Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

Randle woman missing for more than three weeks

Monday, April 25th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office took a missing person report of a 57-year-old Randle woman who left her her house without her purse and car and hasn’t been seen since for almost three weeks.

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Trisha McKenzie-Fire

Trisha McKenzie-Fire lives with her boyfriend Kent Anderson on Silverbrook Road in Randle.

Anderson, 67, said he called authorities on April 2 after he woke up and she wasn’t home.

Sheriff’s detective Jamey McGinty said last week it’s not entirely unlike her leave without telling him where she’s gone.

But Anderson says he’s sick with worry.

“I want her found,” he said. “Nineteen days, that’s enough. She’s never done this before in her life, since I’ve known her.

“Just to walk out with no ID, no bank cards, no purse. Her purse is here and her car’s in my garage. Just nothing.”

The night before, the two, along with a friend, were drinking whiskey and Anderson went off to bed, he said. At about 3 a.m. or 4 a.m., the friend, who was sleeping on the couch, saw her go outside with a cigarette, Anderson said.

He has searched the property, and posted missing person flyers from Packwood to Centralia.

Anderson has been checking with her bank to find if there is any activity on her account; the sheriff’s office is doing the same.

McGinty said they’ve notified law enforcement up and down the Interstate 5 corridor.

The couple lived in a Chehalis apartment until about three years ago. She doesn’t work.

“When you get someone who just walks out the door and seemed fine, you just don’t know where to start,” McGinty said.

Anderson had suggested to the detective McKenzie-Fire might have checked herself in to a treatment facility. Because of drug and alcohol treatment centers’ confidentiality restrictions however, that can’t be confirmed, he said.

Anderson said he had left her a note before he went to bed that night about that. She left her prescription medications behind as well, he said.

McKenzie-Fire has brown hair and blue eyes. She is described as 5-foot 10-inches tall and 150 pounds.

Marijuana as medicine in Lewis County

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – On Wednesday, an individual with a valid “prescription” for medical marijuana could have gone to Green Health Chehalis to get it filled.

On Thursday, operator Brian Pfister said he was shutting his business down, after the real estate agent told him he was canceling the lease.

Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield had informed Pete Bezy the building on the 1700 block of Bishop Road was subject to seizure under drug laws, Pfister said.

“It was written in the lease exactly what I did,” Pfister said. “But I don’t want the guy to lose his building.”

Pfister opened Green Health Tacoma about a year ago, he said, and then a similar enterprise in Key Center, a community on the Kitsap Peninsula, a few months later.

His goal, he said, was to serve more than 300 Lewis County residents who travel to his Tacoma shop to obtain medical marijuana; most of whom he says are terminally ill.

The 1998 Washington Medical Marijuana Act made it possible for certain qualifying individuals with an authorization from their doctor to possess or grow marijuana, yet it’s not legal to buy or sell and remains illegal under federal law.

Pfister’s organization is among several operating in Tacoma, as the city allows medicinal pot dispensaries to remain open while they wait for the state legislature to clarify the law, according to The (Tacoma) News Tribune.

However, in Lewis County, the sheriff and the prosecutor say they won’t tolerate any such thing.

Pfister met with Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and Sheriff Mansfield about three weeks ago to tell them of his plans.

Mansfield told Pfister he would arrest him.

“Right now, what he wanted to do is against the law, regardless of what they do in Tacoma or Seattle,” Mansfield said.

The 48-year-old was very friendly and seemed very sincere, Mansfield said. But dispensaries are not allowed under state law and marijuana remains illegal under federal law, he said.

“When the law changes, my position changes, it’s that simple,” Mansfield said on Friday.

Pfister moved forward any way, knowing he would likely be arrested.

“I didn’t go into this expecting not,” Pfister said. “Once you have a couple of dying people crying to you, you tend not to care about getting locked up.”

Green Health is a non-profit and they accept donations but don’t sell medical marijuana, according to Pfister.

He intentionally kept the contents of the Bishop Road building sparse, knowing it was on the radar for a raid, he said.

