Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

Onalaska fire station condemned

Friday, December 29th, 2017

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS  – The two buildings that comprise the Onalaska fire department’s main station have been condemned.

Lewis County Fire District 1 Board of Commissioners Chair Rich Bainbridge said it wasn’t a surprise.

The notice dated yesterday indicates numerous issues such as structural dilapidation with wood rot, interior vegetation growth and inhalation hazards such as mold, asbestos and mice droppings.

“Everything you can think of is wrong with it,” Bainbridge said. “Obviously it caught us at an awkward time.”

He said they have been visited off and on this week by Labor and Industries and Lewis County.

“We had a meeting last night, L&I came down last night from Olympia,” he said. “They said, you’ve gotta get out of these buildings now.”

The station is located at 244 Carlisle Avenue.

Bainbridge said the district has two satellite stations it can use, but exactly where the fire engines and other equipment will be parked is unknown.

“I can’t answer that right now, where everything is going to go,” he said.

The newly appointed Fire Chief Adam Myer is taking an inventory of the district’s belongings, he said.

The district owns property, six acres, for a new building.

Bainbridge said an engineering firm is in the process of putting together a design and once they know the final cost, they plan to go for a bond to build it.

“That’s been my target since I became commissioner,” he said.

The three-member board of commissioners normally meets the third Thursday of each month, but some special meetings will likely be held, Bainbridge said.

November’s meeting was held in the office area at the Carlisle Avenue location and an emergency meeting the following week took place in the large bay just adjacent.

The second meeting was heavily attended and contentious, as the board had just dismissed the fire chief and then one-third of the volunteers resigned in protest.

Bainbridge isn”t sure where the next meeting will take place.
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For background, read “Commissioners, volunteers clash at Onalaska fire department” from Thursday November 23, 2017, here

Stolen guns behind Silver Creek dispute, gun shots

Thursday, December 28th, 2017
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Roberto L. Mendez, in green striped jail garb, is represented by temporary defense attorney Kevin Nelson in Lewis County Superior Court

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Sunday’s incident in which shots were fired near a gas station in Silver Creek and one man was arrested led to the recovery of five firearms stolen in a recent Lewis County burglary.

Roberto L. Mendez, 32, of Mossyrock, reportedly told deputies he fired his handgun into the air as he and a 39-year-old Winlock man drove away in separate vehicles following an argument.

Mendez said the dispute was because he had not sold some guns the man provided him the week prior, because he believed they were “hot”, according to charging documents.

Mendez was charged yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court with one count of drive-by shooting, five counts of possessing a stolen firearm and possession of methamphetamine. He remains held in the Lewis County Jail with bail set at $100,000.

Charging documents in his case state that deputies dispatched about 11:30 a.m. on Sunday to the 2900 block of U.S. Highway 12 spoke to a clerk at the gas station who said there had been two males parked who appeared to be in an argument but they left. She heard what she thought was two gun shots, but didn’t know who fired a gun or where the shots came from, Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead wrote.

The 39-year-old man was contacted at his home and didn’t want to cooperate but an acquaintance who had been with him said as they each drove away, Mendez stuck his hand out of his driver’s side window and fired a handgun into the air two times, according to Halstead.

Deputies located Mendez through a traffic stop and he allegedly admitted to firing the gun.

When they searched his vehicle, they found the handgun and five other guns. On Tuesday, a detective showed the victim of a recent burglary pictures of the five guns and he identified them as his which had been taken from his home, according to Halstead.

Mendez’s arraignment is scheduled for next Thursday.

Cispus: Independence Day shooting of veteran labeled justifiable homicide

Thursday, December 21st, 2017
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Dusty Phelps
1966 – 2017

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Dusty Phelps had recently been evicted from his home at the Mount Adams Motel in Randle, and set up camp in the Cispus area south of Randle.

His belongings were stored in his multi-roomed tent, his many guns were packed inside the Chevrolet Tahoe which was parked sideways partially blocking the entrance to his campsite. There was a separate child-sized tent with bedding inside for his dogs.

Twice earlier that day, he’d been to the motel and invited former neighbors to come check out his camp and shoot off a few rounds. It was the Fourth of July.

By that evening, the 51-year-old lay dead on the ground in his camp, from a gunshot wound.

Deputies were dispatched after a  911 call at 7:14 p.m. on July 4 from a 63-year-old Glenoma man who said he shot an individual at a campsite in self defense.

