Archive for February, 2011

St. Helens quake shakes east end

Monday, February 14th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

This was updated at 12:25 p.m.

A 4.3 magnitude earthquake this morning near Mount St. Helens was felt in Morton, Mossyrock and Randle, but no damage has been reported.

Sgt. Ross McDowell, of Lewis County Emergency Management, said the 10:35 a.m. quake was shallow, only about three miles deep.

The earthquake was six miles northwest of the volcano and 19 miles south of Morton, according to the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network.

McDowell said its in the same area where two weeks ago more than a dozen small earthquakes were felt.

This morning’s shaking was followed about two minutes later by a 2.5 micro-quake. And one more of 2.3 magnitude at 11:35 a.m.

McDowell said his office received about a dozen calls from people who said they felt it.

By contrast, the quake on Nov. 16 near Mossyrock was about nine miles below the surface and initially recorded at 3.5 and upgraded to 4.2. It made the list of notable Pacific Northwest earthquakes since 1993, compiled by the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network.

McDowell said people should remember we live in an earthquake zone and they should be prepared, because there is little or no notification for earthquakes.

Washington state typically experiences over 1,000 earthquakes each month, according to Lewis County Emergency Management. Of these, approximately two dozen a year are large enough to be felt.

Usually the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network offers preliminary data and adjustments are made during the following 48 hours or so as they gather information.

The public can follow the earthquake data at the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network’s website.

Morton, Winlock, pitch sites for new state prison

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A site selection team for a new 1000-bed prison facility visited Morton and Winlock last week, looking at multiple properties in the two communities, both of which invited the state Department of Corrections to consider them.

“Jobs, that’s what prompted this,” said Pat Hart, a retired Morton business man who helped bring prison officials to the East Lewis County town. “That is what we need, jobs. It’s bad out here; unemployment is pushing 25 percent.”

DOC plans to construct a what it calls a new male reception center in Western Washington. It’s the place offenders go first, to be evaluated for physical, mental health, security and other needs and to determine the particular prison where they will serve their time, according to DOC.

The Washington Corrections Center in Shelton serves that purpose now, but prison authorities want to return it to its original role as a multi-custody prison and increase the number of beds in the system.

At the end of 2010, state prisons housed some 16,000 inmates spread out through 13 facilities, according to DOC.

Prison authorities say the construction of a facility specifically sited and designed for intake management purposes will increase efficiencies and result in lower construction costs as DOC expands to meet expected future capacity needs.

Interested communities had a Jan. 6 deadline to submit their proposals. The team has 16 sites to look over. Proposals came from as far north as Snohomish County, as far west as Raymond and south to Castle Rock. Grand Mound is also among them.

Hart, who toured with the team and others on Tuesday, said they looked at one site off state Route 7 just north of town owned by the state Department of Natural Resources and another owned by Hampton east off of Priest Road.

He thought the visit went well and that Morton would make a good place for the center.

“For one, the city is seriously for it, they want it,” Hart said.

Also, having Morton General Hospital right there is something other communities can’t offer, he said.

And it would be very good for Morton as well, he said, noting it could bring an estimated 300 corrections officer jobs, with their family-wage pay.

On Wednesday, the team visited Winlock to view two properties in the town’s urban growth area and another south off of Knowles Road, according to Mayor Glen Cook.

It’s not so much the jobs that make the center attractive to Cook, as they would be slow in moving into the area, Cook said.

The reception center would be a very good utility customer and could be an anchor in a future industrial park, he said.

The mayor thinks the community has a good shot at getting the Department of Corrections to choose them.

“I have a positive feeling on it,” he said.

Hart said they were told the site selection team was about halfway finished with its touring and hopes to narrow the field to three by the end of March.

The team is looking for 40 to 50 acres available for purchase and development with utilities available or planned and less than a 30 minute drive to Interstate 5 or I-90, as well as nearness to police, fire and emergency services which are willing to respond and within a reasonable distance to a shooting range, according to its criteria.

The state legislature last year approved funding to find a location and for pre-design costs but have not yet approved funds to build the new facility, according to DOC.

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Proposals for sites for a new prison came from as far south as Castle Rock and as far north as Snohomish County.

2011.0212.prison

Randle murder defendant free on bail

Friday, February 11th, 2011
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Erik R. Massa, center, waits for court to begin with his lawyers, Chris Baum, left and Joe Mano.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter


CHEHALIS – Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher asked a judge today to set bail in the Randle murder case at $25,000 unsecured, but with 10 percent of that posted with the court.

