Archive for January, 2011

Breaking news: Mudslide near Bear Canyon, smaller slide on Highway 12 near Morton

Sunday, January 16th, 2011
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Slide on state Route 508 at Bear Canyon. / Courtesy photo by Washington State Department of Transportation

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Landslides have closed sections of three Southwest Washington highways including state Route 508 at Bear Canyon, according to the state Department of Transportation.

Crews are on the scenes clearing mud, rocks, trees and power lines, according to a noontime news release from the DOT.

Drivers should take alternate routes.

One slide is on state Route 411 near Hazel Dell Road in Kelso and the third is on state Route 14 near Cape Horn, according to the news release.

A smaller slide is being cleared on U.S. Highway 12 near Davis Lake Road near Morton, DOT reported.

Update at 5:40 p.m.: Late this afternoon, DOT reported crews are continuing to work on clearing the slide at Bear Canyon, but noted it will be closed to all traffic overnight.

As heavy rain, slides and flooding are impacting multiple highways across the region, DOT advises motorists to check conditions on its web site before traveling.

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After cleanup Sunday: the slide on U.S. Highway 12 near Morton. / Courtesy photo by Jennifer Mau

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The Tilton River on Sunday in Morton at Main Avenue. / Courtesy photo by Jennifer Mau

Breaking news: Evacuations advised in Randle as river rises

Sunday, January 16th, 2011

This was updated at 12:30 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Fire department crews are going door to door in low-lying areas of Randle this morning and advising residents to evacuate, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

In Packwood, the fire department is advising citizens to monitor the level of the Cowlitz River themselves and be prepared to evacuate if necessary, the sheriff’s office reports.

A flood warning was issued last night for the Cowlitz River which forecast major flooding in the Randle area and moderate flooding in Packwood.

The current forecast is the river could crest in Randle at almost 24 feet around 4 o’clock tomorrow morning, but water is expected to cover U.S. Highway 12 in that area by this afternoon or early evening, according to the sheriff’s office and the National Weather Service.

The river floods in Randle at 18 feet and it was at about that level at 9:30 this morning, according to the weather service.

Flood stage in Packwood is 10.5 feet and the river reached about that level around 11:15 a.m. today. It is predicted to crest about one foot higher around 10 p.m. tonight.

The sheriff’s office cautions citizens to be safe and not drive through standing water.

In the November 2006 flooding around Randle and Packwood, a man drowned after driving his truck through water which swept it and him away.

The Lewis County Emergency Operations Center is set to open this afternoon as officials prepare for anticipated flooding.

The National Weather Service has issued flood warnings in several counties, including Lewis, Thurston, Pierce, King, Snohomish, Pacific, Yakima and eastern Grays Harbor counties.

A flood watch on the Newaukum River near Chehalis was upgraded at 9:40 a.m. today to a flood warning.

Heavy rain over the southern Washington Cascade Mountains overnight and today will drive the Newaukum over flood stage later today which will likely continue into tomorrow, the weather service reports.

Minor flooding is expected.

The current prediction is the Newaukum will crest near 11.7 feet – about a foot over flood stage of 10.5 feet – around 10 p.m. tonight.

At 10.5 feet, flood waters will inundate many roads, residential and commercial areas along the Newaukum and its forks. Some areas may be deep and hazardous, the weather service cautions.
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Continuously updated conditions, warnings and forecasts in more detail can be found from the National Weather Service’s website by clicking on “Weather forecasts” and “River levels” beneath “Other useful web links” on the right hand side of Lewis County Sirens pages.

Flood watch upgraded to warning on Cowlitz, plus urban streams

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Update: The forecasts for some river levels were increased again at 11:12 p.m., except for the Cowlitz below the Mayfield dam which was decreased. Check them here

The National Weather Service has issued flood warnings now for the Cowlitz River at Packwood, Randle, and below Mayfield Dam.

A flood warning means that flooding is imminent or has been reported.

Major flooding is possible on the Cowlitz, the weather service reported at 8:38 p.m. tonight.

The weather service describes that as rising above flood stage at Randle around 7 a.m. tomorrow and cresting at 23.2 feet about 10 a.m. on Monday.

At 22 feet, the river will cause major flooding from Randle and downstream through Riffe Lake, and what the weather service calls dangerous inundation of many roads including U.S. Highway 12, residential, commercial areas and farms. Flooding can be expected along the river, its headwaters, tributaries and other streams within and near the Cowlitz River Basin.

