Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

Randle murder defendant free on bail

Friday, February 11th, 2011
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Erik R. Massa, center, waits for court to begin with his lawyers, Chris Baum, left and Joe Mano.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter


CHEHALIS – Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher asked a judge today to set bail in the Randle murder case at $25,000 unsecured, but with 10 percent of that posted with the court.

The defendant, forty-three-year-old Erik R. Massa of Randle, was accompanied by two lawyers in Lewis County Superior Court this afternoon who agreed with the recommendation.

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Guy LaFontaine

Massa is charged with second-degree murder in the March death of Guy W. LaFontaine, 58, of Federal Way. The two men are related by marriage.

Massa, a taxidermist, was arrested last March 14 after LaFontaine died from  blunt force injuries to his head, torso and extremities and Lewis County sheriff’s detectives found evidence including a broken shotgun with blood on it in an empty silo next to Massa’s shop. He was released from jail three days later, with prosecutors telling a judge they did not yet have enough evidence to charge him.

Meagher charged Massa last week with first-degree assault, but on Monday upgraded the charge.

Six of LaFontaine’s family members and a former co-worker from Todd Shipyards in Seattle were in the Chehalis courtroom for this afternoon’s proceedings.

Meagher told the judge he was confident about the bail arrangement since Massa has no criminal history and owns a home here. He asked the judge to limit Massa’s travel to Lewis County.

Chehalis attorneys Joe Mano and Chris Baum are representing him.

Baum said his client has already surrendered all his firearms to Mano.

Judge Richard Brosey agreed with the bail arrangement.

Charging documents describe a night in which LaFontaine – who had gone to Randle to go fishing – called his wife and said he had been beat up and he thought he was going to die.

According to the documents: His wife Gail picked him up and took him to Morton General Hospital where they found both his eye sockets were broken and he had a broken arm.

At 3:45 a.m., the hospital advised a sheriff’s deputy they released LaFontaine because they couldn’t keep him in his bed.

LaFontaine’s wife took him to St. Francis Hospital in Federal Way where he was pronounced dead.

The King County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled LaFontaine’s death a homicide.

Massa’s arraignment was scheduled for Feb. 24.

Massa is one of six people charged in Lewis County with murder for homicides that occurred during 2010. His is the only second-degree murder case.

The others are:

• Ronald A. Brady, 60, is charged with first-degree murder for the April 19 shooting death in Onalaska of Thomas McKenzie, 56. Also, first-degree assault. Bail: $50,000 unsecured bond

• Richard Joseph Frank Roth, 65, is charged with first degree murder for the Nov. 4 shooting death in Winlock of Jackie Marie Lawyer, 64. Bail: $500,000

• Jack A. Silverthorne, 20, is charged with first-degree murder for the death of Austin King, 16, whose body was found in Morton on July 20. Bail: $2 million

• Ryan J. McCarthy, 29, is charged with three counts of first-degree murder in the Aug. 21 shooting deaths in the Salkum-Onalaska area of David West Sr., 52, David West Jr., 16, and Tony Williams, 50. Also extortion. Bail: $2 million

• John A. Booth Jr., 31 is charged in the same deaths as McCarthy but with aggravated first-degree murder for West Jr. and Williams and attempted first-degree murder of Denise Salts. Also extortion. Bail: $10 million
•••

Read previous story on Massa and LaFontaine here

Bus driver apparently “passed out” and crashed into building once before

Friday, February 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A video camera aboard the Twin Transit bus that drove into a Chehalis house this week shows the driver “wasn’t really coherent” after he started to make a left turn and until he ran into the house, police say.

Seventy-year-old Federico J. Mestaz was put on administrative leave while the collision is being investigated.

Police called Wednesday morning when the mid-sized bus plowed through a fence and yard before striking the home suspected the cause was related to some sort of medical issue.

Chehalis Police Department detective Sgt. Rick McNamara indicated this morning the videotape bolsters that theory.

Twin Transit General Manager Ernie Graichen would not release the driver’s name but said bus driver Fred Mestaz crashed into a light pole and awning of a bank on Pearl Street in Centralia in October of 2004.

Grachien would not confirm it was the same bus driver.

In the 2004 incident, Mestaz apparently passed out before running into the Bank of America, according to Grachien.

He returned to work after six months and an extensive medical evaluation, Grachien said.