The defendant, forty-three-year-old Erik R. Massa of Randle, was accompanied by two lawyers in Lewis County Superior Court this afternoon who agreed with the recommendation.

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Guy LaFontaine

Massa is charged with second-degree murder in the March death of Guy W. LaFontaine, 58, of Federal Way. The two men are related by marriage.

Massa, a taxidermist, was arrested last March 14 after LaFontaine died from  blunt force injuries to his head, torso and extremities and Lewis County sheriff’s detectives found evidence including a broken shotgun with blood on it in an empty silo next to Massa’s shop. He was released from jail three days later, with prosecutors telling a judge they did not yet have enough evidence to charge him.

Meagher charged Massa last week with first-degree assault, but on Monday upgraded the charge.

Six of LaFontaine’s family members and a former co-worker from Todd Shipyards in Seattle were in the Chehalis courtroom for this afternoon’s proceedings.

Meagher told the judge he was confident about the bail arrangement since Massa has no criminal history and owns a home here. He asked the judge to limit Massa’s travel to Lewis County.

Chehalis attorneys Joe Mano and Chris Baum are representing him.

Baum said his client has already surrendered all his firearms to Mano.

Judge Richard Brosey agreed with the bail arrangement.

Charging documents describe a night in which LaFontaine – who had gone to Randle to go fishing – called his wife and said he had been beat up and he thought he was going to die.

According to the documents: His wife Gail picked him up and took him to Morton General Hospital where they found both his eye sockets were broken and he had a broken arm.

At 3:45 a.m., the hospital advised a sheriff’s deputy they released LaFontaine because they couldn’t keep him in his bed.

LaFontaine’s wife took him to St. Francis Hospital in Federal Way where he was pronounced dead.

The King County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled LaFontaine’s death a homicide.

Massa’s arraignment was scheduled for Feb. 24.

Massa is one of six people charged in Lewis County with murder for homicides that occurred during 2010. His is the only second-degree murder case.

The others are:

• Ronald A. Brady, 60, is charged with first-degree murder for the April 19 shooting death in Onalaska of Thomas McKenzie, 56. Also, first-degree assault. Bail: $50,000 unsecured bond

• Richard Joseph Frank Roth, 65, is charged with first degree murder for the Nov. 4 shooting death in Winlock of Jackie Marie Lawyer, 64. Bail: $500,000

• Jack A. Silverthorne, 20, is charged with first-degree murder for the death of Austin King, 16, whose body was found in Morton on July 20. Bail: $2 million

• Ryan J. McCarthy, 29, is charged with three counts of first-degree murder in the Aug. 21 shooting deaths in the Salkum-Onalaska area of David West Sr., 52, David West Jr., 16, and Tony Williams, 50. Also extortion. Bail: $2 million

• John A. Booth Jr., 31 is charged in the same deaths as McCarthy but with aggravated first-degree murder for West Jr. and Williams and attempted first-degree murder of Denise Salts. Also extortion. Bail: $10 million
•••

Read previous story on Massa and LaFontaine here

Bus driver apparently “passed out” and crashed into building once before

Friday, February 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A video camera aboard the Twin Transit bus that drove into a Chehalis house this week shows the driver “wasn’t really coherent” after he started to make a left turn and until he ran into the house, police say.

Seventy-year-old Federico J. Mestaz was put on administrative leave while the collision is being investigated.

Police called Wednesday morning when the mid-sized bus plowed through a fence and yard before striking the home suspected the cause was related to some sort of medical issue.

Chehalis Police Department detective Sgt. Rick McNamara indicated this morning the videotape bolsters that theory.

Twin Transit General Manager Ernie Graichen would not release the driver’s name but said bus driver Fred Mestaz crashed into a light pole and awning of a bank on Pearl Street in Centralia in October of 2004.

Grachien would not confirm it was the same bus driver.

In the 2004 incident, Mestaz apparently passed out before running into the Bank of America, according to Grachien.

He returned to work after six months and an extensive medical evaluation, Grachien said.

Nobody was hurt in this week’s accident at the corner of Southwest 13th Street and Southwest McFadden Avenue, but a 66-year-old woman inside the home escaped likely serious injury only because she’d left her bed to sleep upstairs with a colicky grandchild, according to her family.

Grachien said on Wednesday the driver who hit the house was a 15-veteran with an “excellent record.”

All of Twin Transit’s 14 busses have video cameras inside which show multiple views, according to Graichen.