In Packwood, moderate flooding is expected.

Below Mayfield dam, minor flooding is expected. Flood waters will inundate some farmlands and several roads, mainly near Toledo, according to the weather service.

Moderate flooding is also expected on the Nisqually River near National.

A flood warning has also been issued tonight for urban areas and small streams in Lewis, Mason, Thurston and eastern Grays Harbor counties until 2 p.m. Sunday.

Expect widespread flooding of small streams to begin late tonight, the weather service reports.
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Scroll down to see what Randle area Fire Chief Jeff Jaques expects at 22 feet.
•••

Flood watch continues through Monday

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A flood watch first issued Thursday for portions of Western Washington including Lewis County has been extended through Monday afternoon.

Yet another system expected to bring substantial rainfall late today through tomorrow, combined with high snow levels of 8,000 to 9,000 feet could drive many rivers over flood stage, according to the National Weather Service.

For comparison, White Pass is at an elevation of 4,500 feet.

The potential is for minor to moderate flooding, the weather service’s mid-day forecast notes.

The Cowlitz River at Randle is forecast to exceed flood stage by the most and crest sooner than most rivers around Lewis County.

By 10 p.m. tomorrow, the river could be just over major flood stage of 22 feet.

Lewis County Fire District 14 Chief Jeff Jaques said at that level, “it’s not going to inundate a bunch of homes or anything.”

However, Jaques said this evening, he expects U.S. Highway 12 will be under water and closed with a detour on Silverbrook Road at Randle. And state Route 131 out towards Cispus will likely be covered with water well, he said.

“Fortunately we don’t have a lot of snow in the mountains like we did in 2006,” he said.

In November 2006, rain combined with a big snowmelt lifted the Cowlitz River to just over 25 feet devastating areas around Randle and Packwood.

The fire chief said it was reasonable dry today and only began raining a few hours ago.

It’s not a huge issue until it gets around 23 to 24 feet in Randle, he said.

The community saw levels of about 22 feet in both January 2009 and November 2008, according to Jaques.

Within the past hour, the weather service changed its expectation of the river at Randle, now forecasting it may crest at just over 23 feet around 10 o’clock Monday morning.

A flood watch means conditions are favorable for flooding but flooding is not imminent or occurring.

Two to five inches of rain are expected in the Cascade and Olympic mountains through tomorrow.

The ongoing wet weather has prompted cautions about potential mudslides around Western Washington and also an avalanche warning in the mountains through tomorrow.

The Newaukum River near Chehalis is forecast to crest about a foot over flood stage around 10 o’clock tomorrow morning.

The Skookumchuck River at Bucoda is also forecast to crest about a foot over flood stage but not until 10 p.m. tomorrow night. It’s expected to remain below flood stage in Centralia.

And about 10 a.m. on Monday, the Chehalis River at Centralia and Grand Mound is expected to crest between one and a half and two feet above flood stage.

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Watch the river levels and their forecasts for yourself here now or, anytime, by clicking on “River levels” under “Other useful web links” on the right hand side of Lewis County Sirens pages.

Prosecution’s theory on slaying: Somebody stole Robert Maddaus’s drugs

Friday, January 14th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

OLYMPIA – She used meth. He sold drugs, she said.

She was 25 years old and had been staying with him at his mobile home in Rochester.

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Robert J. Maddaus Jr.

Jessica Abear described Nov. 13, 2009 as she answered questions from attorneys in Thurston County Superior Court yesterday.

“I was sleeping on the couch, I remember waking up to the door being kicked in and the people saying ‘freeze’,” she said.

Abear, now 26, recalled thinking it was three, maybe four, people, who ran in and down the hallway, as someone tall held a gun to her head and told her not to move. She vaguely remembers a bandana and sunglasses, she said.

“I remember them – I don’t know if this was because I was coming out of a dead sleep – maybe speaking another language,” she said. “The only thing I did hear in English was ‘I’ve got it’.”

They were in and out really quick.

“I want to say a Mexican accent, but speaking Russian,” she said.

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Shaun Allen Peterson

Abear is a witness in the murder trial of Robert J. Maddaus Jr. The 41-year-old Rochester man is charged in the death of Shaun A. Peterson who was found handcuffed and fatally shot on an Olympia street early on Nov. 16, 2009.

Maddaus is charged with first-degree murder, as well as four counts of witness tampering. He was also charged in the same case with attempted kidnapping and second-degree assault of Abear, which allegedly occurred just days before Peterson was killed.

