Archive for the ‘News briefs’ Category

Read about Rochester man may not recover from I-5 construction area collision …

Monday, June 8th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

KIRO Radio reports a $20 million claim has been filed against the state Department of Transportation and its contractor Scarsella Brothers following an April incident in which a Rochester motorcyclist slammed into a dump truck at the Harrison Avenue freeway onramp in Centralia.

Scott R. Bliss, 44, of Rochester, was thrown from his Harley Davidson, and flown to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle on the morning of April 17, the state patrol reported at the time.

Reporter Sara Lerner writes the attorney for his longtime partner Cheryl Alton contends the truck driver was making an illegal U-turn near the Interstate 5 construction area and Bliss’s diagnosis of major brain damage has left him with less than a 10 percent chance of recovering.

Wesley G. Snelson, 61, from Galvin, was the driver of the 2004 Mack dump truck and was reportedly unhurt, according to the state patrol.

Read more here
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For background, read “News brief: I-5 construction area crash sends one to Harborview” from Friday April 17, 2015, here

News brief: Dog mauling leads to two pit bulls shot on Mandy Road

Monday, June 8th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Another incident with a dog fight and a shot gun in Toledo is highlighting the importance of people keeping their animals on their own property, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

Two dogs were shot early Thursday morning after they attacked another dog on the dog’s property on the 600 block of Mandy Road, according to the sheriff’s office.

The victim German shepherd was taken to a veterinary hospital in critical condition with bites and cuts all over its body, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said on Friday morning.

Brown gave the following account of what took place:

A 29-year-old Toledo man heard growling in his front yard and discovered two of his neighbor’s pit bulls had his pet pinned to the ground, with one biting its neck and the other latched onto its hindquarter.

When his shouting didn’t stop the attack, he retrieved his shotgun. He fired a warning shot.

He shot one dog, which got it to let go and run away. He shot the other dog which had the same effect.

The 29-year-old followed to make sure they headed home, and when one of them came towards him, he shot it again, killing it.

Brown said the German shepherd owner’s actions were found to be justified under the cricumstances, as he was protecting his pet on his own property.

The pit bulls had left their property after the owner’s son accidentally a gate open, she said.

No humans were injured.

The German shepherd’s owner didn’t want the 39-year-old owner of the pit bulls cited for his dogs’ actions, according to Brown.

It was just four days earlier when a dog owner on Herriford Road shot a neighbor’s mastiff which came into his yard and tangled with his German shepherd. Both pets in that case survived.
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For background, read “Toledo dog fight, shooting bring anger, sorrow and fear” from Sunday June 7, 2015, here

News brief: Firefighters to conduct ladder practice at city’s tallest building

Sunday, June 7th, 2015
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St. Helens Apartments, 440 N Market Blvd, Chehalis / Image from Lewis County

Updated at 8:40 a.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The downtown Chehalis stretch of North Market Boulevard that runs by the St. Helens Apartments will be closed this morning as crews bring out their ladder trucks and engage in hands-on pre-planning for how they would fight a fire there.

The tallest building in town is six stories high, with a basement, and is home to scores of people, according to the Chehalis Fire Department. All of its 54 units are occupied, Firefighter-Investigator Derrick Paul said.

The on-scene practice is something they do for complex and potentially dangerous structures, Paul said.

“We haven’t done the St. Helens in probably 10 years,” he said.

The Chehalis Fire Department and Riverside Fire Authority will both bring out their ladder trucks, to see just how high the ladders reach and to scope out the best places to park them for a fire, Paul said.

Members of Lewis County Fire District 6 will be joining them as well, he said.

They expect to begin about 9 a.m. and hope to be done around 11 a.m.

The entire 400 block of North Market Boulevard will be shut down. One block of Cascade Avenue that runs behind the apartments will be closed too, although one lane is expected to remain open, according to Paul.

The masonry wall with wood beam constructed building  dates back to 1900, according to Paul. The individual apartments don’t have fire sprinklers, but there are a couple on each level in common areas, he said.

Paul said that over the years, they’ve responded to several fires there, but fortunately the fire station is close and all have ended up being “room and contents” fires, getting extinguished before spreading.

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Courtesy photo by Chehalis Fire Department.

News brief: Inmate’s angry note to girlfriend alarms jail staff

Friday, June 5th, 2015
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Joseph L. Nickols, in red and white striped jail garb, sits at the defense table when he was charged with harassment on Monday in Lewis County Superior Court.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Lewis County Jail inmate remains held on $500,000 bail for allegedly threatening to kill jail staff and their families in a letter he wrote to his girlfriend which was intercepted at the Chehalis facility.

An attorney for Joseph L. Nickols, 33, of Chehalis, yesterday requested a reduction in the bail amount, but was denied.

