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Police looking for elderly, ill Centralia man

Wednesday, January 16th, 2013

Updated at 6:54 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Centralia police are asking the public to keep their eyes out for an 80-year-old man, or his gold-colored passenger car, who left his home overnight and hasn’t returned.

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Raymond Wolford

Officer Stacy Denham says Raymond E. Wolford is suffering from the early stages of dementia and the late stages of bone cancer. He requires medication daily.

Police were called about 1:20 a.m. today to the 1800 block of Shamrock Drive – south of Providence Centralia Hospital – where his wife said she had heard him leave, according to Denham.

“She doesn’t know exactly when he left,” he said.

The car was gone from the garage car leading police to think Wolford left with it. It is a 2001 Toyota Avalon, with a license plate of 0077 VXR.

The man’s wife thought he could have headed to his son’s home in Bingen in southern Washington but no one has been able to locate him anywhere, Denham said.

They’re very concerned about him, he said.

“The family is checking with family, places he could go, they even talked with his pastor on Coal Creek Road,” Denham said.

Police have entered Wolford’s information and missing person status into various law enforcement databases, including the automatic license plate readers some police agencies equip their patrol cars with, according to Denham.

In the meantime, police are asking for the public’s help, just in case anyone sees the car on a logging road or in some strange place, Denham said.

Wolford is 5-feet 10-inches tall and weighs 200 pounds with gray hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a dark gray shirt, a blue ball cap, jeans and black shoes.

Police ask anyone to report any sightings or information about Wolford’s whereabouts to the Centralia Police Department on duty supervisor at 360-740-1105.

Update at 9:59 p.m.: Wolford’s family told police around 8:30 or 9 p.m. tonight they located him at a hospital in Everett, “Safe and sound,” Officer Mike Lowrey said.

How he ended up there isn’t yet clear, but more information should be available later, according to Lowrey.

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Missing car looks like this one.

Centralia woman charged in bar fight stabbing

Monday, January 14th, 2013
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Lena A. Castillo, 23, awaits her turn to go before a judge as she makes a first appearance in court regarding an assault charge.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Prosecutors allege the stabbing victim from this weekend’s bar fight in Chehalis started the physical altercation but the other young woman with a small knife continued attacking her after she stopped fighting and was on the ground.

Lena A. Castillo, 23, told police she was standing outside Garbes bar smoking a cigarette when 22-year-old Ashley Stewart confronted her, said something and grabbed her by the hair, according to charging documents.

“If you want to talk sh*t, let’s go,” Stewart allegedly said to her.

Castillo told police it was about Castillo’s ex-boyfriend.

The incident, caught on video outside Garbe’s Bar and Grill, shows Stewart approach Castillo and strike her and the two women beginning to fight, according to charging documents. But it also shows Castillo attacking Stewart until someone pulls her away, the documents allege.

Chehalis police called it mutual combat and said this morning they can’t prove who owns the pair of brass knuckles that turned up in the restroom where the stabbing victim was tended to by friends.

It all happened about 12:30 a.m. on Saturday on the 300 block of Northwest Chehalis Avenue in an area with five bars along the same stretch.

Both of the young women are from Centralia.

Castillo was charged today with first-degree assault. A judge set her bail at $75,000.

Charging documents offer other details as described by Chehalis police:

Arriving officers noticed Castillo bleeding from a cut on her pinky finger. They found in her jeans pocket a small silver object – a lighter-knife combination with a double-edged blade.

Police observed a blood trail leading through the bar and into the bathroom where Stewart was located.

Stewart was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital where she was treated for four stab wounds to her stomach and one to each leg.

Castillo told police she didn’t know how her finger got cut and denied stabbing Stewart.

Chehalis Police Department detective Sgt. Gary Wilson said Castillo suffered bumps and bruises, none of the injuries significant, including some bruising on her head.

“We can’t tell from what,” Wilson said.

In Lewis County Superior Court this afternoon, Lewis County Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher told the judge the video is very clear as he argued for high bail.

Castillo, who according to information in her court documents is 5-feet 2-inches tall and 129 pounds, said very little as she sat at the defense table, shackled both around her waist and at her ankles.

Defense attorney Bob Schroeter said Castillo works part-time babysitting and has only four minor previous contacts with the law.

Castillo has a misdemeanor theft conviction from 2010, according to prosecutors.

Meagher, when asked outside the courtroom about the possibility brass knuckles were used in the fight, indicated it wouldn’t make a difference.

“I’ll leave that up to the jury,” Meagher said.