Witnesses testified earlier this week Maddaus was a dealer trying to track down who’d stolen drugs and cash from him in the days before Peterson was slain.

Olympia resident Eric Gripp told the court Maddaus showed up at his fifth-wheel home earlier that weekend holding a gun, and said he’d lost “… four pounds of crystal, a pound of marijuana and $15,000, I think.”

Yesterday, as Abear sat on the witness stand for more than an hour, she described running next door to Maddaus’s mother’s house to tell her he’d just been robbed and to call him. She didn’t know where he was.

She said she returned to the mobile home, and grabbed a can of bear mace.

“Yeah, I was concerned maybe those people would come back and I was concerned how Bobby would feel about it,” she said. “I was afraid he would think I had something to do with it.”

Under questioning, Abear told what happened after Maddaus arrived at his home some 10 minutes later.

“He was pissed,” she said.

Maddaus didn’t believe her story and thought she was protecting someone, she said.

“Yeah, he hit me in the head with the butt of a gun, sprayed me with bear mace, ripped my clothes off and shot me with a paintball gun,” she said. “He acted like he was going to shoot me in the foot. He told me to stick my foot out, saying he was going to get it out of me.”

“Were you afraid?” Deputy Prosecuting Attorney David Bruneau asked her.

“Yes, very,” she said.

Bruneau elicited that she heard Maddaus’s end of a telephone conversation telling someone he needed a place to take her “to get information.”

When Maddaus headed down the hallway, she ran back to his mother’s house, wearing her pajama shorts, she said.

Testimony from Gripp on Wednesday describes that Abear phoned him, her ex-boyfriend, crying, saying she needed to be picked up.

“She reeked of mace, she was hysterical,” Gripp said. “So everybody in my car kind of got exposed to it.”

They took her to his Olympia home and used milk to neutralize the mace, he said. Gripp said he saw some 30 quarter-sized welts on Abear’s body.

Gripp said it didn’t seem “comfortable” the way Maddaus had paced back and forth outside, talking on a cell phone when Gripp had taken Abear away from the Rochester property, so he told his neighbor, “If anybody shows up, call the cops.”

Within two or three hours, Maddaus, holding a gun, and four other people were knocking on his door, Gripp said.

“He said he was looking for Jessica Abear,” he said.

“He said he’d lost a lot of personal property,” Gripp said. “Yeah, drugs. Then I decided it was okay to let her talk to them.”

Abear told the court Maddaus was less angry, but still thought she set up the robbery and wanted the truth out of her.

The neighbor must have called the police.

“The phone rang, it was the cop,” Abear said. “I handed the phone to Eric, I told everyone, ‘the cops are coming, get out of here’.”

When Thurston County sheriff’s deputy David Claridge arrived, she was in the bedroom area.

Abear said she told him she didn’t want to talk to him.

“I didn’t think it would help,” she said. “I thought it would probably make the situation worse.”

But about two weeks later, Abear did allow a detective to take photos of her injuries and interview her, Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Bruneau said yesterday.

“I didn’t really have a choice, they already knew what happened,” she said.

Maddaus was arrested in Chehalis almost two weeks after Peterson’s death, following a high speed pursuit through the Chehalis Industrial Park.

After he was apprehended, a search of the Corvette in which he was a passenger turned up a nine millimeter pistol, more than $35,000 cash and a green backpack which contained two and a half pounds of methamphetamine, nearly a half pound of cocaine and almost one-third pound of heroin, according to charging documents in Thurston County Superior Court.

Maddaus is being held on $2 million bail.

Among the others who have testified in the first two days of Maddaus’s trial are an Olympia police detective, a forensic pathologist and examiners from the Washington State Crime Lab.

Olympia Police Officer Jeff Herbig described arriving to the scene where Peterson’s body was found about 4 a.m. on Nov. 16, 2009.

In the courtroom yesterday, Herbig identified various pieces of evidence he and his co-workers collected there, including a sweatshirt with holes in it laying on the street, a cell phone, and four shell casings.

Crime lab examiner Brenda Lawrence told the court the casings were from approximately 30 caliber bullets.

She identified them as what she called 7.62 x 25’s Tokarves, manufactured in China.

Dr. Eric Kiesel conducted Peterson’s autopsy.

Kiesel described a wound from a projectile that entered Peterson’s neck on his right side and exited the front; a fatal wound, he said.

