Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

Lawyers: Who broke into the safe at Frosty’s tavern?

Wednesday, June 12th, 2013
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Lonzo W. Lawson II, left, listens to a deputy prosecutor accuse him of making off with thousands of dollars in a nighttime burglary.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office argued to a jury yesterday that the nearly $15,000 cash stolen in a break-in to a Napavine tavern earlier this spring was taken by a 37-year-old homeless man who pedaled seven miles on a bicycle to commit the burglary.

Lonzo W. Lawson II is charged with multiple offenses in connection with the April 9 hit on Frosty’s Saloon and Grill on West Front Street.

Jurors heard testimony the building had no alarm system and that the safe’s combination was written on a shelf near it.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Shane O’Rourke said Lawson learned from a cell mate in the Lewis County Jail, a Frosty’s employee, what an easy target the business would be.

O’Rourke contended Lawson told two buddies what he was going to do and returned with wads of cash which they spent on partying.

“A quick and easy pay day fell into Mr. Lawson’s lap, and he took it, O’Rourke said.

Lawson was arrested on April 12 at a Chehalis motel room, three days after the burglary. His trial in Lewis County Superior Court could last until early next week. Judge James Lawler is presiding.

O’Rourke told jurors the “cherry on top” of his case is the DNA found on a hat at the scene that matches the defendant.

The owner Gina Allen testified she did her usual bookwork on a Sunday, making sure to leave enough cash on hand for her next two days off, and also was getting ready to pay the property taxes.

Defense attorney Don Blair addressed the jury yesterday afternoon as well, suggesting there may be reason to think someone else was the culprit.

Blair told jurors they would learn a phone call the evening before asking what time the bar closed came from one of the buddy’s phones. And that friend is a drug dealer, a burglar, a thief and an informant, who wanted to get back at his client, Blair said.

“Some of what the state told you, we don’t disagree with,” Blair said.

He went on to repeat that the Frosty’s employee did talk while at the jail about how simple it would be to burglarize his workplace, but the conversations involved several inmates, he said.

“Frosty’s was an easy mark,” Blair said. “So it was a group over time he was talking to. He wasn’t just talking to Mr. Lawson.”

Lawson is charged with first-degree burglary, first-degree theft and possession of heroin and meth as well as two counts of trafficking in stolen property for allegedly sharing some of the loot with his friends.

Allen has since installed a security system at her business.

Seven charged for dealing meth in Randle

Tuesday, June 11th, 2013
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Leah D. Williams, 24, listens to defense attorney Bob Schroeter as she is charged in Lewis County Superior Court with delivery of methamphetamine.

Updated at 8:28 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Seven Randle residents went before a judge yesterday accused of selling methamphetamine to police informants at various times in the two months before last week’s roundup by more than two dozen law enforcement officers.

Among them was 24-year-old Leah D. Williams, whose worst crime before now was a ticket for littering in 2009.

Williams shares a home on Kiona Road with a 42-year-old construction worker. He was also arrested.

“She got caught up in the wrong crowd, let’s hope this is a wake up call,” her father Danny Williams said.

Danny Williams arranged for his daughter to move in with him in Morton if she was released from jail, since he anticipated she and her boyfriend would be prohibited from having contact with each other pending the outcome of their cases.

Leah D. Williams lives on $290 a month in financial support, plus food stamps, and has three young children, Chehalis attorney Bob Schroeter told the judge yesterday afternoon. She is charged with two counts of delivery of meth.

According to charging documents, on one occasion a confidential informant said they could purchase the drug from her boyfriend  Byron O. Daily and on another occasion said they could get it from her or her boyfriend.

Each time, the informant wanted more, but was only able to get a “quarter” for $20, according to the allegations.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey allowed Leah Williams released on a $5,000 signature bond, meaning she does not have to post bail money but will owe the court that amount if she fails to appear for any proceedings.

Friday’s arrests, dubbed Operation Big Bottom Bust for the Big Bottom Valley in which they took place some 50 miles east of Interstate 5, were coordinated by the Lewis County Regional Drug Task Force.

