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Coroner’s inquest: Clues still coming in

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011
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Current Lewis County Sheriff's Office detective Sgt. Dusty Breen

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Even as the coroner’s inquest in Ronda Reynolds’ death has unfolded, the current detective’s supervisor at the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office has been taking notes on “things to follow up on.”

Detective Sgt. Dusty Breen said learning the name of the first arriving emergency medical technician to the Toledo home almost 13 years ago was new to him and just last week he talked with her.

When Breen testified yesterday, he spoke of he and his people looking at possible new leads and the frustration of learning all the physical evidence was gone.

It’s like a puzzle with a lot of pieces missing, he said.

“A lot of it came down to the initial investigation,” Breen said.

Belle Williams, the longtime director of evidence at the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office, said yesterday evidence was destroyed or returned in the year following the death, after the request of the then-detective sergeant. More evidence was cleaned out again in 2002, she said.

She was in the midst of implementing a new procedure requiring written authorization.

“At that point, all we could do was stop it,” Williams said.

The seven-day inquest in Chehalis into the former trooper’s December 1998 death is concluding, with jurors scheduled to return to the courtroom with their decision at 4 p.m. today.

The four women and one man who deliberated yesterday afternoon and again this morning were asked to determine if the death was suicide, homicide or something else.

They are using the standard of a preponderance of evidence or “basically 51 percent, according to Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod.

McLeod told jurors he’d like it to be unanimous, but a majority agreeing would be sufficient.

If they return with a conclusion of homicide, he has said he would send them back to decide who they believe killed Reynolds. Under state law, if the jury names someone, the coroner is required to issue an arrest warrant.

What Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer would do in the situation, he has said he doesn’t know.

The inquest jurors have heard testimony from those who believe Reynolds’ death was suicide and those who think murder.

The 33-year-old was found dead on the floor of a small walk-in closet, with a bullet in her head and covered up by a turned-on electric blanket.

A new story inquest jurors heard yesterday was from a man Reynolds’ mother, Barb Thompson, had learned might have been at the Reynolds’ house the night before the death.

He lived with Joshua Williams, an individual who claimed one of the teenage friends of the Reynolds boys shot Reynolds, but later recanted his story.

Richard Melton told Breen of a time Williams borrowed his truck and then returned it spotlessly clean, Breen recounted. Melton denied ever being inside the Toledo house, according to Breen.

Breaking news: Decision reached in coroners inquest

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Jurors for the coroner’s inquest into the  death of former state trooper Ronda Reynolds have reached a decision.

They will reconvene at 4 p.m. in the courtroom.

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FYI: You may learn what the verdict is first on Lewis County Sirens’ Facebook group page, before you read it here.

Coroner’s inquest: Images inside the courtroom

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

Photos by Bradd Reynolds
For Lewis County Sirens

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Jurors for the coroner’s inquest into the 1998 death of former trooper Ronda Reynolds adjourned for the night after beginning deliberations about 11 o’clock today.

They are scheduled to return to the courtroom in Chehalis at 9 a.m. tomorrow morning.

The five jurors are tasked with determining if Reynolds death in her Toledo home was due to suicide, homicide or something else.

Some 40 witnesses have testified in the inquest which began last week.

Chehalis-area resident Bradd Reynolds (no relation) has been following the proceedings with his camera.

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Retired Lewis County Sheriff's Office detective Dave Neiser testifies.

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Barb Thompson, mother of Ronda Reynolds, with sheriff's Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown to the right.

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Retired sheriff's Chief Criminal Deputy Joe Doench testifies.

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True crime author Ann Rule

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Juanita Vaughn, who worked with Reynolds at Wal-Mart in Aberdeen, testifies.

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Royce Ferguson, Everett attorney working with Thompson.

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Isabelle Williams, director of evidence for the Lewis County Sheriff's Office, testifies.

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Lewis County Coroner's Office Chief Deputy Dawn Harris, with Thurston County Coroner Gary Warnock.

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Nason Weller, Reynolds' supervisor at The Bon in Olympia, testifies.

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Current sheriff's detective Sgt. Dusty Breen, left, speaks with Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer.

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Retired sheriff's Deputy Gary Holt testifies.

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Sheriff's detective Jamey McGinty leaves the courtroom

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Sherri Murphy, who worked as a debt collector and then a state trooper, testifies.

Coroners inquest: What the sheriff’s office believes today

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011
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Detective Bruce Kimsey talks with Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and Sheriff Steve Mansfield in the inquest courtroom during a break. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Present day members of the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office testified yesterday they were unable to confirm Joshua Williams’ story of a teenage party at the Reynolds’ Toledo home and his allegation Ronda Reynolds was shot and killed by one of the young people there.

Three sheriff’s detectives told of following up in 2009 and 2010 on new information in the case of the Dec. 16, 1998 death of the former trooper. They spoke of interviewing about a dozen individuals, many of them who were teenagers at the time.

“I have the feeling Mr. Williams may have been making some things up, to put it bluntly,” detective Kevin Engelbertson said yesterday morning.

Their testimony came as the coroner’s inquest in Chehalis into Reynolds’ death is wrapping up.