Law enforcement responded to the area, on Forest Service Road 2801 off Cispus Road, in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest to investigate.

Within days, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office related some of what they had learned. The man and his wife from Glenoma said they were out for a drive in the woods, when they heard gunshots going through the trees.

The couple drove into Phelps’ campsite to contact him about discharging firearms in an unsafe manner. They said Phelps approached the driver’s side door of their vehicle and fired multiple shots, to include one round into their interior of the vehicle.

John Arnold fired one round, striking Phelps in his head.

Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Dusty Breen said the initial evidence appeared consistent with self defense, but the case would be forwarded to prosecutors for evaluation.

Last week, Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer relayed to the lead detective that his thorough review made it clear Arnold acted in self defense. No criminal charges would be filed.

Arnold declined, through his wife in a phone call, to comment.

Phelps’ younger sister is still mourning, making plans for a military burial at Fort Richardson National Cemetery in her hometown of Anchorage.

“If that’s what it is, that’s what it is,” Rebecca Phelps said upon learning the final determination.

Her brother isn’t the type who would harm someone, she said, unless he felt threatened. She expressed her wish, repeatedly, the Arnolds would have done things differently that day.

“It wouldn’t have happened if he just stayed away, call the police,” she said. “He took it upon himself to take himself, his wife and his gun and confront my brother. My brother didn’t drive up to him.”

Chief Breen said last week, his recollection was there was very little conversation between the two men before shots were fired. The incident report, which includes interviews with the Arnolds, offers very little detail about what was said.

John Arnold and his wife Violet Arnold recalled the crucial moments somewhat differently from each other.

John Arnold didn’t mention any words being exchanged, until a deputy spoke with him a second time, after hearing Violet Arnold’s account.

“Violet said the man and her husband had a short conversation about shooting safely and not killing someone,” Detective Gabe Frase wrote of his interview that took place that night.

Frase spoke to John Arnold again: “He told me he remembers just starting to talk when the shots occurred,” Frase wrote.

Rebecca Phelps hadn’t seen her brother since 2013, when she lived with him for a short time in Yelm, but they kept in touch through Facebook and by phone.

She said her brother was in the military about 25 years, doing terms in Iraq and Kuwait. He was discharged in 2010 or 2011, with an injury to the side of his jaw and ear from an IED, she said.

“That really had a lot to do with his post traumatic stress disorder,” she said. “He smoked weed, I know he drank too.”

She called him a loner, who had his dogs, and spent his time hunting and fishing.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office’s reports on the incident contain interviews with numerous people who knew Phelps, interviews with the Arnolds and an interview with one person who spoke with John Arnold that evening.

Almost three weeks later, a detective went to the Mount Adams Motel where the owner said Phelps had been evicted because of complaints from other residents he was aggressively harassing them to give him things.

One of his old neighbors said Phelps was quick to lose his temper, another said Phelps didn’t have any problems with people at the motel. One said Phelps often came to his place to watch the news, and was especially interested if there was any news about the war. Another resident said Phelps was “already drunk” when he stopped by earlier on July 4.

While numerous deputies and detectives responded that evening, it was a trooper and a Morton police officer who arrived first. A Washington state Department of Fish and Wildlife sergeant responded as well.

A trooper detained John Arnold at the Cispus Learning Center, where he had gotten a lift to from a citizen who found him walking, trying to get a cell signal. He had left his wife at the campsite.

WSDFW Sgt. Brad Rhoden decided to check the area for potential witnesses and didn’t find any other camps.

“I did locate, down the road from the shooting, a turnaround spot in which the last vehicle to leave it had accelerated out, spinning the back tires,” Rhoden wrote in his report.

He got a lead on who had given John Arnold a ride and went to talk to him. Don Reichert, a camper from Portland, said he turned off Forest Service Road 28 when he came across a man who said he’d just shot someone and needed to get to a phone.

Reichert said John Arnold had told him he and his wife were driving, heard shooting and bullets hitting the trees as they passed the campsite and then drove back “to tell the shooters to knock it off,” according to the report.

Detective Frase arrived to the scene about 8:40 p.m. It was then he interviewed the Glenoma couple, separately.

John Arnold said he, his wife and dog had gone for a drive checking campsites, something they often do after a weekend to see what others have left behind.