He had one person there, to help patients with “edibles”, he said. That individual would take a patient’s name and call a doctor to verify the authorization, he said. He requires an original copy of the authorization with an original signature, he said.

Pfister has a state business license for Green Health Dispensary LLC, according to the Washington Department of Licensing.

Lewis County does not issue or require county business licenses, unlike some cities including Centralia which unknowingly gave a license earlier this year to Hub City Natural Medicine which was shut down by police last week.

Centralia police seized dried marijuana, various foods suspected of containing marijuana, as well the businesses’ computers on Wednesday evening. They arrested one man, Daniel J. Mack, 39, who said he was a volunteer dispensary worker.

The following evening, Centralia police went to the Mack’s Rochester residence and found more than 150 plants growing on his property, including in an underground growing operation.

Mack was charged Thursday with delivery of marijuana and other offenses. It’s not clear what other charges have been or may be filed following the seizures in Rochester.

The state medical marijuana law allows a patient or designated provider to possess up to a 60-day supply. Guidelines offered by the Washington State Department of Health say that’s defined as 24 ounces and 15 plants.

Centralia Police Department spokesperson Officer Chris Fitzgerald says a lot of people are ignorant about the law.

First of all, Fitzgerald says, it’s against the law to possess marijuana. The medical marijuana law provides for authorization – not a prescription – in certain circumstances, she said.

“It may be used as an affirmative defense, which may or may not help you out in court,” Fitzgerald said.

In some case, when Centralia officers come across a person who produces an authorization, they will seize the marijuana and refer the case for evaluation of any charges, she said.

In some cases when an individual is growing it, they take samples but not the plants, she said.

But dispensaries are a different story, according to Fitzgerald. The law says an individual may grow it for one patient, she said.

The stance in Chehalis is similar, according to Deputy Police Chief Randy Kaut.

For individuals, as long as they are staying within the law, they aren’t necessarily arrested at the time, he said.

“We’re trying to give the benefit of the doubt, unless we see obvious violations,” Kaut said.

Fitzgerald says a big problem is abuses of the authorizations.

Most of the time, the authorizations Centralia police come across are not valid, sometimes just a piece of paper that looks like it’s been photocopied several times, she said.

And, “We’ve made several arrests where people said they were cultivating it and said they had authorizations, but we caught them selling it.”

Read the state medical marijuana law here

Follow the legislative session here

•••

SOME FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT THE LAW

Q: Is medical marijuana legal in Washington? I’ve heard conflicting answers to this question.

A: Marijuana possession is illegal in Washington. The medical marijuana law, chapter 69.51A RCW, provides an affirmative defense for qualified patients and designated caregivers. People who qualify have a valid reason to possess a 60-day supply of marijuana. They may use that reason to defend against a legal action taken under Washington law. However, medical marijuana is not legal under federal law. There is no affirmative defense for people who are arrested or charged under federal law.

Q: How can I find out if I qualify to be a medical marijuana patient?

A: Talk to your doctor. The law includes a very specific list of qualifying conditions you must have before a doctor can recommend medical marijuana.

Q: What is a valid written recommendation?

A: Beginning June 10, 2010, a recommendation must be written on tamper-resistant paper. It must also include an original signature by the health care provider, a date, and a statement that says in the health care provider’s professional opinion the patient may benefit from the medical use of marijuana.

Q: How do I get medical marijuana? Can I buy it?

A: The law allows a qualifying patient or designated provider to grow medical marijuana. It is not legal to buy or sell it.

Q: How much medical marijuana can I have?

A: A qualifying patient or designated provider may have a 60-day supply of medical marijuana. A 60-day supply is defined as 24 ounces and 15 plants (WAC 246-75-010) The law says that a patient may exceed these limits if he or she can prove medical need.

Q: How do I become a designated provider?

A: A designated provider must be at least 18 years old and must be designated in writing by the qualifying patient. A designated provider can only be a provider for one patient at any one time.