Reynolds was was found dead on the floor of a small walk-in closet, with a bullet in her head and covered up by a turned-on electric blanket.

Former sheriff’s detective Jerry Berry testified at length last week about a series of jail house meetings he had with Williams in which he was told Williams and others were at the Reynolds’ boys’ house, hanging out, playing video games and partying the night before the death.

Berry continued working with Barb Thompson – mother of Ronda Reynolds – after he left the sheriff’s office and then worked as a private investigator.

Berry was told Reynolds’ husband, Ron Reynolds, was home only briefly that night and left the house.

Engelbertson testified he knew Williams from his previous longtime work as a drug detective, and he had many times before given information in attempts to get out of jail and found to be unreliable.

Engelbertson spoke of contacting Jason Collins, who Williams implicated, and said Collins denied ever being at the Toledo house and said he’d do anything detectives wanted to clear his name.

Detectives yesterday recounted, as Berry previously has, that Williams’ story had grown more elaborate with each interview.

Detective Bruce Kimsey said yesterday Williams seemed to be extracting details from Berry’s questioning, and giving back that same information.

Kimsey and detective Jamey McGinty both testified they think the death was suicide.

Inquest jurors yesterday also heard briefly from former Chief Criminal Deputy Joe Doench, who said he had administrative overview of sheriff’s office field operations in 1998.

Doench, who said he was at the scene briefly but didn’t directly supervise the death investigation, told the courtroom he considers it a case of suicide.

Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod said yesterday he has two witnesses testifying today, and then five members of the inquest jury will adjourn to deliberate.

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

Sunday, October 16th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Portland consultant visited by members of the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office less than a month after Ronda Reynolds death testified on Friday it had all the earmarks of suicide.

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Ronda Reynolds

Rod Englert gave his opinion to lead detective Jerry Berry and detective Sgt. Glade Austin after viewing limited evidence, he said, that included photographs of the scene, a pillow with its case, a green plaid electric blanket and a gun.

Englert, testifying by telephone in the coroner’s inquest, said he has 48 years in law enforcement and specializes in crime scene reconstruction and blood pattern analysis.

Much of the information he shared Friday was based on pictures of Reynolds’ body laying on its left side on the floor of the closet in her Toledo home on Dec. 16, 1998.

More specifically, his conversation was based on five pages of notes he took on Jan. 13, 1999. On Friday afternoon, Englert said he hadn’t received from the coroner’s office copies of the photos from the film he gave Berry and Austin after the visit.

Englert described various reasons for his conclusion her body was not moved after she was shot, primarily viewing the blood on her neck and face, noting gravity and that he’d been told a pillow was said to have been covering her head.

He didn’t see signs of a struggle, he testified.

The trajectory of the bullet would be consistent with the position she was in, Englert said.

Englert had an explanation for those who wondered with firearms expert Marty Hayes how Reynolds possibly could have held the gun to her own head with the wound path that resulted.

It’s a fallacy to assume a right handed person would always shoot themselves with their right hand, he said.

“Most often what happens in cases like this is the barrel of the weapon is held with the right hand and you just reach up and pull the trigger with the left thumb,” he said.

One key observation is the site of the bullet’s entry is a classic site, Englert said. If Reynolds pulled the trigger, she went to a classic site, her right temple area, he said.

The gun and her hands were positioned the way he would have expected, he said. He would have been suspicious if the weapon was actually in her hand, he said.

Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod noted to Englert he hadn’t seen a photo of the body and gun together, and that he’s heard varying testimony throughout the inquest on where the gun was positioned before it was removed.

The consultant said he looked at the .32 caliber Rossi handgun, and was told a fiber had been removed from it that was similar to the blanket.

He examined the pillow itself and found it had no defects, but said the pillow case – very near its edge – had a bullet defect and what appeared to be powder burns, he said.

On the top edge of the electric blanket, he observed blood stains and what also might be powder stains, he said.

Englert noted his experience in what he said were hundreds and hundreds of suicides: They go to a secluded place, maybe out in the woods or in a closet, getting under something, he said.

“I’ve seen several of them in closets,” he said.

There’s not evidence, that he saw, someone else could have done it without her being aware, he said.

“Could she have been asleep? It’s possible,” Englert said.

He added before his testimony ended that, according to the literature, 99 percent of all contact gunshot wounds – as was Reynolds – are suicides.

Englert was the final witness in the first week of McLeod’s inquest. His testimony followed the testimony of Barb Thompson, mother of the former trooper, who had just told the inquest jury she was certain her daughter was murdered.

Thompson after the proceedings adjourned, declined two of her friends’ attempts to get her to stay the night in Chehalis with them. She said she wanted to get home to Spokane for the weekend.

“I need some alone time,” Thompson said.

Reflecting just briefly on what she’d just heard in the courtroom, she said: “Rod Englert made some good points. I’ll have to think about it.”