Both Arnolds said they started hearing gunfire flying through the trees near them and turned around to go express their concerns to the shooter and tell them where they could go to shoot safely.

They pulled into Phelps’ campsite, driving around the back of his Tahoe, toward his tent.

Violet Arnold said the guy sitting by the tent got up and walked to their car, and as he and her husband talked, she leaned forward in her seat to see around her husband.

Violet Arnold said the man cocked his gun and aimed it at her, and she leaned back in her seat and closed her eyes. “She then heard two or three shots.”

John Arnold told Frase as the male walked up, his wife noted the male had a pistol in his hand, and John Arnold retrieved a pistol from his driver’s door and put it on his lap.

John Arnold said as the male arrived at his open driver’s window, the male immediately fired two shots into the ground and then pointed the pistol into the window at the couple.

John Arnold said he used his left hand to shove the male’s hand toward the windshield and used his right hand to fire his pistol once, striking him the head.

Investigators examined the scene and took photos, returning the following day to collect evidence and finish up.

Four of Phelps’ pit bulls were taken by the Lewis County Animal Shelter, and a fifth one escaped.

The reports go on to describe other items collected as evidence.

One of the first sheriff’s deputies to arrive noticed a large amount of spent ammunition throughout the camp, and observed wounds on several trees with sap running out.

A Ruger 9 mm handgun was located on the driver’s seat of the Arnold’s vehicle. A Ruger .380 pistol was retrieved from inside a purse on the passenger side floorboard. A 12-gauge shotgun was stored in the back of the Durango.

Another Ruger 9 mm lay on the ground on the right side of Phelps’ body.

Inside Phelps’ Tahoe, were five long guns, on the backseat and in its trunk area. Written in the dust on the back window were the words, “Remember Ramadi” and a circle with a star inside.

From atop wooden box next to a chair, detectives collected a pack of Marlboro cigarettes, a pipe, a box of ammunition, an unopened can of beer and a lighter.

At the south side of the fire pit was an orange Igloo water cooler. Sitting on its top was ammunition and an AR-15-type magazine. Next to that, on the ground was a Sig Sauer 556 semi automatic rifle with its barrel elevated by a bipod.

A table held a camp stove, cooking supplies and food. Between two trees, sat other camping supplies, an open case of beer and an open case of Dr. Pepper. Empty beer cans were found in the fire pit and other places around the site.

Among the items inside the large tent were several military sea bags, a military rucksack and clothing, including an Army dress uniform with Phelps’ name on it.

A deputy tried but was unable to close the passenger side window of the Arnold’s Durango before departing the scene.

After their Durango was back at their home, the Arnolds’ called to say the window switch had worked fine before, but it was damaged during the shooting.

A detective on July 6, went to the Arnolds’ residence and retrieved two bullet fragments from inside the passenger door of the Durango.

Early this month, the results from the Washington State Crime Laboratory were received by a sheriff’s detective, regarding the bullet fragments. The analysis eliminated it as having been fired from John Arnolds’ gun. The lab could not say for sure if the fragments were or were not from Dusty Phelps’ gun.

Dusty Phelps’ funeral will be held on June 14 in Anchorage, after the ground thaws out.
•••

For background, read “News brief: Coroner reveals name, info on man killed near Randle” from Tuesday July 11, 2017, here

Second of five suspects charged with Centralia motel robbery

Friday, December 15th, 2017

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A second young woman was charged today in connection with last week’s incident in Centralia where a man said he arrived to motel room and was hit over the head and two armed males stole his wallet and car.

The 17-year-old girl the victim said he was texting with and asked him to meet her there was charged this week as an adult, with first-degree robbery and theft of a motor vehicle.

Today, 18-year-old Claire J. Carsoner-Garcia was charged with the same offenses in Lewis County Superior Court.

Temporary defense attorney Rachael Tiller asked for lower bail, stating Carsoner-Garcia has no criminal convictions and has been extremely cooperative.

“I know she has been fully cooperative,” Tiller said.

Judge Joely O’Rourke imposed $150,000 bail, the same amount as she imposed for Maria I. Sevilla-Martinez on Wednesday.

Charging documents for Carsoner-Garcia offer further details, but they are somewhat vague.

It happened around noontime on Dec. 6.

