Archive for the ‘News briefs’ Category

News brief: Suspect in hospital parking lot beating takes deal from prosecutors

Tuesday, October 4th, 2016

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A 20-year-old Centralia resident implicated in a case in which a 37-year-old Centralia man was beaten inside his car in the parking lot at Providence Centralia Hospital entered into a plea deal and was sentenced to time served.

David Serrano Mosso was charged Aug. 3 for the July 28 incident and held on $500,000 bail.

Charging documents in the case describe the victim as meeting someone he’d sold some wheels to, in order to get paid, and two males getting into his car, one of them shoving a pistol into his ribs and them telling him to drive out to a wooded area. Police at the time said he got scared, and pulled into the hospital parking lot where he was pistol whipped.

He said he noticed a third male following them in a white Honda-style car.

Last Thursday afternoon, Serrano Mosso made an Alford plea to second-degree assault, stating he did not commit the crime but wanted to take advantage of a plea offer.

The charges of  first-degree assault and first-degree kidnapping were dropped.

The following day, he was sentenced to 64 days in jail, up to 12 months of community custody and ordered not to have contact with the victim for 10 years.

The standard range for second-degree assault, given he had no criminal history, was three to nine months, but both sides agreed justice would be best served with a lower than usual sentence, according to court documents.

Lewis County Senior Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead said that was because of the “facts in the case.”

Police are still looking for the other person or persons involved, Halstead said today.
•••

For background, read “Prosecutors: Centralia man’s refusal to drive to wooded area gets him pistol whipped” from Thursday August 4, 2016, here

News brief: Dogs found chained to trees in forest outside Morton

Monday, October 3rd, 2016

Updated at 1:08 p.m.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Cinebar area man has been arrested after being identified as the person who allegedly left five dogs chained to trees out in the woods outside Morton without food or water.

Richard D. Carlile, 29, is tentatively scheduled to go before a judge this afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court. He was booked into the Lewis County Jail on Friday for first-degree animal cruelty.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office said this morning they began investigating a week ago, after getting a call from someone who discovered a dog chained to a tree in the forest. The pitbull was non-ambulatory, could not lift its head and could not eat, Chief Deputy Dusty Breen said.

That was on Saturday evening, Sept. 24, according to Breen.

The caller said she thought she heard other dogs out there, but left, fearing for her safety, Breen said.

The following day, the woman led deputies to the area of Forest Service Road 73 – about six miles from state Route 508 –  where they located four other pitbulls tied up to to trees, with no food or water, Breen said. They appeared to be malnourished and dehydrated, Breen said.

They also found an abandoned campsite, which contained no personal belongings or any kind of food, according to Breen.

The deputy brought two of the dogs out, and upon return, the remaining two canines were nowhere to be found, Breen said.

On Friday, when Carlile contacted the Lewis County Animal Shelter to claim his two impounded dogs, he was arrested.

Breen said Carlile is transient and told deputies he’d only left his pets there for a short time on the day deputies went there.

Carlile’s hearing will be at 4 p.m. today.

News brief: Pedestrian injured by train in Centralia

Sunday, October 2nd, 2016
2016-1002-train-foot-centraliaheli

Responders bring patient to be airlifted near Delaware Avenue in Centralia / Courtesy photo by Riverside Fire Authority

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Centralia police are working with BNSF to figure what sort of train struck a 21-year-old woman earlier today and how it happened.

The Centralia woman lived, but was in no shape to be interviewed before being whisked away by a helicopter to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, according to police.

Nearby citizens heard her calls for help and came out to investigate, Centralia Police Department Sgt. Dave Clary said. The train was already gone, and it’s likely the crew didn’t know what had occurred, he said.

Police and firefighters were called about 12:30 p.m. to the area about 300 yards north of the Sixth Street viaduct near Delaware Avenue, which runs adjacent to the tracks, according to authorities.

Clary said she was hit while crossing the tracks and her only injury was to her foot, although it was significant.

“How her foot was injured and not the rest of her seems to be like a Christmas miracle,” Clary said.

Medics with Riverside Fire Authority responded and summoned an Airlift Northwest helicopter to pick her up at the scene, according to Fire Capt. Scott Weinert.

The fire department described her injuries as traumatic, but she was conscious and alert when she departed, they said.

Clary said the public needs to heed their warnings, and sometimes tickets, about walking over railroad tracks in areas where there is no designated crossing.

“People need to take these trains extremely seriously, and know they will not win with a train,” he said. “This young woman’s foot, I can tell you, is never going to be the same.

“It was not worth not going up and around the Sixth Street viaduct.”

News brief: Monroe prison investigating death of inmate from Lewis County

Saturday, October 1st, 2016

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS –  The state Department of Corrections is investigating the death of a former Morton man, an inmate found unresponsive yesterday morning at the Monroe Correctional Complex.

Thirty-year-old Michael D Bryant was discovered about 7 a.m. unconscious and not breathing, and prison staff began providing lifesaving measures, including a call to 911, according to authorities. Local paramedics pronounced him dead at 7:29 am., DOC spokesperson Jeremy Barclay stated.

Bryant was being held in Monroe’s Special Offender Unit, a part of the facility opened in 1981 to treat and house seriously mentally ill offenders.