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Photo of Ronda Reynolds on floor of closet, without gun or electric blanket, Dec. 16, 1998

Coroners inquest: Mother of former trooper says it was murder

Saturday, October 15th, 2011
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Barb Thompson, mother of Ronda Reynolds speaks on the witness stand in Chehalis. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – When Barb Thompson took the witness stand yesterday during the coroner’s inquest into her grown daughter’s death she told those in the courtroom she was certain it was a homicide.

“There is no doubt in my mind, I am 100 percent convinced without a doubt that my daughter was murdered,” Thompson said.

The Spokane mother answered questions for almost an hour and a half about what she has learned since Dec. 16, 1998 when she was told her daughter, 33-year-old Ronda Reynolds, had committed suicide in her Toledo home.

Ronda Reynolds, a former trooper then working security at the Bon Marche, was found dead on the floor of a small walk-in closet, with a bullet in her head and covered up by a turned-on electric blanket.

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Ronda Reynolds

Her new husband, Toledo Elementary School Principal Ron Reynolds, told sheriff’s deputies the marriage was ending and his wife was talking about suicide the day before and through the night. Ron Reynolds said he woke up around 6 a.m. and realized she was no longer in bed with him, according to previous testimony.

Thompson testified she spoke with her daughter on the telephone twice that night and at first her daughter was going to move out that day, but changed her mind and decided she would leave on her own terms. She was not suicidal, she was upbeat, Thompson said.

Ronda Reynolds purchased an airline ticket to fly to Spokane the following afternoon.

“She was going to come home, spend some time with family and make some decisions and plans,” Thompson said.

Some 30 witnesses have been heard in Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod’s inquest in Chehalis as its first week came to a close.

Thompson described how she went to Toledo and her conversations with the son-in-law she was meeting in person for the first time.

Ron Reynolds told her she couldn’t have any of her daughter’s personal belongings because he planned to sell them to cover debt he blamed on his wife, Thompson testified.

She asked him about a funeral, and he said he said he didn’t know because he didn’t have any money. She asked if she could bring her daughter’s body back to Spokane, and cremate her, she said.

“He said he didn’t care as long as he didn’t have to pay for it,” Thompson said nearly breaking into sobs on the stand.

He told her she left him bankrupt, and never once did he say he missed her, Thompson said.

Thompson testified Ron Reynolds told her how he discovered a life insurance premium his wife hadn’t payed, that he thought it was $300,000 and was going to put it in the mail that afternoon.

Thompson has spent the years since poring through records, working with private investigators and an attorney to find out for sure what happened to her daughter. It always comes back to homicide, she said on Friday.

Neither Ron Reynolds nor his three sons are taking the opportunity to testify during the proceedings, as they invoked their fifth amendment right against self incrimination.

Thompson spoke of one of Ron Reynolds’ teenage sons she believed had a very deep hatred for her daughter, after a previous incident in which she was told he peeked at Ronda Reynolds in the shower, and she jumped out and tackled him.

He went into a rage and threatened to kill her daughter, Thompson said. The sheriff’s office was called and he had to go live with his mother, Thompson said.

When asked yesterday under oath what Thompson believed could be a motive, if indeed her daughter was killed, Thompson spoke of the Reynolds’ boys and their teenage friends said to have been hanging out and partying at the house that night, one of which told a private investigator Ron Reynolds left the house that evening.

Thompson said she believes there were several individuals at the house that night, including an older Reynolds’ boy who is not named in any of the police reports as having been present. She’s been told by three people Micah Reynolds’ truck was there, she testified.

Thompson spoke of then-17-year-old Jonathan Reynolds.

“I’ve been told he talked about ways he’d like to see her killed,” she said.

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Coroners inquest: Lie detector examiners testify

Friday, October 14th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Ron Reynolds took a polygraph days after his wife’s death which was inconclusive and another months later that indicated he was being truthful when he said he did not shoot his wife, experts said today.

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Ron Reynolds

The elementary school principal called 911 early on the morning of Dec. 16, 1998 and said his wife committed suicide inside their Toledo home

The classification of her death has vacillated between suicide and undetermined ever since.

Today, during the coroner’s inquest into the death of 33-year-old former trooper Ronda Reynolds, a local polygraph examiner testified he reviewed both tests in the autumn of 2001 when the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reopened the case.

Steve Birley, who opened his business after a 30-year-career with the Chehalis Police Department, said he concurred with the findings on both tests.

The examiner who conducted the second test in July 1999, at the behest of Ron Reynolds’ attorney, described to the inquest jurors the questions he asked the Toledo man.

“Did you pull the trigger on the gun that killed your wife?” and “On or about Dec. 15, did you shoot your wife?”

Terry Ball then read from his report: “Based on my polygraph examination, it’s my opinion he was being truthful.”

Ball was asked if such tests are always accurate.

He said 90 percent to 100 percent of the time they are.

“But they’re probably the most accurate method of determining truthfulness or deception,” Ball added.

Ron Reynolds is not taking part in the inquest in Chehalis, as he and his three sons were excused by Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod after asserting the privilege against self incrimination

More later

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Meanwhile read more about the inquest:

• “Mother: Ronda Reynolds was murdered by her step-son” from KOMOnews.com on Friday October 14,  2011 at 5:51 p.m. p.m., here