Nobody was hurt in this week’s accident at the corner of Southwest 13th Street and Southwest McFadden Avenue, but a 66-year-old woman inside the home escaped likely serious injury only because she’d left her bed to sleep upstairs with a colicky grandchild, according to her family.

Grachien said on Wednesday the driver who hit the house was a 15-veteran with an “excellent record.”

All of Twin Transit’s 14 busses have video cameras inside which show multiple views, according to Graichen.

This morning, Sgt. McNamara watched the video and said it shows the driver “slump” a little to the left as his left arm relaxes and that hand drops off the steering wheel and becomes limp. His right hand was still on the wheel but the bus continues into the house, McNamara said.

Just before that, he has a coffee cup in his hand which he puts down and starts coughing, according to McNamara. He didn’t know if the coughing was related to the moments in which he appeared “incoherent.”

Grachien said he couldn’t answer if the driver would be let go, as the circumstances are still being investigated. In 2004, he didn’t have sufficient grounds to dismiss the driver, he said.

McNamara said he doesn’t expect Mestaz will be cited for the collision.

The bus company and its insurer – Washington State Transportation Insurance Pool – are conducting an investigation.

Graichen said he understands the insurer is getting estimates to repair the home and will take care of that.

The dollar amount to fix the 15-seat bus is not yet available, he said.

•••

Read Wednesday’s story “Chehalis bus versus house collision a mystery” here

•••

KIROtv.com posted video from inside the bus. See it here

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Sabrina Kostick snapped this photo with her phone of the bus and house at the corner of Southwest 13th Street and Southwest McFadden Avenue in Chehalis.

Chehalis bus versus house collision a mystery

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011
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Sabrina Kostick snapped this photo with her phone this morning of the bus and house at the corner of Southwest 13th Street and Southwest McFadden Avenue in Chehalis.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

This was updated at 7 p.m.

CHEHALIS – Police say they don’t know what caused a Twin Transit bus to crash into a Chehalis house this morning.

No passengers were onboard and nobody was injured, but the bus and the home sustained significant damage, according to authorities.

However, it was a close call for Mei Liu, who had gotten up very early and gone upstairs to stay up with her colicky grandchild, according to a family friend. Her bed is in the downstairs corner that was struck, he said.

“Luckily she wasn’t sleeping in her bed, she would have been under all that debris,” Matt Howard said.

Aid and police called at about 7:30 a.m. to Southwest 13th Street near William Avenue said the bus had been traveling eastward. It plowed through a fence and the yard before striking the split-level home.

Chehalis Police Department detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said initial indications are it was probably a medical issue with the driver and not anything mechanical with the vehicle.

“He said he was turning left and the next thing he knows is he was hitting the house,” McNamara said. “Something happened. He can’t explain it and we can’t explain it.”

Brickwork was knocked off the building and the wall pushed in, a little bit, McNamara said.

Twin Transit General Manager Ernie Graichen said the driver is a 15-veteran with an “excellent record.”

The driver was checked out and appeared to be fine, Chehalis Fire Department Capt. Kevin Curfman said.

However, he was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital to be checked out and for a post-accident drug test, according to Graichen. The driver’s name was not released.

Forty-four-year-old Hieu Duong said he was brushing his teeth when he felt a jolt.

“Suddenly the house moved, like somebody put a bomb outside,” he said.

It scared his children, he said, but the main thing is no one was injured, especially his mother-in-law.

“She’s lucky,” his wife Liu Li said.

“She might not (have made) it,” he said.

The couple, who own the South Pacific Bistro nearby, were expecting a contractor tomorrow to estimate the damage.

The 15-seat bus was towed to a repair facility.

Twin Transit will conduct an investigation, Graichen said.

McNamara said he didn’t know if the driver would be cited.

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Plywood now covers the corner of the Hieu Duong and Liu Li's home in Chehalis.

Rochester drug dealer gets life for Olympia slaying

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011
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Robert J. Maddaus Jr. sits next to his lawyer in Thurston County Superior Court after he is sentenced to life in prison.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

This was updated at 7:08 p.m. and 8:36 p.m.

OLYMPIA – Robert J. Maddaus Jr., 41, of Rochester, was sentenced this afternoon to life in prison without the possibility of release for the first-degree murder of forty-year-old Shaun Allen Peterson.

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Shaun Allen Peterson

Peterson died handcuffed and shot on an Olympia street early on Nov. 16, 2009.

It was a third strike for Maddaus.