Ten individuals were arrested in the sweep, according to the sheriff’s office, but one was only for a warrant and two men were released without charges pending further investigation. The two are Chris Edward Green, 58, and Jason A Green, 24.

The defendants were all represented during yesterday afternoon’s hearing by Schroeter who negotiated bail and helped schedule arraignment dates.

The defendants ranged from as young as Williams to as old as 57-year-old Jack Wayne Mullins.

Mullins, a lifetime Lewis County resident who owns the property where he lives on Falls Road, was charged along with 52-year-old Diane L. Allison for the three times an informant allegedly came to their home and bought $40 worth of meth.

Allison has several prior drug convictions, according to prosecutors. Mullins has none, although he did get in trouble for driving under the influence in 2011, according to Schroeter.

All of the defendants were charged with either two counts or three counts of delivery of methamphetamine. None were charged with possession of the drug, although police said they conducted search warrants on Friday at at least three locations.

Law enforcement officers confiscated one vehicle, some cash and some methamphetamine – mostly “street level” amounts like $25 bags, according to Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Chief Criminal Deputy Gene Seiber.

Beginning at daybreak, the sheriff’s office and its SWAT team with assistance from three other police agencies hit five places in an hour and a half, Seiber said. The operation came after 14 undercover buys, he said.

It’s not like the community of Randle is some kind of large hub for supplying users in comparison to the rest of the county, according to the sheriff’s office.

“Meth is everywhere. Everywhere,” Seiber said. “It just happens we got in with this particular bunch.”

According to charging documents, the police-observed “buys” all took place at the defendant’s homes, except in the case of Robert D. LaChance Sr. who allegedly made his deals in a Randle parking lot and alongside U.S. Highway 12 in Glenoma. He lives with his parents on Ridge View Drive.

LaChance, 50, allegedly sold $160 worth of meth in one of his two transactions and $120 in the other.

LaChance’s legitimate income amounts to a $710 monthly payment from SSI, and like some of the others he has previous drug convictions.

The most recent undercover deals involved 42-year-old Keith Allen Sanders at his home on Morris Road where he’s lived for 30 years.

On June 3, sheriff’s detective Jeff Humphrey spoke with an informant who said he or she could purchase $40 worth of meth from Sanders, according to charging documents.

After the informant and their vehicle were searched, Humphrey provided the “pre-recorded” buy funds and then observed as the informant went to Sander’s home, charging documents relate. About 15 minutes later, the informant returned with a small baggie with a small amount of meth inside, according to the documents.

The same process was repeated the next day.

The highest bail any of them faced was $25,000 for Marty Joe Mullins, 48.

On one of the two visits informants made to Marty Mullins’ Kiona Road residence, they were made to wait while he retrieved the drugs from a neighbor’s place, according to charging documents.

Seiber said today they took 11 people into custody, and they are looking for number 12. It’s not clear who the 11th person was as the sheriff’s office announced only 10 arrests on Friday.

Morton police did arrest a 29-year-old woman for delivery of methamphetamine on Friday night after an officer was informed by someone they’d just witnessed a drug deal at an apartment on Westlake Avenue and provided a license plate numbers for a vehicle which left.

Twenty-seven-year-old Paul Leggett, of Glenoma, was subsequently located and arrested for possession of a small baggie of suspected meth.

Police arrested Bobbie E. Escontrias, 29, for delivery of a $20 amount of meth but found no drugs when the apartment was searched, according to charging documents in that case. On her person however, was found residue on a glass pipe, a baggie and a cotton ball, according to the documents.

Escontrias was charged yesterday with delivery, but with no criminal history, was allowed release on a $10,000 signature bond.

All of those charged will get a chance to make their pleas on Thursday or a week from Thursday in Lewis County Superior Court.
•••

RANDLE: THE ARRESTS, THE CHARGES AND BAIL

• Marty J. Mullins, 48. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $25,000

• Diane L. Allison, 52. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $10,000
• Jack W. Mullins, 57. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $10,000 unsecured.

• Byron O. Daily, 42. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $10,000 unsecured.
• Leah D. Williams, 24. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $5,000 unsecured.

