Archive for September, 2010

News brief: Victim refuses to testify against Robbie Russell

Friday, September 24th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Prosecutors asked a judge to dismiss one of the four cases against Centralia resident Robbie Russell yesterday saying the main witness won’t cooperate.

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Robert Shawn Russell

Russell, 46, was charged with possession of a stolen vehicle, a black Dodge Caliber found on his property late last year a few weeks after he assisted police in capturing a man wanted for an Olympia murder.

The vehicle belongs to Robert John Maddaus Jr., the 40-year-old being held on charges of witness tampering and first-degree murder in the Olympia case.

The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office wrote in its motion the victim in the stolen property case sent correspondence advising “he does not wish to testify in this matter, that he has nothing to say and that if called to testify he will ruin the state’s case.”

The motion for order of dismissal without prejudice – meaning it could be refiled at a later date – was granted.

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Robert John Maddaus Jr.

Deputy Prosecutor Steve Scott said outside the courtroom later in the day, “It means just what it says.”

Russell remains held in the Lewis County Jail pending three other cases: one from May of this year involving possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver; one from June of this year; and another from the summer of 2009 in which he allegedly took part in an ambush of a group of teenagers camping in Winlock.

In the Winlock case, his co-defendant was David West Sr., one of three people found shot to death last month in an Onalaska-area home.

Maddaus, the alleged victim of the stolen vehicle, is also facing charges in Lewis County related to possession of pounds of methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin. Russell, who was with Maddaus last November in the red Corvette where the drugs were found, presumably would be a witness in that case.
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Read more about Robert John Maddaus Jr. and Robert S. Russell here, here and here.

Centralia parents deny assaulting infant and toddler

Friday, September 24th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A lawyer representing the Centralia parents charged in the case of an infant with broken bones told a judge yesterday there is an issue of a possible genetic condition that could have caused the fractures.

Defense attorney Chris Baum is the court-appointed attorney for 30-year-old Raymon E. Bell. The mother, Brandi J. Larson, 28, is represented by Mike Underwood, but Baum spoke for both parents yesterday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court.

Both pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges of second-degree assault of a child involving two children.

Charging documents describe a 29-day old baby with fractures in her upper left arm, her lower left leg and her right foot. A test also showed the child had THC – an element of marijuana – in its system, according to the documents.

The findings came after the parents took the newborn to the emergency room at Providence Centralia Hospital on June 20 and a social worker contacted Centralia police.

Bell reportedly told hospital personnel he was holding the baby and stumbled, causing it to strike its arm and leg.

The baby has been taken into state custody.

The charges were initially filed last week, and on Monday, prosecutors added the charges involving a toddler. Those charges allege assault of a 2-year-old occurring in April or May of last year. The nature of that alleged assault is not described in court documents.

Bell and Larson are being held in the Lewis County Jail on $25,000 bail.

Baum asked Judge Nelson Hunt yesterday to reduce bail for Bell, a Centralia College student, saying he did have some criminal history that dates back to 2002, but “by and large, he’s been on the straight and narrow.”

The judge said no. Hunt also declined to reduce bail for the mother – a part time Jack-in-the-Box worker.

A trial date was set for the first week in November.

D.E.A. special agent wants you to clean out your medicine cabinet

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Ecstasy. Cocaine. Methamphetamine. Heroin.

These are drugs most commonly the subjects of seizures by federal law enforcement agents in Washington.

But prescription drugs?

Their misuse ranks second only to marijuana as the most common form of drug abuse in the country, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

Fifteen years ago, 23 individuals in the state died from accidental overdoses involving prescription drugs, yet by 2008 more than 500 lost their lives.

The alarming rate of prescription drug abuse is part of why the D.E.A. has organized an event this weekend in which ordinary folks can help make a big dent in the growing problem.

The majority of teenagers abusing prescription drugs got them from family and friends, with the home medicine cabinet a primary source, according to the D.E.A.

So on Saturday, collection sites around the state, around the country, will be accepting unused, unwanted expired prescription medications.

The service is free, anonymous, no questions asked, according to officials.