Peterson’s 12-year-old son Joshua was among those who addressed the judge.

“He may not have been the best dad, but he was mine,” Joshua said.

Peterson, a father of two who lived in Tumwater before he died, was a drug dealer who was supplied by Maddaus.

Maddaus’s sentencing in Thurston County Superior Court followed his conviction by a jury last week of murder and numerous other charges related to a weekend of threats as he tried to recover cash and pounds of methamphetamine stolen from his Rochester trailer home.

Witnesses said Maddaus forced Peterson at gunpoint at the Lacey Fred Meyer to put on the handcuffs and then took him another drug dealer’s apartment on Capitol Way Southeast.

Peterson’s mother, Judy Peterson, told the judge her son loved the outdoors, wrote poetry and often teased people.

“He tried several times to get out of the drug world and helped others get out of the drug world,” she said. “He had the biggest heart.”

Peterson’s sister Gaylin Johnson said there were no words to make sense of the tragedy Maddaus brought on.

“He’s an arrogant, disrespectful, heartless human being,” Johnson said.

“Shaun’s death was no accident,” she said. “Bobby handcuffed my brother, shot him repeatedly and left him in the street to die alone.”

More than 50 individuals crowded into the courtroom, with many standing.

Maddaus, dressed in white prison garb, declined an opportunity to speak.

His defense attorney Richard Woodrow offered no words on his client’s behalf.

Deputy Prosecuting Attorney David Bruneau told the judge Maddaus had two prior most serious offense convictions: second-degree assault in Lewis County in 1993 and possession with intent to deliver while armed with a deadly weapon in Thurston County in 1995.

That made it a third strike, and a mandatory life sentence, he said.

Judge Christine Pomeroy was brief.

“At this time Mr. Maddaus, I will sentence you to life in prison without the possibility of release,” Pomeroy said. “The victim was handcuffed and vulnerable.”

Maddaus was sentenced also for two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm and four counts of witness tampering, as well as second-degree assault and attempted kidnapping for an incident three days before the shooting.

His lawyer said he will appeal.

“My opinion, I think this case is going to be back in Thurston County for a retrial,” Woodrow said after the proceedings.

Woodrow filed a motion for a new trial, he said, as his office received a typed but unsigned letter yesterday saying one of the juror’s family members who works in family court printed out and gave Maddaus’s criminal history to the juror.

If not for the life sentence, the number of months he faced, which included mandatory five-year firearm enhancements, added up to more than 500 months.

Recently elected Thurston County Prosecutor Jon Tunheim said because Maddaus is a persistent offender – from the state’s three- strikes law – those months basically “get consumed.”

“I think the community is a whole lot safer with him in prison,” Tunheim said after the proceedings. “That’s kind of the bottom line.”

•••
Read about the places in Lewis County Robert Maddaus hid out in the 11 days after the shooting until he was captured, here

Randle taxidermist to face murder charge

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Randle taxidermist is expected in court this week to face charges in the March homicide of a 58-year-old welder from Federal Way.

Erik R. Massa, 43, of Randle, was charged yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court with second-degree murder, according to the prosecutor’s office.

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Guy LaFontaine

A relative, Guy W. LaFontaine, had gone to Randle to go fishing but ended up on March 13 at Morton General Hospital with two broken eye sockets and other injuries. LaFontaine died the following morning.

Deputies arrested Massa later that day, but he was released from jail three days later, with prosecutors telling a judge they did not yet have enough evidence to charge him.

Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher initially charged Massa last week with first-degree assault, but said today a review of the forensic evidence prompted him to upgrade the charge.

LaFontaine died from blunt force injuries to his head, torso and extremities, according to information from his autopsy. He had a shoe print on his head, according to charging documents.

Detectives found a broken shotgun with blood on it in an empty silo next to Massa’s shop, according to charging documents.

LaFontaine worked at Todd Shipyards in Seattle as a welder.

Charging documents give the following account of the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office investigation:

A deputy interviewed LaFontaine’s wife Gail on March 13. Her husband said he was going to go fishing near River Ranch Road in Randle.

She got a call from him, in which he said he had been beat up and he thought he was going to die. She found him on a road, picked him up and took him to Morton General Hospital.

Deputy Matt McKnight who responded to the hospital, was told LaFontaine had substantial wounds about his face and arm and told a nurse he was in extreme pain. He also had a broken arm and a bullet in his arm with an apparent fresh entry wound. (Meagher said today it turned out to be a wound from years earlier)

He was not cooperative with law enforcement.