• Robert D. LaChance Sr., 50. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $10,000.

• Keith A. Sanders, 42. Charge: Delivery of meth. Bail $20,000.

• Chris E. Green, 58. Arrested for delivery of meth, but released without charges pending further investigation.

• Jason A Green, 24. Arrested for delivery and possession of meth,  but released without charges pending further investigation

• Robert M. Church, 48. Arrested for felony warrant
•••

For background, read “Breaking news: Drug dealing investigation nets multiple arrests in Randle” from Friday June 7, 2013 at 10:20 a.m., here

Breaking news: Drug dealing investigation nets multiple arrests in Randle

Friday, June 7th, 2013
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Courtesy photo by Lewis County Sheriff’s Office

Updated at 11:16 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office has arrested 10 people this morning in the Randle area following a months-long drug investigation.

Deputies, along with three other law enforcement agencies and the state Department of Corrections, began their operation at daybreak, according to the sheriff’s office.

Officers are currently conducting searches at three different locations in Randle, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said in a news release.

One person was picked up on a warrant, but the rest have been booked into jail for delivery of methamphetamine, according to Brown. More arrests are expected, according to Brown.

The morning raids – dubbed Operation Big Bottom Bust, named for the Big Bottom Valley in which they took place – are being conducted by the sheriff’s office regional task force.

Assisting were officers from the Morton Police Department, the Chehalis Police Department and the Pacific County Sheriff’s Office. Brown said about 25 personnel are taking part.

Brown, a spokesperson for the sheriff’s office, said she did not know yet if any drugs have been found. Their work isn’t done.

“I don’t really know how long they will be out there, it could be hours,” she said.

Brown indicated the residences visited were located on the 100 block of Morris Road, the 100 and 200 blocks of Kiona Road, the 100 block of Falls Road and the 100 block of Ridge View Drive.

The arrested are:

• Keith Allen Sanders, 42, Delivery of meth
• Marty Joe Mullins, 48, Delivery of meth
• Chris Edward Green, 58, Delivery of meth
• Jason A Green – 24, Delivery and possession of meth
• Jack Wayne Mullins, 57, Delivery of meth
• Diane Lynn Allison, 52, Delivery of meth
• Robert Delano LaChance Sr, 50, Delivery of meth
• Byron Otis Daily, 42, Delivery of meth
• Leah Danyale Williams, 24, Delivery of meth
• Robert M Church, 48, Felony warrant

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Courtesy photo by Lewis County Sheriff’s Office

•••

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Courtesy photo by Lewis County Sheriff’s Office

Unexplainable Centralia murder case ends with three-decade sentence

Wednesday, June 5th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS –  Prosecutors offered no motive and last month’s four day trial revealed only the rejected self defense claim but today a courtroom finally heard a lengthy recitation from Weston G. Miller’s lawyer that shed light on last year’s fatal shooting of his houseguest in Centralia.

Miller is delusional.

The 30-year-old former welder could have but chose not to pursue an insanity defense, according to Centralia attorney J.P. Enbody.

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Weston G. Miller

Miller was diagnosed with paranoid delusional disorder by a psychiatrist who said the best course for him would be long term treatment at Western State Hospital, Enbody said.

“He was sure people were trying to poison him, including Ms. DeSalvo and Mr. Carson,” Enbody said.

Enbody read aloud passages from doctor’s reports that described how Miller placed security cameras around his B Street house, believed his neighbors were stealing from him, thought someone had hacked into his bank accounts and wouldn’t eat food unless it was pre-packaged because someone was trying to poison him.

His client didn’t know who to trust and was frightened of David Carson, Enbody said.

“He was preoccupied with people being after him, being in danger,” he said.

Miller was in Lewis County Superior Court today to be sentenced for first-degree murder. He was convicted by a jury last month in the death of 43-year-old David Wayne Carson.

Carson and his girlfriend Sara DeSalvo, who were on again off again homeless, were staying at the B Street home for a short time in exchange for DeSalvo doing some heavy cleaning.

Miller fired a 9 mm pistol at close range into Carson’s chest after asking him to step out of a bedroom.