This morning, Sgt. McNamara watched the video and said it shows the driver “slump” a little to the left as his left arm relaxes and that hand drops off the steering wheel and becomes limp. His right hand was still on the wheel but the bus continues into the house, McNamara said.

Just before that, he has a coffee cup in his hand which he puts down and starts coughing, according to McNamara. He didn’t know if the coughing was related to the moments in which he appeared “incoherent.”

Grachien said he couldn’t answer if the driver would be let go, as the circumstances are still being investigated. In 2004, he didn’t have sufficient grounds to dismiss the driver, he said.

McNamara said he doesn’t expect Mestaz will be cited for the collision.

The bus company and its insurer – Washington State Transportation Insurance Pool – are conducting an investigation.

Graichen said he understands the insurer is getting estimates to repair the home and will take care of that.

The dollar amount to fix the 15-seat bus is not yet available, he said.

•••

Read Wednesday’s story “Chehalis bus versus house collision a mystery” here

•••

KIROtv.com posted video from inside the bus. See it here

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Sabrina Kostick snapped this photo with her phone of the bus and house at the corner of Southwest 13th Street and Southwest McFadden Avenue in Chehalis.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, February 11th, 2011

COUNTERFEIT BILLS TO PAY UTILITY BILL

• An individual attempting to pay their utility bill in Centralia with three phony $20 bills was questioned yesterday by police. The Centralia Police Department reports the person was released after an officer concluded they did not know the money was counterfeit.

STOLEN HONDA

• A 1992 Honda Accord reported stolen from the 200 block of West Hanson Street in Centralia yesterday morning was later found with the wheels, tires and stereo missing at the 200 block of Jones Road, according to the Centralia Police Department.

PILLS PILFERED

• Centralia police took a report of the theft of medication from a home on the 500 block of West Fourth Street yesterday evening.

• An officer took a report yesterday afternoon of the theft of medication from a vehicle on the 1600 block of South Gold Street in Centralia.

STOLEN FIREARM FOUND

• Centralia police report a stolen gun was recovered yesterday after a pawn shop on the 800 block of West Main Street discovered and reported they had a stolen weapon. Sgt. Stacy Denham said it is a firearm that has apparently been stolen multiple times. An investigation is ongoing.

Frost Road Trailer Park homicide: Lawyers still waiting for defendant’s mental health evaluation

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Attorneys continue to wait for a report from Western State Hospital to find if 65-year-old Richard Joseph Frank Roth is competent to stand trial for first-degree murder in the November fatal shooting of his trailer park neighbor.

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Jackie Marie Lawyer

Roth was arrested and subsequently charged in the Nov. 4 death of 64-year-old Jackie Marie Lawyer in Winlock.

Prosecutor’s alleged Roth retrieved a handgun from his property and confronted Lawyer near the trailer park mailboxes after an argument between the two about him “snitching” on her for her dumping wood stove ashes in the woods.

A trial date has not been set because, at the request of his attorney Mike Underwood, Roth was sent first to the state mental hospital to be evaluated. Underwood said at the time it was his standard protocol for a case of this seriousness.

Roth is back in the Lewis County Jail, but was not brought to the courtroom today for a scheduled review hearing.

Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher told the judge the report was being typed up as he spoke and asked that they reconvene next Thursday on the matter.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

TRUCK RUNS OVER FARM PLOWS

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office will be tracking down the driver of an 18-wheeler who left the scene after damaging two antique ornamental farm plows as it tried to turn around in a Chehalis driveway last night. The big rig, belonging to Swift Trucking, also drove across landscaping at the 100 block of Taylor Road, according to Chief Deputy Stacy Brown.

MOTORCYCLE STOLEN

• Centralia police took a report yesterday evening that a 50cc Honda motorcycle went missing from the 2400 block of Seward Avenue sometime since Sunday.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were told yesterday a building on the 1100 block of West First Street had been “egged”.

IGNORE SCAM EMAIL FROM “FBI” AGENT, SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office this week said it is beginning to get a few citizen reports of receiving emails which Chief Stacy Brown calls the “Agent John Edwards FBI scam”. Brown is hoping to get the word out to prevent any recipients from being victimized. A copy of one of them, in a sample Brown distributed to the news media, reads in part: “Urgent attention: beneficiary” The attachment, purportedly from an FBI agent, describes trunks confiscated at JFK Airport in New York which contain $4.1 million and a document “which bears your name as the receiver of the money …” The message continues that the sender will assist in procuring a necessary certificate in order for you to avoid being arrested, interrogated and prosecuted for evading the taxes. Brown calls the people behind the email “yahoos”.