Archive for August, 2010

Centralia muffler shop owner arrested after SWAT team raid

Thursday, August 19th, 2010
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Firefighters arrive about 3:30 p.m. today to help police break into safes inside the muffler shop on South Gold Street in Centralia following the morning raid.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – The owner of a Centralia muffler shop was arrested today following an investigation into trafficking of narcotics and stolen property.

The Centralia police SWAT team executed a search warrant at 10 o’clock this morning at the Muffler Hut on the 1400 block of South Gold Street.

Frank Eugene Willis, 65, described as the longtime owner, was booked into the Lewis County Jail.

Detectives and other officers have searched the premises and recovered numerous items of contraband and stolen property, according to a news release from the Centralia Police Department. Officers also seized numerous firearms, police reported.

Police detective Sgt. Pat Fitzgerald said the stolen goods they found are the “typical stuff you find in Lewis County, in a rural county.” He named items such as chain saws table saws, power tools, and the kind of equipment used for construction and logging.

Willis, who lives in an apartment on the premises, was arrested for possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver. The sergeant said he couldn’t really say much about the amount of methamphetamine found until it was weighed. He later said it was about one ounce.

Members of Riverside Fire Authority arrived about 3:30 p.m. to help police get into some safes. Fitzgerald said he believed one or more guns were found inside them.

About 40 firearms were seized, mostly a collection of old rifles, some shotguns and one very old black powder Revolutionary War-era replica, he said. Some handguns were found and one firearm was confirmed to have been stolen out of Pacific County, Fitzgerald said.

A utility trailer and an ATV stolen from Chehalis were among the property found, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

Today’s arrest was the culmination of an investigation by the Centralia Police Department Anti-Crime Team.

Also arrested was an employee on an unrelated outstanding warrant, according to police.

Yellow police tape blocked the entrance to the fenced shop yard this afternoon as log truck driver Ken Sellers Jr. showed up to see what was going on. His wife is a longtime friend of Willis and called him to say she’d heard news about the raid, he said.

“I was gonna bring my daughter’s car here so he could fix her muffler, but then we hear this,” Sellers said.

Fitzgerald said police finished up about 5:30 p.m. and he didn’t know of any reason the shop couldn’t be open tomorrow.

Neither Willis’s wife, who owns the business with him, nor his son (or step-son, he wasn’t sure) who were there this morning were arrested, Fitzgerald said. The sergeant said he believed they only had the one employee.

A customer was just leaving as the SWAT team arrived this morning and a pair of women who live in a mobile home in the compound were there as well when police arrived, he said.

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This news story was updated at 7:35 p.m. and again at 10:15 a.m. on Friday Aug. 20, 2010.

Toledo man released from Western State Hospital

Thursday, August 19th, 2010
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Darlene Wallace sits in court with one of her sons, Rally Wallace, her daughter-in-law and a nephew during Wednesday's hearing for Rodney Wallace.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Rodney Wallace is going home.

The farm mechanic from Toledo has been locked up at Western State Hospital for most of the past five years after he was accused of trying to run down his father and two deputies with a tractor near the family’s Mandy Road home.

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Rodney Wallace

Wallace, then 37, was found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity of second-degree assault and felony eluding for the July 2005 incident. He had a diagnosis of bipolar disorder.

Yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court, Judge Nelson Hunt heard from Wallace’s attorney who shared feedback from a private psychologist that his client is stable and from Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher who said he said he had concerns about Wallace being released to live with his parents.

“(I’m concerned) if Mr. Wallace doesn’t understand or empathize with his alleged victims and we’re putting him right back with them,” Meagher said.

Wallace’s lawyer Zenon Olbertz told the judge the community nurse from the  psychiatric hospital would testify, if needed, that Wallace is not a substantial danger and does not represent a significant likelihood of committing criminal acts.

“He wants to be home with his parents, he wants to be working on the farm,”  the Tacoma attorney said. “They want him home. They’re strong people, and they’re not going to put up with anything.”

Hunt granted a conditional release.

His mother Darlene Wallace, two of his brothers and other family members were in the Chehalis courtroom hoping that’s exactly what the judge would do.

“We all want him out, we’re glad he’ll be out,” his brother Rally Wallace said. “He’s paid his dues, or whatever, it’s time for him to be out.”

Under state law, the hospital could hold Rodney Wallace as long as the maximum time he would have gotten if convicted, which is 10 years, according to his attorney.

The terms of his release include meeting with a community mental health professional ever other week and with the hospital’s community nurse Kris Harkness every two weeks.

The agreement in early 2006 to dismiss the charges and plead insanity made by then-Lewis County Prosecutor Jeremy Randolph and Wallace’s court-appointed attorney came after Wallace was “sucker-punched” by another Lewis County Jail inmate and hospitalized with a broken eye socket and a swelling brain. Wallace settled with the county for $30,000.

On Wednesday, as Harkness prepared to drive him back to the Tacoma-area hospital to pack his belongings and Wallace exchanged hugs with his family, the Toledo man pulled a slip of paper from his suit jacket pocket.

It was inside the fortune cookie he got at lunch the day before at Western State, Wallace said. He read it aloud:

“Tomorrow will be lucky and memorable for you.”

News brief: Morton man found guilty of stealing old growth cedar

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A Morton man was convicted yesterday of stealing old growth cedar from the National Forest and selling it to a local mill.

James R. Van Renselaar, 45, was caught by a U.S. Forest Service officer with a chain saw and bolts of cedar northwest of Morton in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest in March 2008, according to authorities.