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David Wayne Carson

Carson, who once worked with expensive show dogs in southern California and most recently as a millwright, was dead at the scene when police arrived on the afternoon of March 13, 2012.

Judge Richard Brosey gave Miller 30 years in prison.

He called it the most senseless and without explanation of homicides he’s seen in all his years.

Brosey said he didn’t need to decide if Miller was lying or just had a very warped perception of what occurred.

“Mr. Carson had no knife, he wasn’t advancing on you,” Brosey said. “It was an impossible scenario to have played out.”

Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher had told the judge the standard sentencing range given the conviction was from just shy of 26 years to almost 33 years. He asked for the top end.

“Quite frankly the state thinks that for taking a life, that is low, but we are bound by it,” Meagher said.

Meagher pointed out that Miller had ignored a previous court order prohibiting him from possessing firearms yet had four of them, using one to kill Carson. Furthermore, Meagher said, Miller was still refusing to take responsibility for what he did.

Meagher read a passage from a psychiatrist’s report that offered further insight.

It appears likely Miller may have downplayed his reported methamphetamine use; he said he was awake three days before the event, the deputy prosecutor said.

Miller’s disorder is consistent with delusional meth psychosis, he read.

According to Enbody, it’s not clear how much of a role methamphetamine played.

The documentation of his client’s deterioration goes back to October 2011.

“Even then, he thought people were trying to kill him,” Enbody told the court. “I think that’s the start of what everyone talked about; the disorder he slipped into for a variety of reasons.”

Miller had two stays at the mental health unit at Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, and tested negative for methamphetamine while he was there, Enbody said.

The diagnosis of paranoid delusional disorder he spoke of came after months of being locked up awaiting his trial, he said. Nobody drug tested him when he was arrested, Enbody said.

Today in the Chehalis courtroom, Miller chose to give a statement on his own behalf.

He said he only knew Carson three days but considered him a friend.

“I tell you the truth, I never wanted to hurt David, I had no motive,” Miller read from a piece of paper.

He spoke of himself as someone who’d purchased a home at age 21 to make a life for his family, was an outstanding citizen and worked until an on-the-job accident.

He told how the year 2011 saw his younger brother’s death and then he got behind in his accounting classes, got behind in his bills, and began showing signs of obsessive compulsive disorder and started to get paranoid.

During the trial, jurors heard descriptions of the shooting from the only two individuals – besides Carson – who were there.

DeSalvo and Miller agreed Miller knocked on the door of the bedroom. Miller said his two house guests had been fighting. DeSalvo said they were not.

When Miller spoke today, he maintained that Carson was “choking out” DeSalvo in the bedroom, that Carson let go of her and when he brought a knife up to the level of Miller’s throat, Miller fired at him.

He said he told DeSalvo to call 911.

“I know I shouldn’t have left, but I was in shock,” he said. “I just wanted to get out of the house and get somewhere safe.

Miller said he needed a hug from his father.

“Again, I want to say I’m sorry,” he read. “I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.”

DeSalvo and family members offered their thoughts in court today as well.

The 46-year-old woman called Miller a liar who murdered the love of her life. She advanced the theory he was a serial killer, who’d let a secret slip to her boyfriend.

“You told someone about something you didn’t want him to know,” DeSalvo said, facing Miller and raising her voice. “And that’s why you killed him.”

“Come clean,” she nearly shouted. “Where’s Kayla Croft-Payne and the other girls you killed?”

Enbody read a statement from his client’s younger sister, who was in the courtroom.

Crystal Miller said she looked up to her brother as a protector and as a proud father with a good heart, but she didn’t understand why he went the direction he did.

“Weston has shocked many people, including his friends and family,” Enbody read.

Carson’s grown daughter sat on a bench on the opposite side of the courtroom.

A statement from Caitlin Carson was read aloud for her.

“I hope every day you are reminded we lost our father on March 13, 2012,” her statement said. “But your daughter lost her father too.”

Carson’s brother Daniel Carson spoke softly when it was his turn.

Miller took his brother, his childhood friend, he said.

