last year in Washington, there were 14 people struck and killed by trains in Washington. The year before, there were 26.

The stretch of tracks through Centralia is the busiest route in the state, with an average of 60 trains each day.

Patton is survived by his children, Jennifer Coucoules, Allen Patton and Edward Patton, their families and also by two brothers and two sisters, according to Inmon.

A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday Jan. 26, 2013 at 1 p.m. at Centralia Bible Chapel, 209 N. Pearl St., Centralia, Wash. A potluck will follow.

Instead of flowers, his family requests donations be made to the Lewis County Veteran’s Relief Fund, 360 NW North St., Chehalis, Wash., 98532 or to the University of Washington Alzheimer’s Research Fund.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

January 17th, 2013

MIDDLE SCHOOL DRUGS

• A 12-year-old boy was taken to the Lewis County Juvenile Detention Center yesterday because he allegedly brought a hydrocodone pill with him to Centralia Middle School and gave it to a 12-year-old girl. It came to the attention of authorities when the girl went to an adult at school because she was experiencing ill effects, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DOMESTIC DISPUTE LEADS TO ARREST

• A 42-year-old Chehalis man was arrested yesterday for allegedly threatening to kill his girlfriend. Michael J. Folden, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for felony harassment, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

BURGLARY MIDDLE FORK ROAD

• A deputy was called yesterday to a residential burglary at a home on the 1500 block of  Middle Fork Road near Onalaska. The homeowner said he returned home to discover a laptop computer and camera was missing, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

VEHICLE THEFT

• Centralia police took a report about 7:40 a.m. today of 2012 black Honda 700 motorcycle stolen from the 1300 block of Belmont Avenue. It’s owner said the key is stuck in the ignition and cannot be removed. It has a British Columbia license plate of S70757, according to the Centralia Police Department.

MONEY MISSING

• Chehalis police responded to a call yesterday to an insurance office on Boistfort Street in which about $150 cash was discovered missing. There is more than one office in the building, and no forced entry was found, so it’s not clear when someone may have gotten inside, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

• Chehalis police were contacted by an individual yesterday about unauthorized bank card withdrawals from his account that occurred while he was staying at the Chehalis Inn on Southwest Interstate Avenue. The case, in which abut $3,500 is missing, is under investigation, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

COMPUTERS TAKEN

• Centralia police responded in less than 24 hours to two thefts of  computers, both of which have identified suspects. This morning, a woman on the 600 block of Nick Road said a friend of her son left the home with a laptop computer, but not with permission to take it according to the Centralia Police Department. Yesterday afternoon, a laptop was reported missing from the 1000 block of Mellen Street, according to police.

Breaking news: Tenino fourth grade teacher arrested for child porn

January 17th, 2013

Updated at 1:51 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Tenino Elementary School teacher who is also a Boy Scout volunteer was arrested yesterday for possession of child pornography.

James D. Mobley, 46, came under investigation as authorities examined the records of an international company that distributed child porn through the mail, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Authorities allegedly discovered that Mobley purchased materials from the company on multiple occasions between February of 2009 and January of 2011, according to a news release today.

Mobley is described by federal authorities as a fourth grade teacher who is also a private tutor and active as a volunteer with Boy Scouts.

Any parents who are concerned about any contact he may have had with their children are being asked to call the Tenino Police Department.

In a search of Mobley’s Tenino home yesterday, law enforcement seized a computer hard drive and also DVDs containing child porn, according to U.S. Attorney’s Office spokesperson Emily Langlie.

Mobley is being held at the Federal Detention Center in SeaTac pending a detention hearing. He is charged in federal court with possession of child pornography.

The case is being handled by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the Tenino police.

The international company which sold the images is not named in the criminal complaint against Mobley, but it was almost two years ago when an unspecified foreign law enforcement agency searched the business and seized hundreds of child porn DVDs and business records, according to Langlie.

Missing elderly Centralia man back home, safe

January 17th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

An 80-year-old man with early stages of dementia who went missing early yesterday from his Centralia home ended up at a hospital in Everett, although police aren’t sure why.

“We think a little confusion on his part,” Centralia Police Department Sgt. Stacy Denham said this morning. “Everyone in his family lives south; no one knows why he went north.”

Raymond E. Wolford is okay and back home with his family, according to police.

Police were called to his home near Providence Centralia Hospital about 1:20 a.m. yesterday when his wife realized he and his car were gone. Wolford has late-stage cancer and requires medication daily, according to police.

Officer Mike Lowrey said last night around 8:30 p.m., officers were notified by the family Wolford was located in Everett, about 100 miles away.

Denham said he apparently drove himself there.

Read about questions raised following Thurston judge’s refusal to perform gay weddings …

January 17th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Seattle Times writes the while the state’s newly amended marriage law exempts clergy from performing same-sex weddings, Thurston County Superior Court Judge Gary Tabor’s opting out from conducting gay ceremonies raises questions.

Read abut it here