His attorney Mike Underwood said his client’s partner who took the wood to the shake mill had a permit which turned out not to be valid.

A jury in Lewis County Superior Court deliberated less than  two hours before finding Van Renselaar guilty of first-degree trafficking in stolen property and second-degree theft

His sentencing date will be be decided next week.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

MAN ARRESTED FOR EARLY SUNDAY ASSAULT IN CHEHALIS

• Police arrested Adam R. McCarter on Tuesday for second-degree assault in connection with a weekend incident at the Code Red bar on the 500 block of North Market Boulevard in Chehalis where an individual was elbowed in the head, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

TRUCK TAKEN FROM CENTRALIA

• Centralia police took a report yesterday afternoon about a stolen red Dodge Dakota pickup truck from the 800 block of West First Street. Its license plate reads B82399N, according to the Centralia Police Department.

MORE THAN $6,000 GOODS STOLEN IN ADNA

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning deputies investigated a burglary in the Adna area in which an estimated $6,050 of valuables were stolen. The theft occurred from a building on the 100 block of Chilvers Road sometime between July 29 and Aug. 4, according to Cmdr. Steve Aust. Missing were a Toshiba laptop computer, a 19-inch HDTV, two wireless microphones and a projector, Aust said.

THROWING THINGS AT CARS

• Chehalis police were called just before 8 a.m. on Tuesday to the 700 block of South Market Boulevard where somebody had thrown a brick through the back of a vehicle’s window.

• Chehalis police were called just after 6:30 p.m. yesterday by a female who said subjects in another vehicle had thrown rocks at her vehicle and a bottle at the window by the courthouse in Chehalis.

SEMINARY HILL FIRE

• Firefighters spent about two and half hours yesterday morning in the Seminary Hill nature area in Centralia knocking down a fire that burned brush and a stump. Riverside Fire Authority Chief Jim Walkowski said it’s an area too far off the road to get fire hoses so crews used shovels and water carried in backpacks to put it out.

WRECKS

• Three children and two adults were taken by ambulance to Providence Centralia Hospital with neck pain after a single-vehicle collision on Interstate 5 just south of Chehalis on Monday evening, according to responders. A southbound car swerved near the Labree Road interchange, struck a cement wall and came to rest facing the opposite direction on the shoulder, according to the Washington State Patrol. Troopers called at 5:30 p.m. to the scene found the 1988 Honda Accord totaled. The driver was Stephanie R. King, 31, of Napavine, according to the state patrol. Her passengers, all from Napavine, included Albert L. King, 45, Desmond King, 13, Devin Rice, 13 and Darin Rice, 11, according to the investigating trooper. All were reportedly wearing seat belts. The cause was under investigation.

• Four teenagers escaped serious injury when their car rolled over on U.S. Highway 12 east of Mossyrock on Monday afternoon. Aid called just before 5 p.m. to the scene near milepost 91 found three girls and a boy between the ages of 14 and 19. The three juveniles were taken to Morton General Hospital but the 19-year-old female driver declined aid, according to Lewis County Fire District 3. Fire Chief Matt Hadaller said he believed they were from the Federal Way area.

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Car rolls over on U.S. Highway 12 near Mossyrock Monday afternoon. / Photo by Matt Hadaller

Primary election preliminary results: Why are the percentages I’m reporting slightly different from what is showing online?

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010
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Lewis County prosecutor candidate Jonathan Meyer looks at the primary election preliminary results shortly after 8 p.m. tonight at the Lewis County Auditors Office.

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Incumbent Lewis County Prosecutor Michael Golden looks over the primary preliminary results just after 8 p.m. tonight.

Don’t know for sure.

But the difference is small and I’m not going to phone Gary Zandell and ask about it at this time of night.

I’m looking at the hard copy handed out in the Lewis County Auditors Office printed at 8:07 p.m. tonight, and presumably the same hard copy as was passed out to the many folks who gathered there tonight.

The number of votes each candidate got, for the races I’m looking at, are the same on this hard copy as they are on the web site through the Auditors Office. But each of them show a slightly higher percentage online.

I suspect it has something to do with what Zandell and his people call under votes and over votes. It’s related to ballots in which a voter might ignore a race or where they might inadvertently …. do something else, or some such thing.

More ballots, such as the ones put in the mail today, will be tallied on Friday. The primary election will be certified Sept. 1.

Look at the results in more detail here.

Primary election preliminary results: What about the race for coroner?

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Two Republicans are hoping to step in to the job of Lewis County coroner; longtime elected Coroner Terry Wilson decided not to run again.

They are Chehalis resident Warren McLeod, 51, and Mossyrock resident Micheal Hurley, 69.

McLeod has received 51.40 percent of the votes cast and counted, while Hurley has gotten 47.62 percent.

Q: What do these numbers tell you?

A: McLeod: “I’m very happy with these numbers, as I’ve only been in the county 18 months,” McLeod said. “Some people call me an outsider, I prefer to say newcomer. It gives me more incentive to work hard and get the message out before November.”

A: Hurley: “They say to me my opponent has picked up a bit of strong support in the Twin Cities,” Hurley said. “I’m just going to have to work harder in the Twin Cities to win the election.”

* Hurley had a prepared statement not reflected here.

Primary election preliminary results: What will local Republican party do now?

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Colleen Morse, chair of the Lewis County Republican Party, said the seven-member executive board will meet soon and decide whether to support any candidates in the contested races where there are two Republicans running for the November general election.