“Birds of a feather flock together,” he said. “That’s why my brother was at your house. He struggled with addiction.”

The conviction and sentencing were a small consolation, and it mattered not if he could ever understand why the murder took place, he said.

Miller reduced a man, a brother, a father, an uncle to a pile of ashes in a plastic bag, he said.

He told Miller he ought to have used his fists instead of a gun.

“I hope the court sends a message to the rest of meth users,” he said. “If you pick up a weapon and take somebody’s life, there’s going to be severe consequences.”

•••

For background, read:

• “Centralia murder trial: Self defense or premeditated?” from Thursday May 9, 2013 at 9:10 a.m., here

• “Centralia murder trial: In the defendant’s own words” from Friday May 10, 2013 at 10:13 a.m., here

• “Centralia murder trial: Miller found guilty in B Street shooting death” from Friday May 10, 2013 at 5:51 p.m., here

Lewis County rape case plagued with delays hits another hurdle

Friday, May 31st, 2013
Leo B. Bunker

Leo B. Bunker, in orange jail garb, listens while attorneys and a judge finalize details for his trial.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Lewis County rape trial that has been repeatedly postponed because of illnesses involving the defendant, the victim and even a judge faces yet another test.

Doctors say the stress of facing in court the man she says violently raped her and otherwise physically abused her during their short marriage could trigger another heart attack for the victim.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Joely O’Rourke told a judge today the victim has an ongoing coronary condition, has had a quadruple bypass and has 28 “stents”. She recently had a heart attack, according to the prosecutor.

O’Rourke said she’s been in close contact with the woman’s treating physician and cardiologist.

“Both have highly advised against her testifying at all,” O’Rourke said.

The prosecutor’s comments came during a hearing today in which she requested the woman be allowed to testify via video, specifically using Skype on a 70-inch screen which would be present in the courtroom.

O’Rourke described how when Leo B. Bunker’s first trial began in January, the victim had so much anxiety, she broke down sobbing and had to be picked her up off the floor.

“I know its unprecedented, but I think we have the technology,” she told the judge. “I think if there ever was a case to do something like this, this is it.”

Judge James Lawler denied the motion, but called it an unusual situation.

“Her condition doesn’t make it impossible for her testify, but that it would be stressful,” Lawler said. “Given that, I can’t find she’s unavailable.”

“It will be uncomfortable, it is for every victim that has to  come in to testify,” he said.

The trial is scheduled to begin next week.

Bunker, 53, of Winlock, has been locked up for about a year and half awaiting trial.

He was charged in December 2011.

The victim contacted law enforcement about a month earlier, describing how she’d recently reconnected with the man who she dated in high school, according to charging documents.

In the beginning, it was okay, but then he began to dominate her, would not let her talk on the phone or leave the house without his permission, she told the deputy.

Charging documents allege that in early October 2011, he forced her to go to Vancouver, Wash. to get married.

She said she was waiting for him to go to jail to get away from him, according to O’Rourke. According to his attorney, Bunker was convicted of violating a protection order in connection with an assault on his previous wife. But his report date got moved, and the victim, frightened she would not survive, snuck out and contacted an ex-boyfriend, according to charging documents.

When she tried to sneak back in, he accused her of cheating, began choking her and said he would kill her, she told the deputy. She said he ripped off her clothes and raped her.

The victim spoke of his taste for pornographic movies depicting violent rape and murder, allegedly telling her to pay attention because it could happen to her, according to charging documents.

Bunker is charged with two counts of second-degree rape, one count of harassment and two counts of violating a protection order. He has pleaded not guilty.

Since being locked up awaiting trial, he was diagnosed with throat cancer and has undergone surgery and radiation, according to his attorney.

His trial finally began in January, but on the second day he was sick from chemotherapy, according to O’Rourke. The next day they reconvened but the following day, the judge got sick, she said. A mistrial was declared.

It has repeatedly been postponed since then because of Bunker’s health, and then when the victim had a heart attack.

Defense attorney Michael Underwood today asked the judge to delay the trial once again. Because of the throat condition, his client’s voice is just a whisper, he said.