At 3:45 a.m., the hospital advised McKnight they couldn’t keep LaFontaine in his bed and they were releasing him.

LaFontaine’s wife took him to St. Francis Hospital in Federal Way. He was pronounced dead there. Deputies learned of his death from the Federal Way Police Department.

At 8 a.m. that morning, sheriff’s detective Matt Wallace went to the 1,100 block of U.S. Highway 12 where Massa has a home and taxidermy shop. Wallace was looking for LaFontaine’s car.

He found what appeared to be blood on the car’s right door and then a dent on the right passenger door of a Nissan pickup there. Also, on the Nissan’s door, Wallace found “red liquid” with what appeared to be hair matted in it.

Meagher said he believed the two men were related by marriage, but isn’t sure exactly the details.

The King County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled LaFontaine’s death a homicide.

Detectives spoke with a man who said he spoke with Massa that morning.

Massa’s father-in-law, Don Roberts who is also Gail’s ex-husband, said to a detective Massa told him LaFontaine had been walking around the taxidermy shop with a shotgun, according to charging documents.

Massa has been summoned to the courthouse in Chehalis at 4 p.m. on Friday.

Meagher said he hasn’t been arrested, but his lawyer Joseph Mano will bring him in.

Crime in Centralia, especially thefts, leaps upward

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Crime in Centralia increased at disturbing levels last year, with property crimes up almost 44 percent, Centralia Police Chief Bob Berg reported yesterday.

The crime rate in Lewis County’s largest city was the highest it’s been in five years, according to Berg.

The chief attributes the rise partly to to a poor economy.

“The condition of our local economy and the release of known criminals back into our community no doubt contributed to the increase,” Berg wrote in a news  release.

The figures come from the preliminary crime statistics compiled for the Washington State Association of Sheriff’s and Police Chiefs as part of the Uniform Crime Reporting Program forwarded to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The chances of a resident being a victim of a property crime last year was almost 8 percent.

Garage and storage shed burglaries accounted almost exclusively for the sharp increase in burglaries last year, according to Berg.

“The police department continues to work these crimes as an emphasis of the anti-crime team, along with their street level drug enforcement efforts,” Berg wrote.

He notes that in 2009, the city experienced one of the lowest crime rates since uniform reporting was implemented 50 years ago, but all those gains were wiped out last year.

The overall crime rate in Centralia went up by 41.1 percent last year, compared with the year before. But property crime increased by 43.7 percent and violent crime only 13.6 percent.

Berg’s numbers show:
• Theft: up 52.9 percent (from 550 incidents to 841)
• Burglary: up 39.7 percent (from 151 to 211)
• Felony assault: up 38 percent (from 50 to 69)

Some offenses declined or were unchanged:
• Rape (down 35 percent)
• Murder and robbery (unchanged)
• Motor vehicle theft (down 1.5 percent)
• Arson: (down 53 percent)

As a department, they are frustrated with the marked increase, Berg wrote.

On the brighter side, he notes that over time, the trend is still downward, the chances of resident being a victim of a violent crime is less than 1 percent, and the department’s clearance rate for crimes improved by 3.3 percent over the previous year.

Berg writes the department continues to work cooperatively with neighboring law enforcement agencies and neighborhood groups to address the challenges of drugs and crime, but asks for the public’s help.

“Preventing crime is a community responsibility, he writes.

His appeal to the public: Secure your home and valuables, and report suspicious activity to the police.

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UCR rate 2001 - 2010 Centralia

Three guesses as to who helped murder suspect Maddaus hide out …

Sunday, February 6th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

OLYMPIA – After the slaying of a drug dealer in Olympia almost 15 months ago, the Rochester man who came to be the prime suspect hid out in places like a woman friend’s home in Rochester, a motel in Centralia and, briefly, at Robbie Russell’s Chehalis residence, while his get away car got put in an Onalaska body shop to be repainted, according to witness testimony.

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Robert John Maddaus Jr.

Robert J. Maddaus Jr., 41, of Rochester, and four others at the Capitol Way Southeast apartment scattered after 40-year-old Shaun Allen Peterson was fatally shot.

Maddaus was convicted last week of first-degree murder and other charges in Thurston County Superior Court. Peterson, who resided in Tumwater when he was killed, was found handcuffed and dying on the street outside another drug dealer’s apartment early on the morning of November 16, 2009.