Read more FAQ here

Source: Washington State Department of Health

Breaking news: Underground marijuana growing operation shut down in Rochester

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

This news story was updated at 10:45 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police last night went to the residence of the man arrested at Hub City Natural Medicine and found marijuana growing in his home and inside two motor homes as well as an underground growing operation.

Officers seized about 164 plants of all different sizes from the property at the 18400 block of Leon Road Southwest in Rochester, according to the Centralia Police Department.

“The shed had a wooden floor with a hatch that led to an underground room dug out under the shed and the house,” police Sgt. Jim Shannon said this morning.

The approximately 10-foot by 12-foot room was wired for power and lights with reflective material covering the walls, he said.

Daniel J. Mack, 39, of Rochester, was arrested Wednesday evening when police shut down a storefront in downtown Centralia they say was operating as a medical marijuana dispensary. Mack identified himself as volunteer dispensary worker, but police consider him one of three owners of the business.

The Centralia Police Department’s Anti-Crime Unit, along with other officers and sheriff’s deputies served their search warrant about 6 p.m. last night at Mack’s home in Rochester.

Nobody was arrested there. A 14-year-old was the only person present, Shannon said. He is being cared for by neighbors, according to Shannon.

The search warrant was obtained in connection with the investigation that led to Wednesday night’s raid at Hub City Natural Medicine on the 100 block of South Tower Avenue. There, police confiscated dried marijuana in large mason jars, various baked goods, candies and refrigerated items suspected of containing marijuana, as well the businesses’ computers.

Shannon said Mack admitted to bringing product from his residence to the store to distribute.

Further arrests are expected, as there are other growers, other customers and other sellers, Shannon said.

Son pleads not guilty to helping former trooper father in suicide, fraud plan

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Kenneth R. Varner pleaded not guilty today to charges related to allegedly helping his father make a suicide look like homicide so the family could collect insurance money

His father, 49-year-old James E. Varner of Olympia, was found dead with a gunshot inside his car on a forest road near Packwood in February 2006.

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Kenneth R. Varner

Authorities arranged for Kenneth R. Varner to be arrested last month in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico where he had been living.

James Varner worked for the state Department of Labor and Industries and before that, was a Washington state trooper.

He reportedly left a note apologizing to his wife about his debt, and telling her not to blame his son.

It’s a case with a “a lot of fraud” involved, according to Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield.

Charging documents in the case – 19 pages of them –  offer suggestions the son retrieved the firearm from Packwood; it was found later in Mayfield Lake.

They also include details of an insurance fraud scheme related to a falsely-reported-as-stolen antique car, a case both men were blamed for in Thurston County.

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James E. Varner

The documents further contain accusations by a woman who said she reported to the Federal Bureau of Investigation that Kenneth R. Varner defrauded her out of money for the purchase of property after she met him in Puerto Vallarta.

Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead said today the latter allegations are something for the FBI to investigate. He did not know if they have done so.

Kenneth R. Varner pleaded guilty to the Thurston County charges but never returned to be sentenced, Halstead said.

Charging documents include allegations the father facilitated bank transactions for his son’s business deals, which the son conducted under an alias. The younger Varner reportedly worked as a free-lance realtor in Mexico.

Kenneth Varner is charged in Lewis County Superior Court with promoting a suicide attempt and conspiracy to commit theft in the first degree.

He was also charged in an entirely separate Lewis County case – for theft related to a a bid to replace a roof of a business partner’s building in Centralia in 2006.

He remains held in the Lewis County Jail on $500,000 bail.

Trial dates were set for the week of June 6.
•••

Read background on the case here

Plea agreement reached in Austin King case

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS –  Twenty-one-year-old Jack A. Silverthorne is planning to plead guilty in last summer’s death of Morton teenager Austin King.

Austin King

Austin King

Silverthorne’s lawyer said today attorneys have worked out a plea agreement in which the charges will be downgraded, and his client is looking at about eight and half years in prison.