“He looks good, but he’s not feeling good,” Underwood told the judge. “I just need him to be in his best best medical condition he can be in (for trial).”

Lawler denied the request. Underwood indicated he was going to prepare a motion for a change of venue, due to pretrial publicity.

O’Rourke said last week, the victim wants to testify; she wants Bunker put away. Not so much for punishment, but because she’s afraid of him, O’Rourke said.

After today’s hearing and the judge’s denial of using Skype, it’s not clear what will happen.

“Given that the doctors have told it it could kill her, I’m not going to force her to testify,” O’Rourke said.

Jewelry store break-in defendant’s companions testify against him

Thursday, May 30th, 2013
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Justin D. McPherson, right, stands with his attorney Ken Johnson as jurors exit the courtroom during his trial for burglary.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Two women who drove away from downtown Centralia with the two suspected thieves following the botched burglary at Salewsky’s Jewelry shop say they didn’t really know what was going on.

They were waiting in their cars in the parking lot at the railroad station after a long night at a casino, 30-year-old Jennifer Nordyke testified.

“Ryan and Rachael were talking about getting a hotel,” Nordyke said. “The guys say, hold on, we’ll be right back.”

The men were gone 15 to 30 minutes, she said.

Prosecutors initially said Nordyke and Rachael Hunter were the getaway drivers after Justin D. McPherson and his friend broke through a wall into the Tower Avenue business early one morning in mid-March, and fled after McPherson was shot when he was confronted by the owner’s son.

The two women have made plea deals in exchange for their testimony. Ryan W. Cox, also charged in the case, remains held in the Lewis County Jail.

The trial for McPherson opened yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court. It’s expected to run in to tomorrow.

Centralia police called about 7 a.m. on March 20 found a trail of dropped jewelry leading from a person-sized hole cut into the wall of the store from a vacant adjacent business space. Officers recovered a crowbar. The lock on the back door at the alley was discovered broken.

A Seattle area man who was staying at the Olympic Club hotel and smoking a cigarette near his work van early that morning testified he saw two men in black running toward him.

“All I heard was go, go, go,” Joshua Morris said.

The two cars he’d noticed with women in them parked near his van then squealed out of the lot, Morris said.

He thought a bank had been robbed, he said.

“At first I didn’t believe what I saw,” he said. “But I’ve seen a lot of movies.”

Fred Salewsky testified he thinks all of the missing jewelry has been recovered, about $3,800 worth.

Salewsky told the court yesterday he got a call from his son Jeremy Salewsky early that morning.

Jeremy Salewsky lives in an apartment above the shop the senior Salewsky bought from his father in 1985.

“My son tells me, ‘I think I might have shot someone’,” Fred Salewsky said. “I said, I will be right there.”

Centralia police got a break in the case a few days later when an off-duty detective learned a male with a gunshot wound was dropped off at a Tacoma hospital by a female in a red Mercedes the morning of the burglary, according to charging documents.

Officers arrested Nordyke on March 22 when she showed up to visit McPherson; they arrested McPherson as he was released from the hospital a few days later. Cox was charged on April 30; Hunter on May 10.

Police described McPherson as someone with an extensive criminal background, well known to police in the Renton, Kent, Auburn area.

The 29-year-old has a 2006 conviction for possession of stolen property, as well as three three eluding convictions, according to prosecutors. He is represented by Chehalis attorney Ken Johnson.

McPherson is charged with one count of second-degree burglary as well as one count of residential burglary.

He’s sat quietly in the courtroom as Johnson and Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead questioned witnesses.

Jeremy Salewsky testified yesterday it was too dark too see more than a male figure with a blue hooded sweatshirt when he came downstairs to investigate an odd noise that morning.

He didn’t expect to see someone standing there, and fired from his Colt 45 handgun, he said.

He couldn’t even tell which way the person was facing, he said. Police have said McPherson was shot in the lower back.

“The individual jumped back though a wall that was cut,” Jeremy Salewsky testified.

The younger Salewsky said then he just stood there stunned a minute or two after it happened.