Mark Thomas, the acting special agent in charge of the D.E.A. in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Alaska, put it this way:

It’s a public safety issue; it’s a public health issue.

“There’s a lot of prescription drugs that get used and diverted in an improper fashion,” Thomas said Wednesday. “We don’t want them to enter into illicit trafficking and a black market, being sold in our communities and schools.”

The nationwide event, called the prescription drug “take back” campaign should be able to get at somewhere between 55 percent and 70 percent of those drugs, according to Thomas.

“It’s really a simple solution, it will really go a long way,” he said.

When people take personal responsibility to get engaged, “you can reduce a ton of this type of problem,” Thomas added.

Among some 30 sites around the state where the public can take their old pills for disposal between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Saturday is the Rochester Community Center at 10140 U.S. Highway 12 Southwest.

The Thurston County Sheriff’s Office is partnering with the federal agency to accept drugs there, as well as at the courthouse in Olympia.

In Washington, the problem continues to be painkillers such as Oxycontin and Vicodin, as well as anabolic steroids, according to the D.E.A. The use of methadone has increased dramatically, the D.E.A. reports.

Seattle’s former police chief, who is now the director of national drug control policy, echoed Thomas’ sentiment in a news release from the D.E.A.

“Prescription drug abuse is the nation’s fastest growing drug problem, and take-back events like this one are an indispensable tool for reducing the threat that the diversion and abuse of these drugs pose to public health,” Gil Kerlikowske said. “The federal/state/and local collaboration represented in this initiative is key in our national efforts to reduce pharmaceutical drug diversion and abuse.”

For other places to dispose of unwanted medications on Saturday, check the D.E.A.’s web site here.

Remembering Nickolas Barnes

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

ONALASKA – Nickolas Barnes’ mother has run out of tears.

Just as the anniversary of the death of her 15-year-old son approached, Rachael Smith and other family members learned prosecutors were charging a man with manslaughter, alleging he caused the Onalaska teenager’s death by providing alcohol at an underage drinking party.

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Nickolas Barnes

Nickolas died of alcohol poisoning Sept. 21 of last year, two days after he was found passed out in the front yard of an Onalaska home and was driven to Providence Centralia Hospital.

On Tuesday night, exactly one year later, the teenager’s family held a gathering in his memory.

“Nick would be saying, life goes on,” his grandmother Susan Patterson said. “Thank you for being Nick’s friends. From the bottom of our hearts, we want to thank each and every one of you for your help to us through this year.”

About 40 individuals shared coffee, cookies and stories at the new Onalaska Community Youth Center.

Nineteen-year-old Eric Messal spoke of goofy teenage boy capers that made Patterson “shush” him. Patterson talked of the tenderness her grandson showed when their home flooded and he made sure his great grandmother got put in a rescue boat first.

Nickolas was a sophomore who really liked football, Messal said.

He grew up in West Seattle and moved to the small rural community in the eighth grade.

His “substitute” grandparents traveled to Onalaska to attend the gathering. Betty Anderson said she thought it was a wise thing for Nickolas to get away from the influences of the city as he grew older.

The evening was meant to remember his life, not his death, his grandmother said. But outside and away from the crowd, one of Nickolas’s former girlfriends talked about losing a friend.

Tiffani Weiher, 16, said partying is not for her any more.

“Ever since Nick passed, I’ve really re-thought everything,” she said. “I’ve made sure I got closer to God, and my friends.”

Tiffani wasn’t there, but she knows the drinking game being played that night at the house, she said.

Shot for shot, she said. “The first person to pass out has to be the party favor,” Tiffani said.

Nickolas’s friends removed his clothes and wrote on his body with a black marker, according to court documents. They later tried to put his pants back on him and covered him with a blanket.

“Personally, I just think it’s the stupidest game ever,” Tiffani said.

Nickolas’s blood alcohol level was .32, according to charging documents, which is four times the legal limit for an adult while driving under the influence.

Charging documents in Lewis County Superior Court describe a gathering last year in which nine teenagers drank beer which belonged to the only adult who was present, 28-year-old James W. Taylor who lived at the Onalaska house with two teenage children and some other adults.

