Archive for October, 2010

Onalaskan charged in teen’s alcohol poisoning death appears before judge

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010
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James W. Taylor of Onalaska confers with defense attorney Bob Schroeter as lawyers and the judge considered Taylor's bail on second-degree manslaughter, furnishing liquor to minors and failing to summon assistance.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The 29-year-old man charged last month in last year’s alcohol-poisoning death of Onalaska teenager Nickolas Barnes appeared before a judge yesterday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court in Chehalis.

More than a year after the 15-year-old died after playing drinking games with vodka and other teenagers at James W. Taylor’s residence, Taylor is facing charges of second-degree manslaughter, furnishing liquor to minors and failing to summon assistance.

Prosecutors have said Taylor could face as much as 27 months in prison if convicted as charged.

The brief hearing was for the purpose of setting bail. His arraignment is scheduled for Oct. 14.

Deputy Prosecutor Steve Scott asked for $100,000 bail and defense attorney Bob Schroeter asked for $20,000, unsecured, noting the moving company employee came to court on his own volition following a summons.

Judge James Lawler said he was required to consider community safety and whether Taylor is likely to return to court as directed. The judge ordered him held on a $25,000 signature bond, provided it’s co-signed by a property owner.

The judge also ordered Taylor to have no contact with any witnesses in the case, which means he will probably have to move out of the house where he lives with his wife and children, according to Schroeter.

Nickolas’s grandmother Susan Patterson spoke briefly to reporters before she and several other family members met with elected Prosecutor Michael Golden after the court hearing.

Patterson called it a very sad day.

“My grandson is dead because of stupidity, and another young man’s life is fixing to go to hell in a hand basket, because of stupidity,” Patterson said.

Young people need to realize when other kids pass out from drinking, “you get help,” she said.

Nickolas was a sophomore at Onalaska High School and was buried on Sept. 24 of last year, which would have been his 16th birthday.

Centralia defense attorney Don Blair was appointed to represent Taylor.

Taylor was booked into the Lewis County Jail after court yesterday and remains there today.

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Read the Sept. 23, 2010 story about Nickolas Barnes and what prosecutors believe happened at the party that night here

Centralia muffler shop owner is off to prison

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The owner of a Centralia muffler shop was sentenced today to 20 months in prison after pleading guilty to three times selling methamphetamine to a police informant.

Frank Eugene Willis, 65, answered “Yes, your honor” repeatedly to the many questions Judge James Lawler asked him about the rights he was giving up by pleading guilty.

Eight family members and friends of Willis were behind him in the audience in Lewis County Superior Court.

Senior Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Brad Meagher told the judge part of the reason they brokered the plea deal was Willis has no criminal history and police neglected a 15-day deadline to get judicial approval for the wire intercepts – recordings made with a confidential informant.

“That was an issue for us,” Meagher said.

Among the charges dropped were possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver and possession of stolen property, including two firearms.

Willis, the longtime owner of the Muffler Hut on South Gold Street was arrested Aug. 19 after the Centralia Police Department’s SWAT team and other officers served a search warrant there, following an investigation into trafficking of narcotics and stolen property.

Police seized about 40 firearms – described as mostly a collection of old rifles and some shotguns – and two were confirmed as stolen, according to Willis’s attorney James Dixon. The two attorneys are negotiating about Willis forfeiting most of the guns, Dixon said.

The Olympia attorney had notified the court almost two weeks ago his client was planning to plead guilty and the lawyers were still hammering out a plea agreement.

Yesterday, when Dixon received some of the case records from the prosecutor’s office, he realized the police department had not gotten the required judicial review, he said.

“Once I discovered the problem with the wires, the prosecutor made an offer, which was fair, and we accepted,” Dixon said.

The standard sentencing range for the crimes to which Willis pleaded guilty is 12 to 20 months. Meagher and Dixon agreed on the recommended sentence and the judge concurred.

