Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

Prisoner accused of forging Lewis County Prosecutor Meyer’s name

Saturday, September 10th, 2016

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A former Lewis County man doing 12 years in prison for dealing Oxycodone is now in trouble with the law here again, even though he’s been locked up since mid-2014.

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Forrest E. Amos

Forrest E. Amos tried to file documents related to his 2013 case which authorities say he forged with the names of elected Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer, Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead, and police officers Chad Withrow and Adam Haggerty.

The new case is being handled by Pacific County Prosecutor Mark McClain.

McClain indicates the Lewis County Clerk’s Office received a letter from Amos in which he stated the clerk was required to take action, along with  four documents entitled “Forced commercial contract” which were purporting to be notice of subrogation bond and claim for $1 million.

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Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer

The documents appeared to be signed by Meyer, Halstead, Withrow and Haggerty, according to McClain.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office investigated and confirmed Amos signed the documents but Amos contended he merely put the names of others there to reflect who he was bringing the suit against, according to McClain.

Amos, now 33, is incarcerated at Clallam Bay Corrections Center on the Olympic Peninsula.

He was brought before a judge in Lewis County Superior Court last week and pleaded not guilty to four charges of forgery and four charges of first-degree criminal impersonation. A trial has been scheduled for the week of Nov. 28.

Asked what “forced commercial contract” and “notice of subrogation bond” meant, McClain said:

“I have absolutely no idea what he thinks that means,” he said. “Every elected official has a bond they are required to post; I suppose he thinks he can go after them.”
•••

For background, read, “News brief: Local oxycodone dealer goes back to prison” Thursday Aug. 21, 2014, here

Centralia: Police arrest suspected drug dealer, after search warrant

Friday, September 9th, 2016
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Cody M. Warner yawns as he awaits his turn to go before the judge while Dakota W. Davidson sits with defense attorney during bail hearing.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – After twice arranging with informants to buy heroin from a 34-year-old man, drug detectives yesterday served a search warrant at his north Centralia home and arrested two people.

When law enforcement officers approached the residence on Rose Street, they saw someone peek out of a trailer window, and responding to shouts of “search warrant”, a male and female exited, according to court documents.

Dakota W. Davidson, 21, of Centralia, had an outstanding warrant and a search incident to his arrest turned up a small container with suspected meth, charging documents relate. He was arrested, booked into the Lewis County Jail and charged today in Lewis County Superior Court with possession of methamphetamine.

A short time after a detective finished searching the trailer, the detective got a phone call from 34-year-old Cody M. Warner, who said he heard police were at his trailer, and was told he needed to come back so the detective could talk with him, the documents state.

Warner arrived with his father, was shown the search warrant and was placed under a arrest. He too was booked into jail.

Charging documents in Warner’s case indicate that twice between Aug. 1 and Aug. 31, a confidential informant purchased heroin from Warner. The second time the transaction took place at his home, according to court documents.

The case came out of an investigation by the local multi-agency Joint Narcotics Enforcement Team. Court documents don’t indicate what if anything the search of the home and trailer turned up.

Warner was charged today in Lewis County Superior Court with two counts of delivery of a controlled substance.

Judge Nelson Hunt set his bail at $20,000, calling it a community safety issue. Davidson’s conditions of release included a $5,000 signature bond.

Both individuals are unemployed and both were given court-appointed lawyers. Their arraignments are set for next Thursday.

Former defendant jailed for threatening Lewis County prosecutor

Thursday, September 8th, 2016
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Arrestee Dale A. Paine and temporary defense attorney Joely O’Rourke talk in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A 61-year-old man who has reportedly not stopped trying to talk with Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer since 2013 when he was prosecuted for a DUI was arrested and charged after crossing a line.

Dale A. Paine is the source of hundreds of threatening voice mails, faxes and telephone calls, a special appointed deputy prosecuting attorney told a judge yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court.

He even phoned the elected prosecutor at home, and once confronted him in an elevator, Thurston County Deputy Prosecutor Joseph Wheeler said.

This summer, Paine allegedly said something that alarmed Meyer:

“Paine told Meyer to ‘listen very carefully’ that he was going to ‘send Mr. Meyer to be with his family’,” Wheeler wrote in court documents.

About a month later, in one of approximately 50 messages received in just one week, Paine said he was coming to visit Meyer at the courthouse, according to Wheeler.