Some of the teens reportedly gave Taylor money to purchase more beer around 10:30 p.m. that night.

Charging documents in Taylor’s case include the following:

At about midnight, Nickolas and a 16-year-old boy played “shot for shot” with vodka. The two consumed more than 11 shots and then Nickolas drank from the bottle until two boys took it away from him.

A few minutes later, Nickolas passed out.

Prosecutors allege Taylor told the teenagers to “let him sleep it off.”

The vodka was brought by Nickolas for a previous party there, the documents say.

At about 1:30 a.m. or 2 a.m. two adults arrived and found him in the front yard, not breathing, his lips blue.

Taylor and another man took Nickolas to Providence Centralia Hospital, where twice he was revived and flown to Mary Bridge Children’s’ Hospital.

He was taken off life support the evening of the 21st, according to his grandmother.

Taylor, now 29, was charged last Friday with second-degree manslaughter, meaning prosecutors believe he negligently caused the teenager’s death.

He was also charged with failing to summon assistance for Nickolas and with seven counts of furnishing liquor to minors. If convicted as charged, he could face as much as 27 months in prison, according to the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office.

Taylor is scheduled appear before a judge on Oct. 5.

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Read previous stories:
• “News brief: Criminal charges filed in Onalaska teen’s alcohol poisoning death” from Friday Sept. 17, 2010 here.
• “Two more homicide cases now await charging decisions by Lewis County prosecutor” from Saturday Sept. 11, 2010 here.
• “Three Lewis County homicides still unresolved as triple-slaying prosecution begins” from Wednesday Sept. 8, 2010 here.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

CENTRALIA MAN WHO REPORTED HE WAS KIDNAPPED FROM KMART FABRICATED STORY, POLICE SAY

• Chehalis police concluded an investigation yesterday of a man who said he was car jacked at gunpoint from K-Mart and forced to drive to Thurston County where he was pistol-whipped, robbed and dumped in the woods earlier this month. “It didn’t happen,” Chehalis detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said. Dennis E. Burns, 56, from Centralia, was arrested yesterday morning and booked into the Lewis County Jail for false reporting and obstructing a public servant, “Both gross misdemeanors,” McNamara said. “I wish they were felonies ’cause he wasted a lot of my time.” Burns made the report to the Chehalis Police Department on Sept. 3, saying the kidnapping occurred two days earlier from the Chehalis retailer. The sergeant said the primary indication the story wasn’t true was he obtained video showing Burns shopping at Sears at the Tacoma Mall during the same hours Burns claimed he was being car jacked in Chehalis. Burns also described his captors as cutting off his pony tail, which actually was missing when he made the report, McNamara said. The Centralia man couldn’t explain how he could be in two places at the same time, according to McNamara. The sergeant said he could only speculate about the motivation in making the report. Burns and Burns’ girlfriend said the supposed assailants stole his $400 rent money, he said.

SHOPPING SPREE ENDS WITH ARREST

• A 23-year-old Chehalis woman was arrested yesterday for identity theft and two related crimes for allegedly using somebody else’s credit card number and making an estimated $3,600 of transactions. It began Sept. 7 with a theft report from the 200 block of Panisco Road in Cinebar and ended yesterday when Andrea Harris, 23, was picked up at the Lucky Eagle Casino in Rochester, according to Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. She was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust.

THEFTS

• Centralia police took a report yesterday morning of the theft of an undisclosed amount of money from a burglary at a business on the 700 block of Park Way.

• Centralia police took reports of five car prowls between Monday morning and this morning. Stereos were removed from two vehicles on the 1300 block of Delaware Avenue in incidents reported shortly before 7 a.m. today. On Monday morning on the 200 block of Jackson Street, a compound bow and a tool box were reported taken from a truck. Also Monday, medication was removed from a purse sitting in a vehicle on the 2000 block of Borst Avenue and a backpack was stolen from another vehicle on the 900 block of South Pearl Street, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Chehalis police took a report yesterday of somebody breaking into a vehicle and stealing medication.