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Read the news story from Thursday Aug. 19, 2010 when police served a search warrant at the Muffler Hut here

News brief: Onalaska man killed in morning crash

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 73-year-old motorist died this morning when he “rolled through” a stop sign in Onalaska and his car was struck in the driver’s side by a Sport Utility Vehicle, according to the Washington State Patrol.

A trooper called about 8:30 a.m. reported Buster Maggard, 73, of Onalaska, was dead at the scene of the two-vehicle crash.

Maggard was traveling west on Gore Road and was hit by a 2002 GMC Envoy headed north on Leonard Road, according to the state patrol.

The GMC’s driver, Annette Hamilton, 38, of Toledo, and a 6-year-old girl in her vehicle were taken to Providence Centralia Hospital, according to the state patrol. Hamilton suffered scrapes and bruising and the child was transported as a precaution, the state patrol reported.

Her vehicle and Maggard’s 1997 Chevrolet Lumina were both described as totaled. The collision is still under investigation.

More on yesterday’s search at Centralia mobile home: Man ingests meth, police say

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Police detained about a half dozen people when they served a search warrant yesterday morning in a Centralia trailer park, including one man who apparently swallowed large amount of methamphetamine and nearly died.

Centralia Police Department detective Sgt. Pat Fitzgerald said when the SWAT team and detectives arrived at the residence off the 1700 block of Harrison Avenue to look for evidence of a forged and counterfeit check operation, a 27-year-old man on the porch refused to give up and fought with the SWAT team, so they used a Taser gun.

The man was taken to the hospital to be checked out and began having convulsions, Fitzgerald said.

At Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, providers concluded he must have ingested drugs, and it was “touch and go for awhile” Fitzgerald said.

“The report we got from the hospital was it was more than anything they’d ever seen before,” he said.

Three individuals were arrested after the 8:30 a.m. visit to the trailer, including Erica D. McCleary, 33, of Centralia, for forgery and identity theft, according to police.

Police found identification and other personal information of numerous victims from the greater Centralia area and other items consistent with a suspected operation, according to Fitzgerald.

“We don’t know the number of victims yet,” Fitzgerald said this morning.

Also arrested was Ronald W. McNeal, 50, of Centralia, for possession of methamphetamine and April L. Busby, 34, of Rochester, for an unrelated outstanding bench warrant, police said. The others were released.

The search followed a lengthy investigation and turned up credit cards, social security numbers and other personal information police suspect was stolen in car prowls and from mailboxes.

“Anytime you get this kind of activity, you can (expect to) link it to a lot of petty crimes,” he said. “Most of the time, those things are related to drugs.”

McCleary and McNeal live at the residence just south of the fire station, and several people receive mail there, he said.

It’s the home of Fred Isaacson, a man known to law enforcement as “Blind Freddie” and yesterday marked the third time Centralia police have served search warrants there in the past year, according to Fitzgerald.

Late last summer, they arrested Isaacson there and in May of this year, police found Robbie Russell hiding inside a sofa in the trailer when his friends has removed some of the upholstery and stapled it back together with the wanted man inside, according to police.
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Read yesterday’s news story “News brief: Search at Centralia home turns up forged check operation, police say” for a few more details about yesterday’s raid here.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

ELK VERSUS VAN ON STATE ROUTE 507

• A 36-year-old Centralia woman escaped serious injury when her mini van collided with an elk north of Centralia yesterday morning. Riverside Fire Authority Capt. Casey McCarthy said the animal apparently impacted the driver’s side windshield and left moderate damage the length of the driver’s side of the vehicle. It happened about 4 a.m. on state Route 507 near Troy Avenue, according to the Washington State Patrol.  Marcela Lopez, 36, was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital where she was treated and has been released.

VADER MAN HOSPITALIZED AFTER MOTORCYCLE WRECK IN WINLOCK

• A motorcyclist traveling in the wrong lane of South Military Road on a 25 mph curve yesterday nearly struck an oncoming pickup truck and then hit a van following the pickup, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning. The 60-year-old Vader man was taken to St. John Medical Center in Longview with a possible broken right arm and foot, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. It happened about 4:30 p.m. at he intersection at Roth Road, just south of state Route 505 in Winlock, Brown said. The 56-year-old Winlock woman driving the van was reportedly uninjured.

