Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

News brief: Attempted child lurings reported in Mossyrock, Morton

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Three grade school children in Morton and Mossyrock have reported a man driving a white pickup truck offering them money over the past several days, according to police and school officials.

It came to the attention of police on Friday afternoon when an 11-year-old boy said the man stopped near Morton Elementary School and offered him $20 if he would get into the vehicle, according to Morton Police Department.

The boy took off running into the school and reported it, according to police. While officers spoke to the boy, a 12-year-old boy told them the same man offered him $20 the day before for the same reason, police reported.

Morton police describe the truck as a white Ford pickup with a wide black stripe running down its side. The boys said there were large “mud tires” in the bed of the truck.

The male is described only as unshaven with dark hair.

In Mossyrock, the elementary school principal was notified this morning by police of an incident early yesterday evening in which a fifth-grade girl  said she was approached by a male while she was at Smith and Son Grocery.

He initiated a conversation with her and gave her $3 and was driving a white truck with a thick black stripe as well, according to Principal Randy Torrey.

Torrey is sending a letter with details home with students today.

Teachers in both districts have been speaking to students about never getting into a vehicle with a stranger.

“We’re reminding them if someone tries to lure you, or talk to you, run away, yell, maybe even ‘stranger danger’ and get to an adult,” Torrey said.

Read about 13-year-old arrested after fatal shooting in Littlerock …

Monday, October 24th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The (Tacoma) News Tribune reports a 13-year-old Littlerock boy was taken into custody after he allegedly shot and killed his sleeping father overnight at their home.

Read more, here

Breaking news: Fear of lawsuit halted service of arrest warrants after Ron Reynolds, son, named in 1998 death

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Updated 6:43 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod quashed his own arrest warrants following the coroner’s inquest into Ronda Reynolds death out of concern of getting sued, he indicated in a news release yesterday.

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Warren McLeod, Lewis County Coroner

McLeod said he issued arrest warrants for her husband, Ron Reynolds, and his son, Jonathan Reynolds, last Wednesday evening, following the conclusion by the inquest jury the pair were responsible for the homicide of the former state trooper in 1998.

He delivered the warrants to the sheriff’s office that night so they could be served, he said.

McLeod said he was notified first thing Thursday morning by the prosecutor’s office a legal issue had been brought to their attention.

“I was also advised that if the warrants were served prior to the legal issue being investigated and resolved the county could be liable for lawsuits,” McLeod wrote. “Based on this information I quashed the warrants and began an investigation into the legal issue.”

The coroner won’t reveal what the issue is.

He does say he will disclose it on Friday morning, speak about his investigation into it and it will be resolved that day.

Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer has given himself until Thursday morning to decide if any criminal charges will be filed against the Reynolds’ men. He’s said he’s spent numerous hours going through the sheriff’s office case file and the evidence heard by the inquest jury.

Meyer plans to announce his decision on Thursday morning at the Lewis County Law and Justice Center.

Under state law regarding coroner’s inquests, if a jury panel returns with a conclusion of homicide and also names the person or person responsible, the coroner is required to issue an arrest warrant, unless they are already in custody.

McLeod didn’t say who might sue Lewis County. He said today he’s not even sure who raised the issue with the prosecutor’s office.

It wasn’t attorneys for Ron or Jonathan Reynolds, he said.

McLeod, elected last November, conducted the inquest – a rarity in Washington state – in hopes of finding a resolution in the controversial case.

Reynolds, 33, was preparing to leave her husband of less than a year when she was found fatally shot in the head, on the floor of their walk-in closet, with a turned-on electric blanket covering her in their Toledo home.

Ron Reynolds, principal at Toledo Elementary School, told authorities he was asleep and did not hear the gunshot.

The Dec. 16, 1998 death was closed as suicide despite protests from Lewis County Sheriff’s Office lead detective Jerry Berry, and within a week after Ron Reynolds’ attorney had threatened to file a lawsuit against the sheriff’s office if they didn’t cease the investigation.

McLeod today called it a “major” legal issue, perhaps better described as a constitutional issue.

“It there is a multi-million dollar lawsuit and we lose, it could bankrupt the county,” McLeod said. “Just defending those can bankrupt the county.”