Castillo’s arraignment is scheduled for Thursday.
•••

For background, read:

• “Police: “Mutual combat” between two women in Saturday assault outside bar” from Monday January 14, 2013 at 12:19 p.m., here

• “Woman arrested after stabbing outside Chehalis bar” from Saturday January 12, 2013 at 6:50 p.m., here

Police: “Mutual combat” between two women in Saturday assault outside bar

Monday, January 14th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The 22-year-old woman stabbed during a bar fight in Chehalis over the weekend has been released from the hospital, but whether she may be in trouble as well remains to be seen.

Lena Castillo, 23, was arrested after the brawl outside Garbe’s and a knife was recovered, but police also have a pair of brass knuckles found in the bathroom where the victim’s wounds were being tended to by friends, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

Chehalis police detective Sgt. Gary Wilson said he doesn’t yet know who they belong to or if they were used in the fight.

Brass knuckles are illegal to possess, but they are commonly sold  as novelty items, as paper weights, Wilson said.

Ashley Stewart, 22, was treated at Providence Centralia Hospital for multiple stab wounds, but is expected to make a full recovery, according to Wilson.

Both females are from Centralia.

Police called about 12:25 a.m. on Saturday to Northwest Chehalis Avenue arrested Castillo for first-degree assault, but Wilson, who continues to investigate, said this morning his information indicated there was mutual “combat.”

It will be up to the prosecutor to determine if Stewart is charged, he said.

Wilson said he’s not yet been able to prove who left the brass knuckles in the restroom.

“It’s a bathroom used by multiple people, it’s a bar bathroom,” he said. “So it’s hard to say at this point.”

Castillo is tentatively scheduled to go before a judge this afternoon.

Woman arrested after stabbing outside Chehalis bar

Saturday, January 12th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A bar fight between two women last night on Northwest Chehalis Avenue ended with one in the hospital with numerous knife wounds and the other in jail.

The victim, a female in her 20s, was conscious, but had significant injuries to her leg and abdomen, according to the Chehalis Fire Department.

Police and aid called about 1:30 a.m. today found her inside Paradise. The brawl occurred outside the nearby Garbe’s bar.

Booked into the Lewis County Jail for first-degree assault was Lena Castillo, 23, of Centralia.

Ashley Stewart was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital.

Jennifer Yocom, who was out dancing with Stewart and several other friends, said she didn’t know for sure what sparked it, only that the pair had some kind of previous disagreement.

Yocom said she had just left Garbe’s where she had checked on Stewart when she heard a friend say there was a fight.

The two women were in between parked cars next to the sidewalk, she said.

“I see hair pulling and stuff like that, like they were both standing and then they were down,” Yocom said. “I thought she was punching her.”

Yocom said she tried to shove the woman off her friend, because she didn’t want to hit her. Even though the woman was really small, it was really tough, she said.

“I ended up having to grab Lena by her hair and pull her off her,” Yocom said.

Yocom, who is 29, said she and her friends don’t get out together very often, because they all have children. But they ended up spending hours together at the hospital where they were interviewed by police.

Castillo was taken to Providence as well, with cuts to her fingers, according to Yocom.

She said she thinks a quick arrival by aid crews as well as three friends who kept pressure on the wounds helped Stewart’s prognosis.

“I don’t know if she gets to go home today or what,” Yocom said. “A lot of it was just stitches.”

Chehalis Police Department Officer Troy Thornburg said police were still investigating today.

Police: Centralia home a hub for marijuana for regional dispensaries

Friday, January 11th, 2013
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Sohail Hasnani, sits to the right of defense attorney Bob Schroeter, while Zeshawn H. Hasnani, far right, waits in the jury box in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Centralia police found an indoor marijuana farm on Seminary Hill yesterday.

A pair of brothers who have rented a home there for the past seven months and were arrested and charged with numerous offenses say they were supplying product to medical marijuana dispensaries around the state, according to authorities.

When the men, ages 24 and 27, appeared in Lewis County Superior Court today, defense attorney Bob Schroeter noted they work in graphic design, have been to college, and called the material in question medical marijuana.

Schroeter pointed out the state has been forced to rewrite the rules regarding the distribution of marijuana.

“We’re in a gray area now,” Schroeter told the judge.

Deputy Prosecutor Shane O’Rourke said no, it was basically a for-profit marijuana operation.

Charging papers say they had four medical marijuana authorizations on the premises, but Centralia Police Department Sgt. Jim Shannon said even if it were a so-called collective garden – which allows a maximum of 45 plants – police counted 90 plants when they searched the property.

“These guys are far outside anything allowed under (Initiative) 502 or medical marijuana,” Shannon said.

Zeshawn H. Hasnani, 27, and Sohail Hasnani, 24, were ordered held on $250,000 bail.