The victim Jose Ramirez-Ruz told police he had arranged via text messages to meet an ex-girlfriend at the motel on the 700 block of Harrison Avenue to have sex, but when he entered the room, he was immediately hit in the head by a male hiding behind the door, according to court documents.

He said Sevilla-Martinez – the 17-year-old who asked him there – was present, along with two other females. He said the males took his wallet and the keys to his vehicle and said if he left the room, people outside would shoot him, the documents relate.

All five of the individuals left, and his vehicle was taken, according to court documents.

Through investigation, law enforcement discovered Carsoner-Garcia was the person who rented the room.

New information describes that when a detective spoke with the 17-year-old, she said Jose had earlier that day been in the motel room and left after “an incident” occurred between the two of them, according to charging documents.

Sevilla-Martinez subsequently told Carsoner-Garcia what happened and Carsoner-Garcia immediately called her homeys and told them about what happened, the documents relate.

The documents don’t say what the “incident” was.

Several minutes later, the two males arrived and Carsoner-Garcia told Sevilla-Martinez to get ahold of Jose and have him come back, according to the documents.

“Maria stated at first she didn’t want to, she just wanted to forget about it, but after being pressured, she finally gave in and contacted Jose to have him return,” Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Jeffrey Schaap wrote in the affidavit regarding probable cause.

Sevilla-Martinez said she didn’t know what the males were planning on doing, but Carsoner-Garcia kept telling her they would take care of it, according to Schaap.

First-degree robbery is a class A felony, with a maximum penalty of life in prison.
•••

For background, read “Centralia teen held on $150,000 bail for motel robbery of ex-boyfriend” from Wednesday December 13, 2017, here

Head-on crash near Hoquiam injures four local men

Friday, December 15th, 2017

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Five people were injured including a 75-year-old driver who crossed the centerline and four Lewis County residents in the other vehicle yesterday afternoon in Grays Harbor County.

Troopers were called just before 5 p.m. to the scene on state Route 101 about three miles north of Hoquiam, according to the Washington State Patrol. The highway was fully blocked for five hours.

Both drivers were airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle and both vehicles were totaled, according to the state patrol.

Christopher E. Lopez, 34, of Chehalis, was behind the wheel of a Dodge Dakota pickup headed southbound near milepost 91 when a northbound Dodge Durango crossed the centerline and they collided head on, the state patrol reports.

Lopez’s three passengers were transported by aid to Community Hospital, according to the investigating trooper. They are Seth M. Larsen, 24, of Morton; Clayton N. Larsen, 35, from Curtis; and Derek J. Watson, 30, Chehalis, according the state patrol.

The driver of the Dodge Durango, Eddie C. Valentine, 75, from Copalis Beach, was flown to Harborview.

The cause of the wreck is under investigation.

Centralia teen held on $150,000 bail for motel robbery of ex-boyfriend

Wednesday, December 13th, 2017
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Maria I. Sevilla-Martinez meets with temporary defense attorney Kevin Nelson prior to her bail hearing in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A 17-year-old Centralia girl was arrested yesterday and charged in adult court today for her alleged involvement in an incident at a Centralia motel last week in which a man was robbed of his wallet, money and car after being struck over the head with a pistol.

The victim told police he had arranged via text messages to meet an ex-girlfriend at the motel on the 700 block of Harrison Avenue to have sex, but when he entered the room, he was immediately hit in the head by a male hiding behind the door, according to court documents.

In the room with his ex-girlfriend were two other females and a second male, according to the documents.

Maria I. Sevilla-Martinez, 17, was brought before a judge this afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court charged with first-degree robbery and theft of a motor vehicle.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Paul Masiello asked that she be held on $500,000 bail.

Temporary defense attorney Kevin Nelson asked for lesser bail, noting Sevilla-Martinez lives with her parents in Centralia, has a child and that the state had alleged no affirmative conduct on her part.

Judge Joely O’Rourke imposed $150,000 bail and determined Sevilla-Martinez would be housed at the Lewis County Jail, although separate from the adult population.

Masiello said after the hearing he was not aware of any of the other suspects yet being arrested.

Charging documents state that Centralia police were called on Wednesday to the motel, where they spoke with Jose Ramirez-Ruz, who was bleeding from his head.

Ramirez-Ruz told police he had been assaulted by the two males, both of whom were armed, according to charging documents. He said the males took his wallet and the keys to his vehicle and said if he left the room, people outside would shoot him, the documents relate.