The coroner indicated he’s not comfortable having set aside his statutory obligation.

“Let’s just say had the arrest warrants been served, and the folks gone before a judicial officer, a judge, and the legal issue brought up, more likely than not the judge would have put everything on hold,” he said.

The coroner said his suspension of the warrant process and his decision to sort through it publicly on Friday is entirely independent of the Prosecutor Meyer’s timing and decision about any potential criminal charges.

“Even if he announces on Thursday he will not prosecute, that does not relive me of my statutory obligation to issue the warrants,” McLeod said.

McLeod plans to reconvene the inquest at 9 a.m. on Friday.

He’s not asking the jury to deliberate further.

He plans to disclose the details of the legal issue, and put any offering of information about it on the record and have it given under oath.

He said he could have done it sooner, but chose Friday in part to lessen the hardship on the inquest jurors “employment-wise.”

“If it turns out it’s not an issue at all, the warrants will go forward,” he said.
•••

Read background on the inquest, here

Read state statutes regarding county coroner, here

Coroner’s inquest: Prosecutor, coroner, to reveal answers next week

Friday, October 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer issued a statement today assuring the public he is working diligently to make a charging decision in Ronda Reynolds’ death, and he will announce it the day before the coroner’s announcement explaining why the arrest warrants were suspended.

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Jonathan Meyer, Lewis County Prosecutor

After telling a packed courtroom on Wednesday afternoon he would issue arrest warrants within 24 hours for the two men just named as responsible for Reynolds’ 1998 homicide, Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod suddenly this morning announced he put the warrants on hold.

McLeod said only a legal issue “came to light”.

The seven-day coroner’s inquest in Chehalis ended this week with a panel of five concluding the death almost 13 years ago was homicide; and Ron Reynolds and his son Jonathan Reynolds were responsible.

McLeod acknowledged this morning he is required under state law to issue the warrants.

The attorney representing Jonathan Reynolds, indicated today he didn’t file any legal documents to stop the process. Ron Reynolds’ attorney hasn’t returned calls for comment.

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Warren McLeod, Lewis County Coroner

The attorney representing Ronda Reynolds’ mother, Barbara Thompson, said he had no idea what was going on.

Royce Ferguson, designated by the coroner as “an especially interested party” to the inquest, sent an electronic letter to McLeod’s legal counsel today inquiring about the delay.

In it, Ferguson noted, state statute provides that following a finding of homicide by an inquest jury, “the coroner shall issue a warrant for the arrest of the person charged, returnable forthwith to the nearest magistrate.”

“Forthwith commonly means ‘without delay’,” Ferguson wrote.

Ferguson’s inquiry didn’t get him any answers.

Coroner McLeod has said he would provide the answers a week from today in a courtroom when his inquest is “reconvened.”

That is scheduled for 9 a.m. next Friday morning in a Lewis County District Courtroom.

Prosecutor Meyer in his news release today said he has not made a charging decision in the case.

He’s spent numerous hours reviewing the case file and inquest materials and will continue to use the “methodical and diligent process” his office strives for in every case, he wrote.

But Meyer will know his answer by next Thursday, he wrote.

He will announce it at a press conference on the ground floor of the same building at 10 a.m. that day.
•••

Read background on the inquest, here

Read state statutes regarding county coroner, here

Read “Ex-trooper’s husband put on leave from school principal post” from KOMOnews.com today at 2:41 p.m., here

Read “Ruling on trooper’s death: more suspense in unprecedented case” from Crosscut.com today, here

Breaking news: Arrests put on hold in coroner’s inquest

Friday, October 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County coroner has temporarily suspended the process regarding the arrest warrants following the coroner’s inquest into Ronda Reynolds 1998 death.

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Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod

Coroner Warren McLeod acknowledges he is required under state law to issue the warrants after his inquest jury determined Ron Reynolds and his son Jonathan Reynolds were responsible for the homicide, but indicates a legal issue has arisen.

In a news release this morning, McLeod writes a “complete public disclosure” will be made a week from today when his inquest is reconvened in Lewis County District Court.

McLeod calls it a temporary suspension to allow for resolution of the issue.

He stated no further details will be provided at this time.