Paine, who is described by authorities as transient and recently living in Gainsville, Florida, showed up about 4:45 p.m. on Tuesday at the Lewis County Law and Justice Center, and was taken in to custody, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

Meyer told the investigating deputy he thinks the man has mental health issues.

When Paine was brought before a judge yesterday afternoon, he kept talking out of turn causing the judge to leave the bench while temporary defense attorney Joely O’Rourke spoke with him.

Wheeler asked the judge to hold Paine on $25,000 bail and ordered him to refrain from contacting Meyer.

Judge Nelson Hunt didn’t think that was enough, and made the amount $100,000.

“As far as I’m concerned, this is outrageous behavior,” Hunt said. “What I’ve witnessed today doesn’t help any.”

O’Rourke told the judge her client has absolutely no criminal history. He has a residence in Everett, she said.

According to charging documents, when Meyer reported to a deputy on June 30 what had been going on,  he said sometimes the calls or contacts would come two to three times in a day, even at night. And they came from various locations where Paine was at the time, even possibly from as far away as New Mexico and Florida.

Meyer indicated he repeatedly told Paine to stop calling, Wheeler wrote.

The sheriff’s office yesterday morning described the case with victims being several elected and county officials.

Although Meyer told the deputy he was the victim of systematic and repeated felony harassment since 2013, Deputy Prosecutor Wheeler filed only two charges.

They are both harassment of a criminal justice participant performing official duties, on or around June 30 of this year and near the end of July.

Paine’s arraignment was scheduled for this afternoon, but was postponed.

Commissioner Fund: Campaign donation discussion inside county building investigated, found non-criminal

Thursday, September 8th, 2016

Updated at 6:25 p.m.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – All in less than 12 hours, one of the three-member Lewis County Board of Commissioners informed the news media another was under investigation by law enforcement, and the other provided a letter indicating a legal conclusion that the facts don’t rise to criminal liability.

The topic is an overheard conversation between Commissioner Edna Fund and a real estate developer about a campaign donation, at the end of a meeting in a county building when the two thought they were alone.

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Edna Fund

Commissioner Bill Schulte whose term ends this year and chose not to run for re-election, last night sent a memo to local news media, stating Fund is the subject of an investigation conducted by the Washington State Patrol.

“There will be no cover up,” Schulte wrote. “We will keep you informed as we get updated information.”

Schulte this morning said he only learned of it because a detective interviewed him about it.

“I can’t imagine it’s too bad, it just looks bad,” Schulte said. “You have to be careful during campaigns about when and where you have conversations about donations or favors.”

He said his two counterparts were not in agreement with informing the public, which is why the memo had only his name on it.

Commissioner Fund is currently running for a second four-year term. Her opponent is Daniel Keahey. Both are Republicans.

Fund this morning in a brief phone interview said the case was turned over to the Pacific County prosecutor for evaluation who released his findings, which she received a copy of yesterday, or maybe the day before.

Centralia-based real estate developer Frank Dipola initiated the conversation, according to Fund. And she told him that was not the proper place to talk about campaign matters, she said.

Pacific County Prosecutor Mark McClain’s findings affirm the nature of that seemingly brief conversation.

Fund said she’s pleased things got cleared up.

“It reinstates my cornerstone value of no campaigning in public buildings,” she said.

The meeting was held on May 3. Dipola and his wife Winnis Dipola each contributed $100 to Fund’s political campaign on May 13.

Fund said his project is not even in her district, and the topic of the meeting was a county employee the commissioners supervise, the same manner in which McClain’s findings characterized the meeting.

McClain wrote he reviewed the reports and “these facts do not give rise to criminal liability.”

He noted that developers like any other constituents may contribute to an elected official’s campaign, it didn’t appear Fund gave any special favors, the amount of the donation was “rather ordinary” and it was disclosed as expected to the state Public Disclosure Commission.

The minutes from the 50-minute long meeting don’t portray the topic as an employee related issue, but reveal Dipola discussing issues regarding property he wants to develop and a desire for the process to be expedited. He wants to build 14 apartment or condominium units, but had been told the rules allow for only seven units.

The meeting was attended by Commissioners Fund and Schulte as well as Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and recorder Karri Muir. Lewis County Community Development Director Lee Napier joined them via telephone conference call.

The Southeast Spring Street property is in Chehalis’s urban growth area.

According to Schulte this morning, after everyone left the meeting room except for Fund and Dipola, Napier was still connected and overheard their conversation, and reported it to Meyer, who requested the state patrol look into it.