Nickols pleaded not guilty yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court to two counts of felony harassment.

According to charging documents, Nickols was on a “watch list” for his mail, and Corrections Officer Jack Haskins was alarmed when he read the letter.

It appeared Nickols was upset because jailers were reading his mail.

Haskins told a detective he’d been threatened by the inmate in the past and based on his criminal history, felt he would carry out the threats, according to the charging documents.

The second alleged victim is a jail employee who didn’t read the letter, but read Haskins’ report about it, according to documents.

In the letter, Nickols suggested he would shoot with their own gun all who messed with his mail, according to the documents.

His past convictions include drugs, theft, burglary, witness tampering and protection order violations.

According to the jail’s roster, he was in custody since the beginning of April in connection with failing to appear in court for a suspended license case as well as violating a no contact order.

Harassment is a class C felony, with a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine.

News brief: Rochester resident reports exchange of gunfire on the road

Friday, June 5th, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Thurston detectives are looking for a yellow mid to late 1970s pickup with primer on its hood after a Rochester man reported a road rage incident with gunfire exchanged yesterday.

The 32-year-old Rochester resident called 911 from home just before 2 p.m. to report what occurred, according to the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office.

The victim, whose name was not released, said he was traveling on McCorkle Road Southeast when the pickup came up behind him and he heard what sounded like two gunshots, according to the sheriff’s office. The pickup then rear-ended his car, and his car’s back window shattered, Lt. Cliff Ziesemer said.

Ziesemer said the victim sped up to get away but the truck got up beside him and tried to run him off the road. The victim said he saw the passenger in the truck holding what looked like a pistol out the window.

As they approached Tilley Road Southeast on 113th Avenue, near Millersylvania State Park, the victim slowed, pointed his pistol out his window and fired several rounds, the leitenent said.

The bullets may have struck the grill of the yellow pickup, according to Ziesemer.

The victim sped away and drove home to Rochester to call 911, he said.

A flagger in the area said she didn’t hear any gunfire, but had to pull over twice when she saw the small red car and then the yellow truck coming at her. She said she observed a male about 30 years old in the truck, according to the sheriff’s office.

Deputies found five casings in the area where the victim said he fired his weapon.

The Thurston County Sheriff’s Office is asking for the public’s help in locating the 1970’s Ford pickup and its occupants.

The truck sat high and may have had a hitch on the front bumper.

If anyone has information, they are asked to please call detective Mitch King at 360-786-5517 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222- TIPS.

News brief: Investigation into Centralia weekend drowning ongoing

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County Coroner’s Office confirmed that 26-year-old Jessy Hamilton died of drowning following an autopsy yesterday.

Hamilton was found floating in the Chehalis River in Fort Borst Park on Saturday morning shortly after police were called there in response to a report he was missing.

Centralia police detectives said this weekend it wasn’t clear who the Centralia resident was with, but noted he was autistic and  his disorder was such that he was supervised, or should have been supervised, at all times.

Detective Patty Finch said they had numerous people to track down to interview.

Initial reports to 911 were the missing man was 23 years old, but Finch said law enforcement’s database showed he was 26. Coroner Warren McLeod said he confirmed with Hamilton’s mother he was 26.

McLeod said he is leaning towards accidental as the manner of death, but the pathologist won’t finalize that until the results of toxicology tests come back.

That can take as long as 12 weeks, McLeod said.
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For background, read “Missing person found dead in Chehalis River” from Saturday May 30, 2015, here

Read about Kelso drug ‘kingpin’ pleads guilty to reduced charge …

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2015

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The (Longview) Daily News reports a 63-year-old Kelso man suspected of running a four-county marijuana distribution organization – following a two month long investigation by  the Centralia Police Department’s special Anti-Crime Team – pleaded guilty yesterday to a single charge of second-degree malicious mischief and was sentenced to 30 days in jail.

2015.0602.2014.0916.marijuanabudscashsmallerGeorge Szerencsy was arrested in September when police seized 21 pounds of marijuana buds, guns, cars, more than $50,000 cash and several nine-foot tall marijuana plants growing in his backyard.

News reporter Shari Phiel writes the Cowlitz County Prosecutor’s Office was unavailable Monday to explain why the charges were reduced.

Szerencsy was originally charged with unlawful delivery of marijuana, conspiracy to deliver 15 to 20 pounds of marijuana, unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and unlawful manufacturing of marijuana, all within 1,000 feet of a school zone and while armed, according to Phiel.

Centralia police were assisted by the Kelso Police Department and the Cowlitz County Drug Task Force.

The operation was using the cover that they were supplying medical marijuana distributors, according to police.

Read more here