While Initiative 502 passed by Washington voters in November has somewhat decriminalized recreational use of marijuana, no licenses have yet been issued to growers, distributors or retailers.

And local governments have kept at bay any legitimate cultivation of medical cannabis in the county via collective gardens through moratoriums and other means.

For the Centralia Police Department, it’s business as usual as far as the same old laws on the books regarding growing or distributing the weed.

According to charging papers filed today: Sgt. Shannon got a tip in early December about the home on the 2500 block of Seminary Hill Road, just east of Centralia.

He discovered a drastic spike in electricity consumption that began when the bill was put in Sohail Hasnani’s name in August. The mailing address for the bill was Boynton Beach, Florida.

Centralia police conducted night time surveillance from a neighbor’s property and not only detected the odor of marijuana coming from the Hasnani’s property, they noted security cameras in multiple locations.

Yesterday, at 1 p.m., a dozen Centralia police officers served a search warrant at the home.

After using the P.A. system for about 10 minutes, they went to the door and ordered the brothers to come out.

“They complied,” Shannon said.

They brought out their two Pit Bulls, according to charging documents.

Shannon said in one outbuilding police found one room for small plants, one room for medium plants and one room for large plants.

Plus another room for drying, he said, where there was a loaded shotgun, according to charging documents.

“There was marijuana littered all throughout the house,” Deputy Prosecutor O’Rourke wrote.

Shannon said police found about three pounds of marijuana in the home; O’Rourke wrote about 12 mason jars full.

Police seized $4,000 cash, a .22 rifle, a pistol and located numerous new, unused electronic items with tags still attached, according to O’Rourke.

The Hasnani brothers were charged today with manufacture, possession with intent to deliver, possession and maintaining a premises for using controlled substances. Special allegations of being near a school bus stop and committing the crimes while armed with a firearm are included.

And they are charged with money laundering.

According to charging documents, the brothers said they have a T-shirt business called Independent  Distributors, which O’Rourke alleges is nothing more than a mailbox in Florida.

Their 2011 tax returns shows it generated more than $133,000 in revenue.

They also have another business called “Smoketronics”, according to O’Rourke.

Police also found in the home receipts for packages that have been delivered through Fed-Ex to various other states, according to charging papers.

Shannon said police have been investigating their bank accounts and financial documents. So far, they found more than $40,000 in one account, according to charging documents.

O’Rourke writes the brothers traveled around in the Jeep, with the pistol, to sell their marijuana to dispensaries.

“In the past month, the duo admitted to collecting around $6,000 in cash from these dispensaries,” O’Rourke writes.

Defense attorney Schroeter this afternoon asked Judge James Lawler to release them on $10,000 unsecured signature bonds.

O’Rourke argued for, and got, bail set at $250,000.

“These types of underground black market operations draw violent crime,” O’Rourke said.

The brothers both were found to be indigent and qualified for court appointed attorneys.

They will appear again in court on Jan. 17 for their arraignments.

Lewis County Sheriff’s Office overwhelmed with concealed pistol license seekers

Thursday, January 10th, 2013
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Sheriff’s office employee Robin Merchant takes finger prints of concealed pistol license applicant Don Jensen.

Updated

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Don Jensen has had guns for hunting since he was 13 years old.

At 54, the rural Chehalis man, who also owns a pistol, decided he’d like to keep his handgun closer at hand more of the time.

“I just feel with the times the way they are, I just feel more comfortable with a weapon on me,” said the Napavine School District maintenance worker.

Jensen was at the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office yesterday applying for a concealed pistol license, and he’s one of an increasing number of people doing so.

At the sheriff’s office front desk, staff ordinarily would get eight to 10 walkups each day, of persons either seeking a permit or renewing an expired one, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Brown said they saw a jump in requests after last month’s school shooting in Connecticut, as well as some other events in November.

The Friday after the grade school shooting, 36 or 37 individuals came in, sheriff’s office employee Robin Merchant said.

“The following Monday, there were 44,” she said.

The license isn’t required of course to own a handgun, only to carry it concealed on your person out in public.

In 2011, 1,288 people sought a CPL or a renewal of one from the sheriff’s office. Last year, that number jumped to 1,567, with well over 250 of the requests coming in the final month of the year, according to the sheriff’s office.

The process is fairly simple, for the applicant.

Merchant just needs to see picture identification, and then take the person’s fingerprints, their application and their money.

A new license is $52.50. It’s good for five years; a renewal costs $32.

Then, there’s the wait of 30 days while sheriff’s office conducts a background check.

In general, to be eligible, a person must be at least 21, a U.S. citizen, have no felony history, and may not have been court ordered into a mental institution, according to Merchant and Brown.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield said he sees the increase in requests as a reaction where more people just want to be more in control of their own security and safety.