All five of the individuals left, taking his Subaru, then he called police, Lewis County Chief Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher wrote in the affidavit regarding probable cause. Centralia police police last week described the stolen vehicle as a black 1995 Suburban.

Police described the suspects as in their late teens to early 20s and the victim as a man in his 30s.

A police detective viewed video surveillance footage and observed it showed Sevilla-Martinez as one of the females leaving the room and contacted her yesterday at her home in Centralia, placing her under arrest.

Given her age and the level of the charge, the state charged her in adult court, as it is an auto-decline circumstance, according to Meagher.
•••

For background, read “Vehicle, money stolen by armed suspects in Centralia” from Thursday December 7, 2017, here

Vader indoor marijuana nursery shut down

Tuesday, December 12th, 2017
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•••

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The man arrested in Vader smiled and thanked detectives when they complimented him on how nice his indoor marijuana growing operation was, according to court documents.

Heip D. Doan, 33, allegedly told Lewis County sheriff’s detectives he had multiple growing operations when he lived in California and had not yet started the paperwork to get permits for his ventures in Washington, the documents relate.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office had just finished seizing and loading up 674 mature plants from the property on the 700 block of B Street in Vader on Friday evening when Doan arrived to the home he said he rents from his sister-in-law. He looked at the back of the transport truck and said, “You’re taking my stuff,” court documents state.

Doan was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail.

Initiative 502 , voted into law in November 2012, made it legal for for individuals 21 or older to possess as much as one ounce of marijuana and also set up rules under which licensees may cultivate and package the greens and related products in Washington state.

Lewis County leaders chose to require applicants to provide approval from the federal government, which still outlaws marijuana, so no such businesses can operate legally in unincorporated Lewis County.

Doan was charged yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court with manufacture of marijuana, a class C felony with a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

Temporary defense attorney Rachael Tiller asked for the bail to be unsecured, and to take into consideration her client’s prior service in the U.S. Navy in Washington, and honorable discharge.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Paul Masiello noted the defendant had no prior convictions or warrants but said his driver’s license indicates he lives in San Jose, California.

Judge Joely O’Rourke imposed $25,000 bail.

His arraignment was initially scheduled for Thursday, but Tiller told the judge Doan has a court date in California on Wednesday and asked for his arraignment here to be set on Dec. 21.

Masiello said there was a December 2016 arrest in California for driving under the influence.

The judge agreed Doan could fly to California for his hearing, returning on Friday but required him to check in with the court on Monday.

While the outbuilding where Doan allegedly grew marijuana was across the street from Vader City Hall, local authorities only learned about it because Doan’s driver’s license was found at a home in Pacific County where Doan’s brother was arrested two weeks ago for unlawful marijuana growing.

Lewis County sheriff’s detectives began investigating and found the brother was a previous Lewis County PUD customer at the Vader property and Doan was the current customer, according to court documents. The electricity bill was unusually high, at $600 for a two-month period, according to court documents.

Deputies conducted surveillance at the Vader location twice, observing a residence, a garage and a large green outbuilding, which had all its windows “blacked out”, according to charging documents.

Some of the clues included a detectives detecting the odor of unburnt marijuana from 200 feet away, a humming noise consistent with the use of lights and fans, and a stack of potting soil packages and containers of liquid fertilizer they saw through a garage window, according to court documents.

When they executed the search warrant on Friday, they found the green outbuilding had been divided into three rooms, filled with growing marijuana plants.

“The rooms were all set up with ventilation into carbon filters and had lighting attached to programmable timers,” Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Joel DeFazio wrote in the affidavit regarding probable cause.

Deputies confiscated the plants and the the growing equipment, as well as more than $2,500 cash and several pieces of indicia from inside the house.

This arrest was tied to a growing operation in Grayland in Pacific County, but Sheriff Rob Snaza said it’s all tied together to the huge investigation in that began in Grays Harbor County.

On Nov. 28, the Grays Harbor County Drug Task Force oversaw a series of at least 50 search warrants getting served there, in Thurston County and in King County following an investigation into illegal marijuana growing operations by Chinese nationals. They had learned of numerous homes being purchased for that purpose, primarily for cash.
•••

For background, read “Illegal marijuana growing by Chinese nationals targeted in Grays Harbor County” from Tuesday November 28, 2017, here