MISSED TURN CAUSES SEMI-TRUCK DRIVER THOUSANDS

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning the driver of the big rig that crashed and burned yesterday near milepost 6 of Bunker Creek Road outside of Chehalis suffered only minor cuts and bumps. Jerry Nolan, 56, of Hoquiam, was southbound when he failed to negotiate a corner, sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust said. The 1997 Kenworth – pulling a lowboy trailer loaded with a dump truck – rolled over into a field, Aust said. Nolan was getting out the truck when it caught fire, according to Aust. The Kenworth was a total loss and the damage to the trailer and vehicle it was hauling was estimated at $10,000, he said.

“YOU CAN’T HIT THE POLICE”

• The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office reported this morning a 26-year-old man was found guilty by a jury of third-degree assault yesterday in Lewis County Superior Court. Garrick C. Wall, of Kirkland, was charged in May for an incident that occurred while a Chehalis police officer was making an arrest at a downtown bar, according to authorities. Officer Chris Taylor was assaulted. Police detective Sgt. Rick McNamara said the officer is fine. “He wasn’t really injured, but you can’t hit the police,” McNamara said this morning. Wall faces a sentence somewhere between nine and 12 months, according to the prosecutor’s office.

News brief: Mushroom picker found alive this morning

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The missing mushroom picker in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest has been found and he is ok, the  Skamania County Sheriff’s Office reported just moments ago.

Search and rescue crews have been looking for the 84-year-old Lakewood man south of Randle and northwest of Mount Adams. He was last seen about 3:30 p.m. on Monday.

Read Richard Thompson’s story on KIRO 7 news’ web site and watch the video here.

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Read yesterday’s news item about the missing person report here.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

FIRE DAMAGES CHEHALIS AREA HOME

• Firefighters called about 6:40 p.m. last evening to Pier Road off Jackson Highway south of Chehalis found flames coming out the roof and backside of a two-story home. The residents had gotten themselves out and nobody was injured, according to Lewis County Fire District 5. Firefighter Brad Bozarth said the blaze appeared to have started near the stove and firefighters contained it to the kitchen area.

TRUCK CRASHES AND BURNS

• A driver was hospitalized yesterday after the cab of his truck caught fire when it ran off the road into trees on Bunker Creek Road west of Centralia and Chehalis, according to Riverside Fire Authority. Fire Capt. Scott Weinert said the adult male got himself out of the vehicle but the cab was consumed by the fire.

PRESCRIPTION DRUG FORGERY

• Centralia police yesterday arrested a 28-year-old Morton woman for forging a prescription for pain medication. Shawna L. Watson was booked into the Lewis County Jail after an officer responded about 2:40 p.m. to an address on the 500 block of South Tower Avenue, according to the Centralia Police Department.

VEHICLE THEFTS

• Centralia police are asking for calls to 911 if anyone sees a maroon Toyota Tercel stolen yesterday from the 800 block of South Silver Street. An officer called about 8:30 a.m. noted the vehicle had been left unlocked and had an extra set of keys inside. The 1995 Toyota has a license plate reading 789 WGX.

• Chehalis police were called about 8:40 p.m. yesterday to Wal-Mart on Northwest Louisiana Avenue about a stolen gold 1990 Acura Integra.

• Chehalis police were called about 2:40 p.m. yesterday to the Grocery Outlet on Northwest Louisiana Avenue about a stolen white 2003 Mitsubishi Lancer.

MOTOR STOLEN OFF BOAT

• A deputy was called to the 100 block of Fish Hatchery Road near Mossyrock yesterday evening and told somebody had stolen a two and a half horsepower motor from a boat tied up at a private dock. It happened sometime between Friday and yesterday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The Yamaha motor is valued at about $1,130, according to the sheriff’s office.

HIT AND RUN TRUCK SOUGHT

• Centralia police took a report yesterday from the 300 block of South Pearl Street after a white flatbed pickup truck struck a post office vehicle and left the scene.

SHOE ASSAULT

• Chehalis police were called about 3 p.m. yesterday to Southwest Chehalis Avenue and Third Street to a report somebody in a vehicle threw a shoe at her van as she was driving down the street and damaged the front light.