Another entered his left arm and traveled through his chest before exiting; potentially fatal by itself, he said.

A gun shot wound on Peterson’s left forearm was described as superficial; contributory, he said.

The third injury looks different, because the projectile had either bounced off something or already gone through something, Kiesel said.

He speculated a bullet that exited Peterson’s neck could have struck the forearm that way, if Peterson’s cuffed hands were raised upward.

Charging documents allege Maddaus confronted Peterson about stealing his drugs while they were at an apartment on the 1800 block of Capitol Way Southeast in Olympia on the evening of Nov. 15, 2009 and the following morning.

Matthew Tremblay, who said he was present, said Peterson denied it and the three left the apartment, according to the allegations.

He said Peterson and Maddaus argued and then Maddaus fired about five shots, according to charging documents. Then Maddaus and Tremblay fled in Maddaus’s Jetta, he told authorities.

Maddaus has pleaded not guilty to all charges. He is represented by defense attorney Richard Woodrow.

His trial in Thurston County Superior Court in Olympia is expected to resume on Tuesday morning.

•••

Read about
• Day one of Maddaus’s trial, here
• Why the first jury pool had to be dismissed, here
• Why Maddaus was convicted of just simple possession in Lewis County last month, here
• How Maddaus refused to testify against Robbie Russell in September, here
• How Russell and Maddaus tried to outrun sheriff’s deputies a week and a half after Peterson’s death, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, January 14th, 2011

CLIENT AT SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE FIGHTS WITH GUARD, POLICE SAY

• A 64-year-old Onalaska woman was jailed yesterday after she allegedly swung her purse at a guard at the Social Security office in Centralia. Police Sgt. Carl Buster said the woman was asked to leave the Cooks Hill Road building after she became unruly, upset because she wasn’t being seen. She left, then returned and swung her purse at the guard and hit him repeatedly, according to Buster. “She got him several times before he was able to take her to the ground,” Buster said. Casandra N. Brower, 64, was arrested for third-degree assault and booked into the Lewis County Jail.

SHOPLIFTING GONE BAD

• A 27-year-old woman who allegedly shoplifted pens and hand lotion from a Centralia store was arrested for second-degree robbery yesterday because she shoved a clerk who told her to come back, according to the Centralia Police Department. An officer called about 9:30 p.m. to Fullers Market on the 500 block of South Tower Avenue found Lindsay C. Watson also was in possession of suspected heroin and methamphetamine, according to Sgt. Carl Buster. The Centralia woman was booked into the Lewis County Jail. Buster said what would have been a simple misdemeanor becomes a felony if a person uses force to take or retain property.

ORDINARY SHOPLIFTING

• Police were called back to the 500 block of South Tower Avenue about 6:15 a.m. today and detained a 23-year-old Centralia woman for shoplifting. Kari N. Driver was arrested and released, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AUTO THEFTS

• Centralia police reported the recovery of a stolen vehicle yesterday afternoon connected with a location of the 1000 block of North Schueber Road.

• Centralia police took a report of an apparent attempted theft of a vehicle on the 900 block of South Silver Street yesterday morning. Somebody got inside and tore the console apart as though trying to hot wire the vehicle, according to police.

BURGLARY

• Centralia police were called to a downtown business about 10:50 p.m. on Wednesday after a citizen reported a door was open. An officer responding to the location on the 100 block of North Tower Avenue found nobody inside but an owner subsequently discovered money was missing from the till.

THEFT

• Centralia police report an individual at the 1100 block of Stillwaters Avenue fell victim to a phone scam, according to a report taken by police on Wednesday.

News brief: Flood watch issued

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A flood watch is in effect from tomorrow morning through Sunday afternoon in several Western Washington counties including Lewis County.

The National Weather Service issued the watch just before 7 p.m. tonight, noting a series of at least three warm and wet weather systems are expected to move through bringing heavy rains.

A flood watch means conditions are favorable for flooding but flooding is not imminent or occurring.

Around noontime, the weather service noted the rivers appearing most at risk included the Lower Chehalis, Newaukum, Upper Puyallup, Snoqualmie and Snohomish rivers.

It appears that most flooding, if it occurs, will be minor, the weather service forecast this evening.

The expected amount of rain will put extra pressure on soil instability leading to an increased risk of more landslides, the weather service reported. Two landslides occurred today in Western Washington – one in Everett and another in Sumner.