According to the investigative report, state patrol detective David Ortner was asked by Meyer to look into an inappropriate comment made by a constituent to a commissioner and the question he addressed was whether Dipola gave money to Fund’s campaign to obtain a benefit for his development.

The detective first spoke to Napier, who said she felt Dipola was unhappy with her telling him he could build only seven units and wanted to go over her head to the county commissioners to get approval for 14. Napier told the detective Commissioner Schulte during the meeting asked her to be accommodating to the developer and make it a priority to get it figured out.

Dipola has stated he’s already spent $100,000 developing the lots and surrounding properties, according to Ortner.

Napier said she heard people leave the room at the end of the meeting and was still on the other end of the speaker phone when she overheard Dipola tell Fund that he sure would like to contribute money to her campaign.

“Fund told Dipola that this was not the place to talk about that, and they would talk later, detective Ortner wrote of his interview with Napier.

Napier felt Commissioner Fund was put in a bad position by the developer and knows that Fund does not campaign in the courthouse, Ortner wrote.

When the detective attempted his final interview, on July 21, he called Dipola and told him he’d like to talk about the Spring Street project.

Dipola made the comment the county was giving him the run around, and he didn’t understand why the state patrol was involved. He stated he did not want to provide a statement and hung up, detective Ortner wrote.

McClain’s closing comment in his conclusions about the investigation, suggest that even though Fund publicly disclosed Dipola’s campaign contribution as required to the state PDC, she may be wise to make further disclosures should Dipola bring a project before the commissioners in the future.

Former Mossy city clerk pleads guilty to putting city funds in personal account

Wednesday, September 7th, 2016
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Doneia A. Santiago, far left, appears in Lewis County Superior Court this morning with her lawyer.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Somehow what was initially described as theft and misappropriation by a Mossyrock public official involving thousands of dollars has turned into an identity theft case, which she admits.

The town’s former clerk-treasurer Doneia A. Santiago pleaded guilty to nine counts of first-degree identity theft today. Prosecutors dropped nine counts of second-degree theft.

Santiago, who has been free on a signature bond since shortly after her arrest in June, went before a judge this morning in Lewis County Superior Court.

Her sentencing will take place at the end of this month.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Melissa Bohm and defense attorney Don Blair don’t agree upon the amount of time they will recommend she be locked up.

Judge Nelson Hunt accepted her pleas, reading aloud her words regarding what she did.

On nine separate dates during 2014 and into 2015, Santiago used financial information for the city of Mossyrock to transfer funds into her mortgage account, according to the paperwork.

The alleged misconduct came to light when Santiago approached Mayor Tom Meade to tell him her husband inadvertently used the city credit card to make an approximately $3,600 payment to Central Mortgage, according to court documents.

The initial and supplemental affidavits made mention of ATM withdrawals the mayor said were not authorized, use of Mossyrock’s bank card to purchase fuel, an extra payroll check and large monthly withdrawals from the municipality’s accounts.

The attorneys didn’t discuss and were not asked in open court the reason the theft charges were dismissed.

Presumably more details will be discussed at her Sept. 28 court hearing.
•••

For background, read “Prosecutors: Thousands of dollars more missing from Mossyrock accounts” from Tuesday July 19, 2016, here

Chehalis shooting: Firearm still missing, one round recovered from Dairy Bar

Friday, September 2nd, 2016
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Matthew W. Harader appears before a judge with his lawyer in Lewis County Superior Court.

Updated at 5:28 p.m.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Chehalis police yesterday arrested the wife of the man charged with shooting at a passing truck saying they believed that right after the early Sunday morning incident occurred, he gave her the firearm.

Hillary M. Harader, 23, was contacted at the courthouse, there yesterday afternoon for her husband’s hearing. She was booked into the Lewis County Jail for rendering criminal assistance and tampering with evidence, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said this morning they believe she did something with the gun, but they haven’t yet recovered it.

Her husband Matthew W. Harader, age 27, of Centralia, is charged in Lewis County Superior Court with two counts of first-degree assault. At his arraignment yesterday afternoon, his bail was increased to $200,000.

Chehalis police recovered two .45 caliber casings at the scene and recovered one round which had lodged into the side of a building, according to authorities.

It happened at the Jackpot convenience store on the 600 block of West Main Street in Chehalis.

Nobody was injured and charging documents offer no explanation for what occurred.