YOUNG TEEN LOCKED UP FOLLOWING SCISSOR THREAT

• A 13-year-old boy who allegedly threatened to stab someone with scissors was arrested for second-degree assault after police went to a Centralia address on the 900 block of Johnson Road Monday afternoon. The boy, whose name was not released because he is a juvenile, was booked in to the Lewis County juvenile detention facility.

MALE WITH HEROIN HOSPITALIZED

• Centralia police reported yesterday they found discovered heroin on a male found under the influence and hospitalized following an approximately 4:10 p.m. contact with police on Monday at the 200 block of West Maple Street. Further details were not reported by police.

STOLEN VEHICLE

• Chehalis police reported yesterday an officer took a report of a stolen vehicle from State Avenue the afternoon before.

News brief: Search at Centralia home turns up forged check operation, police say

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Police say personal information stolen from mailboxes, cars and other places ended up at a Centralia residence where it was used to write phony and forged checks, based on the items they found when they conducted a search today.

The Centralia Police Department SWAT team assisted detectives when they served a search warrant today on the 1700 block of Harrison Avenue, in space 30, according to a news release.

The action followed a lengthy investigation into forged and counterfeit checks passed in the greater Centralia area, according to police. The news release described the number of victims or potential victims only as as numerous.

Police said the checks were written against existing accounts without the knowledge of the account holders. Detectives traced the checks to individuals residing at the home, according to the news release.

Three people were arrested. They include Erica D. McCleary, 33, of Centralia, for forgery and identity theft and Ronald W. McNeal, 50, of Centralia, for possession of methamphetamine.

A third person was arrested for an unrelated outstanding bench warrant, according to police. She is April L. Busby, 34, of Rochester.

Among the items detectives discovered were computers, hard drives, so-called thumb drives, CDs and documentation consistent with the suspected operation, according to police.

Also found in the home was identification of victims and would-be victims such as credit cards, tax returns, social security numbers, the news release noted.

News brief: Grand champions and more on display at Outlet Mall

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010
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Presley Town, a first-grader in Mrs. Cearns' class at Edison Elementary School in Centralia is this year's grand champion in the younger grades.

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CENTRALIA – It’s fire safety week and the grand champions in the Lewis County fire prevention poster contest have been chosen.

The winner in the younger age group is Presley Town, a first-grader in Mrs. Cearns’ class at Edison Elementary School in Centralia.

Presley’s art work features a family safely leaving a fire, carrying bags of pets out with them.

Among the older students, Rachel Germann, a fourth grader in Mrs. Ethell’s class at Onalaska Elementary School took the top prize.

Rachel’s winning entry portrays a burning house with one sleeping occupant presumably about ready to be woke up by a fire alarm.

“Smoke alarms: a sound you can live with” is their slogan.

Scores of childrens’ colorful fire prevention posters can be viewed all this week at the north end of the Outlet Mall outside the Eddie Bauer store, off Lum Road on the west side of Interstate 5.

The Office of the State Fire Marshal is reminding the public this week it advises smoke alarms should be installed on every level of a home, outside each sleeping area and inside each bedroom.

They offer the following tips to make sure smoke detectors can do their jobs:

• Test smoke alarms at least once a month using the test button, and make sure everyone in your home knows their sound.
• If an alarm “chirps,” warning the battery is low, replace the battery right away.
• Replace all smoke alarms, including alarms that use 10-year batteries and hard-wired alarms, when they’re 10 years old (or sooner) if they do not respond properly when tested.
• Never remove or disable a smoke alarm.
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To find out more about fire prevention week, check the web site of the National Fire Protection Association here

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Rachel Germann, a fourth grader in Mrs. Ethell's class at Onalaska Elementary School is the grand champion among the older students.