Coroner’s inquest update: More waiting

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer is still reviewing the evidence heard by the inquest jury regarding former trooper Ronda Reynolds’ 1998 death.

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Ron Reynolds

When the coroner’s inquest adjourned yesterday afternoon, its presiding officer Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod said he would issue an arrest warrant for Reynolds’ husband and step-son – as state law requires – within 24 hours.

The jury determined her death was homicide and not suicide as McLeod’s predecessor long claimed. The jurors then named Toledo Elementary School Principal Ron Reynolds and his son Jonathan Reynolds as responsible for her death.

Meyer said neither Ron or Jonathan Reynolds had been booked into the jail when he left for the day.

He referred questions about their arrest warrant to McLeod.

McLeod said today he won’t make any public statements until his inquest is officially closed, something he will consider done when he issues his “final order”.

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Ronda Reynolds

Yesterday afternoon from the bench, McLeod told the courtroom he would do that within the “next few days”.

As for who will serve the arrest warrant, Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield’s only public statement came on the day the inquest began: His office “will assist in the same professional, non-biased way that we always have.”

While the coroner is responsible for the inquest and its outcome – changing the manner of death on the death certificate – whether and if any criminal charges are filed is up to the prosecutor.

The inquest jurors only had to find it was more likely than not the two men were responsible, a different standard than would be applied in a criminal case.

Prosecutor Meyer said he’s still looking at the evidence to make his decision.

The Toledo School District’s superintendent issued a formal statement today saying only they are “doing everything possible to maintain the integrity of the educational process.”

•••

Read about the inquest jurors decision and what it means, or doesn’t mean, here

Breaking news: Inquest jurors: Ronda Reynolds was murdered

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011
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Barb Thompson is held by a friend in the courthouse after the inquest jurors' decision about her daughter's death was announced. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

This was updated at 8 p.m., 9:30 p.m. and 11:59 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – An arrest warrant will be issued within the next 24 hours for Toledo Elementary School Principal Ronald A. Reynolds and his son, Jonathan A. Reynolds, the coroner said late this afternoon.

The pair were named today as responsible for the homicide of former trooper Ronda Elizabeth Reynolds in the family’s Toledo home almost 13 years ago.

The announcement came at the end of a coroner’s inquest that began a week ago Monday in the courthouse in Chehalis.

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Ronda Reynolds

Barb Thompson, who has been working since the end of 1998 to uncover the truth about her daughter’s death, was overwhelmed with the decision.

“What more could I ask for?” Thompson said. “It’s beyond any hope I had.”

The inquest jury of four women and one man were unanimous in their conclusions.

Thompson’s attorney shared a similar sentiment.

“Way back when, Barb said it’s a homicide, Marty (Hayes) said it’s homicide and it sounded convincing, but there were always these kinds of obstacles,” Royce Ferguson said. “I think the bungling of the sheriff’s office and their efforts to save face muddied the waters.”

Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer is at his office tonight, reviewing not only the sheriff’s office case file, but the evidence the inquest jurors saw and heard.

Meyer said he will be making a decision as soon as possible as to what action his office takes, meaning what, if any, criminal charges might be filed.

He has to be ready whenever the two are brought before a judge, he said.

“(I’ve talked with) all necessary parties and discussed all possible steps that could be taken from here,” he said.

What Meyer does know for sure, he said, is Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod must issue an arrest warrant and the accused must be brought before a magistrate, or judge, in Lewis County.

Calls for comment to Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield and his public information officer have not been returned tonight.

But Mansfield wrote on the sheriff’s office website the day the inquest began that the inquest’s outcome would not cause him to reopen their case or change its disposition in his office – suicide – unless clear and compelling new information arose.

Lewis County sheriff’s detective Sgt. Dusty Breen testified yesterday he felt the best determination the inquest jurors could make was an “undetermined” manner of death.

Breen also said although he leaned toward suicide, he was taking notes on items to follow up on.

Ronda Reynolds, 33, died with a bullet in her head in the home she shared with husband of less than a year, Ron Reynolds. She was found dead on the floor of a small walk-in closet, covered up by a turned-on electric blanket.