Officers called about 3:20 a.m. on Sunday spoke to the clerk who said two men and a woman had been inside, although they arrived in separate vehicles, according to court documents. The clerk said she heard a “pop” and saw a male dressed in dark clothing running toward the street with his hand raised in front of him as though he held a gun, according to charging documents.

She said she heard a second “pop” and it appeared he was firing toward a large gray lifted pickup truck which was heading westbound on Main Street, the documents relate.

Charging documents continue on, offering the following account:

The two men from the lifted truck told police they stopped at the store to get Gatorade and as they drove west, one of the men made eye contact with them, began to yell, chased them and shot at them. They pulled behind the Dairy Bar across the street, which is where one bullet hit the building.

Arriving officers located the suspect truck, stopping it at the 400 block of North Market Boulevard, and arrested the passenger.

Matthew W. Harader refused to speak with officers but the driver when asked if he knew why they were being stopped, said “He’s crazy, who just starts shooting at people for no reason.”

The driver was not arrested.

The victims, Cole T. Rife and Tanner R. Bradford, told police they thought the man chasing them was the one wearing shorts, but a review of video images from Jackpot showed the one in shorts didn’t leave the side of the truck while he was pumping gas.

A 9mm pistol was found in the suspect truck as well as .45 caliber ammunition, according to Kaut.

Matthew W. Harader appeared in court Monday afternoon, with his employer and others present in his support. He is represented by Chehalis attorney Katherine Gulmert. He pleaded not guilty yesterday.

His juvenile record includes convictions for second-degree burglary and third-degree assault.

Hillary M. Harader bailed out of jail with a $2,000 bond but returned this afternoon to Lewis County Superior Court where she is charged with first-degree rendering criminal assistance, a felony and with tampering with physical evidence, a gross misdemeanor.

Judge Nelson Hunt left her bail unchanged.
•••

For background read “Centralia resident booked for allegedly shooting at moving truck on Main Street” from Monday August 29, 2016, here

Packwood man given nine plus years for 2013 kidnapping

Thursday, September 1st, 2016
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Zachery H. Bynum talks with his lawyer Jacob Clark after signing sentencing documents in Lewis County Superior Court today.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – After spending more than three years in custody, between jail and the state psychiatric hospital, a Packwood man was sentenced today for events he says he mostly doesn’t recall but a prosecutor called a day of hell for the victim.

Zachery H. Bynum pleaded guilty to first-degree kidnapping, two counts of second-degree assault, harassment and resisting arrest.

It was July 16, 2013, when Bynum was arrested at gunpoint on U.S. Highway 12 near Kiona Creek Road after an approximately four-mile police pursuit. He had dragged his young woman friend out of the Glenoma grocery store and forced her to drive toward Randle.

“She was the one who went through this,” Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead said of the then-22-year-old Morton woman. “She’s the one who had a knife held to her throat.”

Bynum, then 41 years old and living mostly in the woods, was suspected to suffer from severe mental issues from the start.

The allegations included Bynum first forcing the young woman up a logging road where he threatened her with a machete.

Defense attorney Jacob Clark today told the judge of a 10-minute evaluation by personnel from Western State Hospital that initially found Bynum competent and then jail visits in which he would watch his client pull out wads of hair and rip off his own fingernails.

“I’d talk through a little door, he wouldn’t come out from underneath his bed,” he said.

Clark said he asked them to evaluate him as an inpatient, which they did and when he’d come back, spend time in solitary, he would deteriorate again.

“We went through the process I think five times, maybe more,” Clark said.

Clark spoke of a previously undiagnosed brain disease that included cyclical swelling. His client’s current state of mind was the best it’s ever been, he said.

Halstead described the plea agreement in which both attorneys recommended 110 months in prison, as an amount of time sought because of the impact to the victim and also witnesses, including children.

The victim was present in the courtroom and asked Halstead to convey her wish Bynum get the maximum penalty.

Bynum took the judge up on an offer to address the court.

“I’m sorry. I’m sorry,” he said. “I don’t remember what happened mostly, I believe it, but I’m sorry for what happened.”

Judge James Lawler agreed with a sentence of nine years and two months.

“I don’t think adding more time is going to change the impact on Mr. Bynum, given the mental health issues,” Lawler said.

The judge gave him credit for 1,142 days already served and ordered 36 months of supervision upon his release.
•••

For background, read “Lawyers: Mentally disturbed Packwood man kidnapped woman friend” from Thursday July 18, 2013, here