Jurors began hearing the case in Judge Christine Pomeroy’s courtroom on Jan. 12.

Witnesses for Deputy Prosecuting Attorney David Bruneau described the days prior to the shooting as a weekend in which the Rochester supplier of drugs to street level dealers through Thurston and Lewis counties was trying to track down who had robbed his home of five pounds of methamphetamine and $30,000.

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Shaun Allen Peterson

Defense attorney Richard Woodrow attempted to show it was Maddaus’s acquaintance Matthew Tremblay who killed Peterson, and probably by accident.

Witnesses described themselves and others as smoking methamphetamine and sometimes heroin at many of the locations “visited” throughout trial testimony, including the 1819 Capitol Way SE apartment of Dan Leville and Falyn Grimes that night.

Olympia police were called to the shooting scene at 2:43 a.m. that morning.

Maddaus and Matthew Tremblay, now 30, both testified the other was the shooter but agree they fled the area together in Maddaus’s dark green Volkswagen Jetta.

They drove to Rochester to the mobile home of Josephine Lundy, a woman who has said she’s known Maddaus some 20 years.

Lundy testified only that Maddaus called her and said he was coming over. She said she went to bed and didn’t even know where in her home on U.S. Highway 12 that Maddaus slept.

Tremblay testified Maddaus told him to start cleaning out the car and that Maddaus hid the gun and handcuffs. Tremblay stayed there a couple of hours during which Maddaus made several calls, looked for gasoline to put on his arms, took a shower and went to sleep, Tremblay told the court.

Tremblay’s girlfriend Amanda Harader testified she got a call from him, asking her to pick him up. “He sounded like he was scared, upset, he wasn’t acting normal,” the 23-year-old woman testified.

The couple said she brought Tremblay’s supply of methamphetamine and Tremblay sold three ounces to Lundy at Maddaus’s request before they left.

The couple said they then switched motels, from the Quality Inn in Olympia to one in Lacey.

They were picked up by police on Nov. 17, on Highway 101 headed toward Mason County on the way to meet her sister and David “Nate” Hoffman, according to witness testimony. “Fat Nate” – who said he was Tremblay’s business partner – testified he and Tremblay were going to leave town.

The other three individuals at the Capitol Way apartment testified that after they heard, but didn’t see, gunshots, they fled to an upstairs apartment of a friend.

Leville and Grimes said they stayed upstairs into the following day, hiding out because she had a warrant and they were scared. Jesse Rivera said he later went back downstairs to their apartment and slept until he had to go to work at Fishtail Brewery where he was a cook, while police conducted an investigation out on the street. Rivera wasn’t contacted by police until Dec. 9.

Maddaus testified last week when he left Lundy’s in Rochester he met Robbie Russell in Grand Mound and went to Russell’s home in Chehalis while Russell arranged for someone else to pick up the Jetta.

“I needed to kind of hide out for a minute, because I needed to figure out what was going on,” Maddaus said.

Maddaus didn’t describe who Russell was, but one witness testified he was a drug dealer who was supplied by Maddaus.

Maddaus only stayed at the Jackson Highway residence a short time because there were a “bunch of people hanging out”, he said. Then Russell found a friend’s place for him to say, Maddaus said.

As the Olympia Police Department continued to investigate the death and round up those they thought might be involved, Maddaus stopped answering his cell phone, according to phone records in the case.

Maddaus testified he spent a couple of days at the King Oscar Motel off Harrison Avenue in Centralia, at another motel and then, if he remembered correctly, back to the King Oscar. Russell helped him get rooms, he said.

A now-23-year-old who calls herself Maddaus’s niece, spoke of visiting him twice at a motel across from the Centralia Factory Outlets. Chelsea Williams said she brought a girlfriend of her “uncle” over to stay there and picked her up two days later.

Dale Carter, who has an auto body and paint shop at his Burnt Ridge Road home in Onalaska, testified that Maddaus contacted him and said he wanted to bring his Jetta in and get the rest of the body work done on it.

Carter was already doing work on an Acura that belonged to Maddaus and he was told to put that “on hold”, he said. Two men he didn’t know delivered the Jetta the next day, Carter testified.

The dark green metallic Jetta was being primed so it could be painted a charcoal color when Olympia police detective Chris Johnstone and a Lewis County sheriff’s deputy came and impounded the car, according to witness testimony.