Ron Reynolds called 911 about 6:20 a.m. on Dec. 16, 1998 to say his wife committed suicide. His three young sons – including teenager Jonathan Reynolds – were allowed to leave as deputies arrived without being interviewed.

The sheriff’s office admitted to some mistakes, including the .32 caliber Rossi handgun being moved at the scene before photos were taken, although some testimony suggested they were lost. Jurors heard about evidence being destroyed or returned too soon.

Over the years, Ronda Reynolds manner of death was changed repeatedly by then-Lewis County Coroner Terry Wilson back and forth between suicide and undetermined as it was reinvestigated and then more recently underwent a judicial review.

Lewis County Coroner McLeod, elected last November, wanted to settle the matter on the controversial death by holding an inquest, something he doesn’t think has happened in Lewis County in the last 50 years.

Prosecutor Meyer, sat through the six and a half days of testimony, as did representatives from the sheriff’s office.

They were joined by even more of their co-workers when the verdict was read just after 4 p.m. by McLeod.

The inquest jurors findings noted Ronda Reynolds died of a contact gunshot wound to her right temple in the home at 114 Twin Peaks Drive on Dec. 16, 1998 between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m., of homicide.

Less than a half hour later, the jurors returned with the conclusion she died at the hands of Ron Reynolds and his teenage son.

The outcome was exactly as it should be, said Sharon Mitchell of Morton who sat in on the proceedings.

“It should have happened years ago,” Mitchell said.

It wasn’t long before Thompson was surrounded by news cameras and reporters outside the courthouse doors.

The Spokane woman alternately teared up and smiled.

She said she was satisfied enough with the death certificate getting changed to homicide. She hopes the sheriff’s office follows through, although she has continued to be disappointed by them, except for Breen, she said.

“I don’t think that’s my job, and I have to move on with my life,” Thompson said. “That’s what you do.”

Asked about a motive, Thompson asked: “How much time do you have?”

She testified last week she believed Jonathan had a deep hatred for his step-mother, after an incident in which she was told he peeked at Ronda Reynolds in the shower, and she jumped out and tackled him.

Thompson said her faith in the system has been restored.

“It’s our peers, that’s why we have the jury system,” she said.

Ron Reynolds did not return a phone call made to his home for comment. Neither his or his son’s attorneys could be reached this evening.

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Members of the news media swarm around Barb Thompson as she exits the courthouse. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

•••

For background, read the following:

Intro to Ronda Reynolds coroners inquest

“Coroners inquest into Ronda Reynolds death: Selection of jurors starts Monday”, here

Day one, Monday Oct. 10, 2011

“Coroners inquest into Ronda Reynolds death: Responders ponder, suicide or homicide”, here

Day two, Tuesday Oct. 11, 2011

“Coroners inquest: Detective reveals staged “suicide” statement from Ronda Reynolds”, here

Day three, Wednesday Oct. 12, 2011

“Coroners inquest: New investigation points to murder”, here

Day four, Thursday Oct. 13, 2011

“Coroners inquest: What the forensic experts say”, here

“Coroners inquest: Homicide experts disagree about Ronda Reynolds’ death”, here

Day five, Friday Oct. 14, 2011

Coroners inquest: Lie detector examiners testify”, here

“Coroners inquest: Mother of former trooper says it was murder”, here

“Coroners inquest: Crime scene reconstruction expert saw “earmarks” of suicide”, here

Day six, Monday Oct. 17, 2011

“Coroners inquest: What the sheriff’s office believes today”, here

Day seven, Tuesday Oct. 18, 2011

“Coroner’s inquest: Images inside the courtroom”, here

“Coroner’s inquest: Clues still coming in”, here

Day eight, Wednesday Oct. 19, 2011

“Breaking news: Decision reached in coroners inquest”, here

Background, Appeals Court on the judicial review

“Coroner’s appeal in Ronda Reynolds’ case heard by three-judge panel” from  Friday June 17, 2011 at 7:53 a.m., here

“Breaking news: Coroner’s inquest for Ronda Reynolds’ death to move forward” posted Thursday July 7 2011 at 8:22 a.m., here

Background, the 2009 judicial review

“Jury finds coroner erred in ruling former trooper’s death a suicide”, here