Centralia attorney J.P. Enbody said it seemed he and prosecutors both came to understand Silverthorne caused the 16-year-old’s death, but it wasn’t something he set out to do.

Austin vanished from his family’s home in the Tilton River Mobile Home Park early on June 23 and was the subject of a month-long search headed up by volunteers. His body was found some 10 miles away off a logging road outside Morton.

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Jack A. Silverthorne

Enbody said evidence showed the two were out on the logging road and there was a dispute. The exact details may never be known, he said.

Austin’s skull was cracked and Silverthorne had a broken bone in his hand, he said.

Silverthorne, who had been staying in the trailer park with his grandmother at the time, was arrested in November at his home in Renton and charged with first-degree murder.

Authorities have said in charging documents they believe Silverthorne’s motive was related to an attraction to a girl, the mother of Austin’s child.

He is expected to plead guilty to first-degree manslaughter on May 6.
•••

Read previous most recent story, here

Read more about the case in “Morton homicide: Suspect had broken hand, victim had cracked skull” from Wednesday Nov. 10, 2010, here

Centralia police seize computers, products at medical marijuana business

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

This news story was updated at 12:37 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police seized marijuana, food items suspected of containing marijuana and computers yesterday evening when they searched a downtown business they say was operating as a medical marijuana dispensary.

One man was arrested as well at Hub City Natural Medicine on the 100 block of South Tower Avenue, according to police.

The action followed a month-long investigation that grew out of numerous complaints of marijuana violations, according to a news release from the Centralia Police Department.

While the city had issued a business license to the enterprise, it was with the understanding it was dealing in products such as vitamin supplements, according to the news release.

The arrest and seizure comes as the state legislature is considering legislation to clarify issues involving the state’s 1998 voter-approved medical marijuana law.

According to police: the Centralia Police Department’s Anti-Crime Unit served a search warrant about 6 p.m. yesterday.

About a dozen officers, including deputies from the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office, were on hand.

Daniel J. Mack, 39, of Rochester, was arrested for delivery of marijuana, possession of marijuana and possession with intent to deliver marijuana.

There were other people inside – determined to be “patients” or “customers” – but they were not arrested, according to Officer Chris Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald said Mack identified himself as volunteer dispensary worker, but police consider him one of three owners of the business. She expects other arrests to be made.

Among the items confiscated were dried marijuana in large mason jars and packaged for individual sale, various baked goods, candies and refrigerated items suspected of containing marijuana, as well as paraphernalia and the businesses’ computers.

Hub City Natural Medicine applied for its city business license on Jan. 31, specifying the nature of its business as “education and sales of natural medicine”, something that didn’t trigger a review by the chief of police, according to the Centralia Police Department.

The news release cited a bulletin from the Washington Cities Insurance Authority issued in December saying medical marijuana dispensaries are illegal and not entitled to a business license.

Loose cap blamed for March 2010 fatal plane crash near Morton

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Authorities are blaming a plane crash near Morton last year that killed the pilot and injured a passenger and on a loose cap that deprived the engine of fuel.

The Cirrus Design Corp SR22 crashed near Morton on March 19, 2010.

The 39-year-old pilot and Rebecca Carroll were returning from a business trip in Concord, Calif, and headed to the Renton Airport but the four-seater plane lost power, and he tried to land at Strom Airport in Morton. Instead, the plane struck trees and came to rest in a rural residential area about two and a half miles from the airfield.

The National Transportation Safety Board issued a probable cause report last week.

According to the report, the aircraft had undergone an annual inspection and had three engine cylinders replaced just 11 flight hours before the accident.

The airplane was returned to service without verification all the inspected items had been completed, according to the NTSB.

Following the cylinder replacement and fuel system pressure checks, the cap on the throttle and metering assembly inlet should have been torqued, but it’s likely the cap was just installed finger tight, according to the report.

The plane crashed into the front yard of a home off state Route 508, killing the pilot, Shane Sullivan of Bellevue, according to a news report from KCPQ’ s q13fox.com.