Testimony didn’t reveal all the places those from the apartment hid out until their arrests, but did show Leville and Grimes were not arrested until Dec. 5 at the Little Creek Casino in Mason County.

At one point before Maddaus was captured, he visited the Tumwater home of another drug dealer, Theodore Farmer.

Farmer testified Maddaus was wearing a long blondish wig when he was brought there by a “Hispanic guy”. They spoke of creating an alibi that Maddaus was with him getting a tattoo done between midnight and 3 a.m. when Peterson was shot, Farmer testified.

Maddaus was coming from the home of a Nisqually man when he met up with Russell at Russell’s Chehalis travel trailer home on Nov. 27.

Maddaus said Russell contacted him and said they needed to go check on the progress of the Jetta.

However, what he didn’t know was three days earlier, detective Johnstone had contacted Russell in Rochester – when he had been stopped by deputies – and asked him to cooperate in picking Maddaus up. He agreed.

Russell asked the detective if he would help out with some charges he had in Lewis County, Johnstone said.

Johnstone testified he spoke with the prosecutor, “who only said he would take any assistance that he gave the police into consideration for his charges, but no formal agreements or promises were made.”

Maddaus knew a warrant had been issued for his arrest. In court last week, he described what happened next on Nov. 27, 2009: “Robbie had the cops waiting for me.”

Johnstone testified he knew ahead of time Russell would be driving a red Corvette and had been in phone contact with Russell throughout the night. Lewis County sheriff’s deputies and their SWAT team had assembled hours earlier to assist in the capture.

“I was at the bottom of his driveway,” Johnstone said.

Sheriff’s Deputy Sgt. Rob Snaza and detective Dan Riordan got word the car was leaving and got behind it as it turned off Jackson Highway onto Rush Road, according to Lewis County Sheriff’s Office incident reports.

The driver at first pulled over, but then sped away fishtailing. Snaza used his patrol car to tap the rear of the Corvette, intentionally spinning out the fleeing car. The car slid sideways into the ongoing lane, hit a culvert and went airborne.

Maddaus was taken into custody.

The Corvette was held at Lewis County’s evidence facility.

When the car was searched, detectives found a loaded nine millimeter pistol beneath the passenger floor mat, more than $35,000 cash and a green backpack which contained pounds of methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin, according to testimony.

The $35,920 in currency was inside a locked bank bag which was in a black Tommy Hilfiger bag found on the floorboard, Olympia Police Officer Dan Smith testified. The Hilfiger bag also contained a copy of the search warrant for Maddaus’s residence, he said.

The drugs were inside a pea-green backpack found behind the seats, according to Smith. It also held a prescription with Maddaus’s name, a passport and an M-80, along with the “food saver” containers, he said.

The drugs inside the backpack amounted to a little less, according to Smith’s testimony, than charging documents initially alleged.

They included: approximately one and three-quarters pounds of methamphetamine (street value of more than $120,000); nearly a half pound of cocaine (street value of more than $15,000); and about one third pound of heroin (street value of $12,000).

Maddaus was sentenced to one year and a day on the drug possession charges in Lewis County.

Russell was not charged in connection with the events of Nov. 27, 2009, but in December got a six-year prison sentence when his four Lewis County cases were wrapped up into one plea agreement.

Testimony in the murder trial didn’t reveal exactly the status of everyone who was in the apartment the night of the fatal shooting, but:

Tremblay said he is in prison now for trafficking in stolen property and gets out in September.

Leville said he made a plea deal for attempted possession of a controlled substance, but has not yet been sentenced.

Grimes said she also made a deal, avoiding prison, and thinks she’s already served her time.

Rivera got “use” immunity in exchange for his testimony. He’s the only one of the group that didn’t have a prior felony record, according to the prosecutor.

Detective Johnstone says he doesn’t know who robbed Maddaus’s home of drugs, it wasn’t part of the investigation.

On the witness stand, Maddaus said he believed Jessica Abear – a woman who was staying with him – was in on it with Jason Juneau who had been in the mobile home the day before and saw where Maddaus kept his drugs.

Also not answered during the lengthy trial or in court proceedings during Maddaus’s related drug possession case is how it was he seemingly replenished his supply after the robbery.

Maddaus will be sentenced on Tuesday afternoon for first-degree murder, two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm and four counts of witness tampering, as well as second-degree assault and attempted kidnapping.

Both attorneys estimates he faces around 50 years in prison.