His hope is to do what he can to encourage folks to gain a full understanding of the law.

“And that they really think things through before they use a firearm to protect themselves,” Mansfield said.

One particular concern, that was even a topic of conversation yesterday among a gathering of sheriffs in Ellensburg, he said, is the databases used check for those who have been committed to mental hospitals aren’t good enough.

“We do the best we can to make sure the background checks are complete,” he said. But there’s no guarantees, he said.

Mansfield said to expect to see law enforcement leaders asking legislators to address that during the coming session.

Possession of a concealed pistol license shortens the waiting period when one purchases a firearm too, Mansfield said.

“If you look at each of these incidents, they haven’t been perpetrated by people you would consider criminals in our society,” Mansfield said, referring to mass shootings. “It’s these mentally ill white, middle class and upper middle class Americans.”

The sheriff’s office earlier this week posted to its Facebook friends that they’ve been overwhelmed with the major increase in CPL applications and cautions the process could take longer during the lunch hour. They also may not accept applications after 3 p.m. if there are more than they can complete by closing time at 4 p.m.

Individuals can apply for a CPL at the local law enforcement agency that serves the jurisdiction in which they live. The sheriff’s office accepts applications from residents, regardless of where they reside in the county.

At the Chehalis Police Department, records technician Julie Hampson said they get one or two requests a month, but she’s seen a steady increase since the Connecticut school shooting and the ensuing talk of gun control.

“I’d say we probably doubled, maybe even tripled,” Hampson said.

Centralia Police Department employee Gayle Mulligan didn’t really notice a jump.

“Once we had four in a week, that was a lot for us,” Mulligan said.

Jensen said his visit yesterday to the sheriff’s office in Chehalis wasn’t about mass shootings.

“With the way things are, I just want to be able to defend myself,” he said.

After his background check is complete, he’ll be able to keep his handgun on him and loaded in public, he said, just not when he’s on school property.

Defendant in Koralynn Fister death pleads guilty

Wednesday, January 9th, 2013

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A deal was struck today that means there will be no trial for James M. Reeder but he will go to prison for many years and possibly the rest of his life.

The 26-year-old, accused of rape, torture and the death of his girlfriend’s toddler, pleaded guilty today, but didn’t admit guilt.

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James M. Reeder

He made a so-called Alford plea in which he acknowledged a jury hearing the evidence would likely find him guilty, but acknowledged no wrongdoing.

“We got the maximum of life, which is the best we could get at trial, and we don’t have to deal with appeals,” Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer said this afternoon.

Koralynn Fister, 2, died May 24 in Centralia. Reeder claimed he stepped away to get a towel while giving her a bath and returned to find her face down in the tub. She died from head trauma and drowning, but authorities said they also found evidence of sexual assault.

The unemployed man who previously worked as a floor installer was separated from his wife when he moved in with Koralynn’s mother in Centralia roughly two months before the death.

According to a report in his court file, he attempted suicide in the jail, trying to drown himself in the sink.

Reeder pleaded guilty today in Lewis County Superior Court to homicide by abuse, second-degree assault, two counts of first-degree rape of a child and possession of methamphetamine.

His sentencing will probably occur around the first part of February, according to Meyer.

The rape conviction means he will be sentenced to an indeterminate length of time with a maximum of life, according to Meyer. A board, like the former parole board, will be responsible for deciding when and if he gets released after he’s served the minimum number of years.

Reeder has no felony criminal history.

Meyer said he will recommend to the judge the minimum stay be 37 and a half years. Reeder’s attorney will be free to recommend 28 years, he said.

Those numbers come from the offense that has the highest standard range among the five counts to which Reeder pleaded guilty; homicide by abuse. It has a standard sentencing range of roughly 28 to 37 and a half years.

Defense attorney David Arcuri didn’t return a phone call this afternoon seeking comment.

As part of the deal, Reeder gave up his right to appeal in any way, according to Meyer.

Secondarily, Meyer said, this avoids the trauma of a trial for all involved.

“Police officers, doctors, jurors, other witnesses; jurors would have to see things they’ve never seen before,” he said of the graphic evidence.

Meyer also this afternoon spoke of his gratitude to the professionalism of members of the fire and police departments.

“They saw things and dealt with things they never should have,” he said.

Reeder will make a brief appearance in court on Jan. 17 to set a date for sentencing. They will have to wait for a pre-sentencing review to be conducted by the state Department of Corrections.
•••

For background, read “Breaking news: Mother’s boyfriend held for investigation of rape, murder of Centralia child” from Friday May 25, 2012 at 5 p.m., here