Nordyke, who said she and McPherson live in Federal Way, told jurors she expects prosecutors will drop two felony charges against her. Her hearing is set for tomorrow.

She admitted she didn’t want to be on the witness stand.

“If I testify, I get a misdemeanor charge, rendering criminal assistance,” she said, her voice breaking. “And I get to stay in drug court so I can raise our children.”

McPherson and she have known each other about 10 years. He and Cox have been good friends since childhood, she said.

She described leaving Centralia, a town she said she wasn’t familiar with, and traveling north on the freeway looking for blue hospital signs, trying to keep McPherson awake, holding hands and praying.

Nordyke explained he used the name of a friend’s ex-husband who had health insurance at the hospital, because they didn’t have insurance.

Reluctantly, she read aloud a passage from a police report in which she told officers she heard McPherson say to a friend that morning, “Dude, Mike, I tried to rob a jewelry store.”

On the stand today, Hunter said she’d been offered the same plea deal.

Halstead questioned her about what she thought McPherson and Cox were doing when they left the women in the parking lot that morning.

“Maybe something that wasn’t on the up and up,” Hunter said.  “So I didn’t really ask.”

Cox is scheduled for a change of plea and sentencing next week.
•••

For background, read “Jewelry store burglary suspect, alleged getaway driver awaiting May trial” from Thursday April 4, 2013, here

Centralia Outlet pepper spray melee defendant disputes police accounts

Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
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Tamala J. Summerhill, right, waits while defense attorney Bob Schroeter confers with a deputy prosecutor during her court appearance.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Tacoma woman accused of letting loose with her pepper spray at the Centralia Outlets over the weekend says news reporters got the story all wrong.

Tamala J. Summerhill, 53, bailed out of jail but returned to go before a Lewis County Superior Court judge yesterday afternoon.

Police said they were called to the shopping center on Saturday because a female used pepper spray to break up a brawl between her grown son and another man outside the Nike Factory Outlet then chased the subject, spraying him and two boys who were with him.

Summerhill is charged with two counts of third-degree child assault and one count of fourth-degree assault.

“I want to tell it, and I will let my lawyer do that,” Summerhill said after her court hearing.

Centralia police said after a disagreement inside the store between 22-year-old Jesse Summerhill and a 38-year-old Tumwater man, the pair ended up in a fight once they got outside.

The 38-year-old Tumwater man had the younger Summerhill on the ground when the mother sprayed him, according to the police version.

Police arrested Jesse Summerhill, also of Tacoma, for misdemeanor assault

How and why the scuffle started and what happened after are not very clear.

Both men told police the other one initiated the rudeness inside the store – over a cashier being ready to take the next customer in line – and once outside challenged the other one to fight, according to charging documents.

The documents allege the following information:

Corey Leneker said he had begun to walk to his car with his two 8-year-old boys but the mother and son followed him calling him names.

“He ordered the two boys to get in the front seat of their vehicle, which they did,” charging documents state.

The two men fought. After Leneker was sprayed he ran and they chased him, Leneker told police. She was spraying as they were running, he said.

Leneker reached his vehicle when the woman sprayed him again and the two boys, charging documents state.

It was streaming spray and not the fog type, according to police.

An independent witness told police Leneker was trying to shield the kids when she sprayed all three of them.

Officers checked the children who both had red and inflamed faces and trouble seeing because of the irritant in their eyes; symptoms of having been pepper sprayed.

Tamala Summerhill told police she sprayed Leneker to get him off her son. When confronted with the information from the witness, she made no comment.

“The boys, I don’t know why they’re an issue,” defense attorney Bob Schroeter said outside the courtroom. “The father said he put them inside the vehicle.”

During the brief court appearance yesterday afternoon, Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher said he had no problem with setting bail with a $10,000 signature bond.

Judge Richard Brosey pointed out it was already set at $20,000 and she posted bail, so he wouldn’t change it.

Schroeter, who represented Tamala Summerhill just for that appearance, said her income qualified her for a court appointed attorney.

Tamala Summerhill works at Joint Base Lewis McChord in child care and family services, Schroeter said.

Her arraignment was scheduled for June 6.