He was convicted in Lewis County Superior Court in early 2008 after repeatedly stabbing a woman he’d met at Cascade Mental Health in Chehalis, for no apparent reason. Bryant was about halfway through his 18-year-sentence.

Monroe’s Special Offender Unit is the same place where last year, a Lewis County man at the beginning of a five-year sentence died after an assault for which a fellow inmate was investigated. Gordon C. Powell Jr., 45, passed away May 18, 2015.

DOC spokesperson Barclay wrote in a news release yesterday that initial response indicates Bryant’s death was a result of an apparent suicide and a full review will be completed of the circumstances/incident.

DOC officials contacted local law enforcement and the county coroner’s office. Monroe Correctional Complex’s Intelligence and Investigations unit, along with local law enforcement, are investigating the matter, according to Barclay.

The prison located in Monroe, in Snohomish County, houses approximately 2,400 male inmates.

News brief: Identity of fiery Glenoma crash victim confirmed

Saturday, October 1st, 2016

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Lewis County Coroner’s Office has positively identified the victim of Tuesday’s early morning wreck of a pickup truck in Glenoma.

He is 27-year-old Richard G. Green, a Glenoma resident, according to Coroner Warren McLeod.

Passersby came upon the burning wreckage on the Champion 200 Line. Investigators estimated the 1996 Ford F150 had been traveling as fast as 70 mph on a long straight stretch before striking a tree and catching fire.

The collision wasn’t witnessed, but the sheriff’s office believes it occurred  sometime around 5:30 a.m. or 6 o’clock.

McLeod won’t make a final determination on the cause and manner of death until after he gets the results of toxicology tests and further studies.
•••

For background, read “News brief: Details on Glenoma crash, fatality still under investigation” from Thursday September 29, 2016, here

JNET talks about seizure of guns, drugs in south Chehalis

Thursday, September 29th, 2016
2016-0928-lcso-twitter-drannon-smythe

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office shared this image on Twitter about JNET’s arrest.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Lewis County law enforcement’s drug fighting team released details yesterday about their Monday night arrest of an alleged drug dealer at his south Chehalis home, including how he’s spent some of the proceeds.

Drannon B. Smythe, 23, is accused of being a large-scale seller of controlled substances, and of trading firearms during his transactions.

He allegedly admitted to buying three sport-type cars with the proceeds.

Smythe was charged Tuesday in Lewis County Superior Court with  possession of heroin with intent to deliver, possession of methamphetamine and second-degree unlawful possession of a firearm. His arraignment was scheduled for today.

Lewis County prosecutors wrote in charging documents that on Monday after his arrest, Smythe said he came to the door with a loaded AK-47, but put it down when law enforcement outside verified who they were.

Prosecutors wrote of the search turning up about an ounce of heroin, some methamphetamine, about $3,000 cash and thirteen firearms, several of which were loaded.

The Joint Narcotics Enforcement Team wrote in a news release that actually 18 guns were seized, several of which were determined to have been stolen in Lewis County.

During the search, they also reportedly found hundreds of prescription pills and made mention that one of the counts they arrested him for was possession of LSD. He was not charged with that.

The arrest highlights the partnership between agencies, according to JNET Sergeant Brian Warren

“Working together will help us be more effective and focus on drug issues in rural Lewis County,” Warren stated. “The Joint Narcotics Task Force will continue to aggressively go after people who choose to be involved in illegal drugs in our communities.”

Warren indicates the search warrant was served at Smythe’s home on the 200 block of Newaukum Golf Drive. Court documents state Smythe lived on the the 200 block of Newaukum Valley Golf Course Drive.

JNET spells his name as Smyth, while prosecutors charged him as Smythe. His street name is given as “Dragon.”

According to Warren, JNET was accompanied by the U.S. Marshals Service as well as members of the Lewis County Sheriff’s Enforcement Team. Smythe’s roommate Sean Anthony Penn, 30, was arrested for an unrelated warrant from Thurston County.

Court documents state that Smythe told them, if law enforcement had served the warrant the previous day, he’d have had pounds of methamphetamine, but he was robbed.

In response to an inquiry, Warren said Smythe claimed someone broke into his house the night before and stole the drugs, but police are not investigating that since it was illegal for him to have them anyhow.

JNET also is asking if anyone has information regarding Smythe’s activities, to please phone them at 360-330-7680 or 360-748-9286.
•••

For background, read “Drugs, guns and an arrest in Chehalis” from Tuesday September 27, 2016 at 8:31 p.m., here

News brief: Inappropriate touching case from Sunbird ends with plea deal

Thursday, September 29th, 2016

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The 33-year-old man charged with indecent liberties for allegedly grabbing the hand of a 20-year-old special needs student and placing it in his crotch area while the two were working at Sun Bird Shopping Center in Chehalis was sentenced yesterday to 90 days in jail.

Rodney R. Cook, from Olympia, was arrested last month.

The young woman was participating in a  program in which students go to local businesses to learn job skills.

Cook entered into a plea deal in which he pleaded guilty to two counts of fourth-degree assault with sexual motivation and the indecent liberties charge was dropped, according to his lawyer Kevin Nelson.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt yesterday accepted the agreed recommendation in which Cook would be given 364 days in jail with all but 90 of them suspended for two years. He’s already served 43 days.
•••

For background, read “Sunbird employee accused of inappropriately touching  developmentally disabled worker” from Thursday August 18, 2016, here