By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter
CHEHALIS – A Winlock woman has been granted a domestic violence protection order against Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield’s son, alleging in court that 20-year-old John C. Mansfield shoved her in a downtown Winlock beauty salon and other instances of assault.
The younger Mansfield appeared in a Chehalis courtroom yesterday where a visiting commissioner for Lewis County Superior Court left in place the order prohibiting him from contacting her or coming near her.
Kaitlyn M. Larson, 18, sought and secured a temporary court order on April 21, following an incident three weeks earlier in Winlock.
The pair have a 2-year-old child together.
John Mansfield was accompanied by Chehalis attorney Jennifer Johnson yesterday who told Court Commissioner Pro-Tem Richard Adamson there was no substantiation for the allegations made by Larson.
The entire Lewis County judiciary has recused themselves from the case because it involves the elected sheriff’s son.
Commissioner Adamson reversed the portion of the temporary order which had prohibited John Mansfield from contact with the child.
Yesterday was John Mansfield’s opportunity to dispute the conditions of the order, but Larson’s’ newly-hired attorney asked to postpone the hearing so she could prepare.
Olympia attorney Jennifer Smith – Larson’s lawyer – and Johnson both said after the hearing they had no comment on the case.
“I still maintain I have no comment, and we’re going to move forward in the best interests of the child,” Smith said.
Larson, who lives in Winlock, wrote in her April 21 request that John Mansfield has in the past left bruises on her and nearly broken her ribs, none of which she received medical attention for.
There was no indication in her filing he was ever arrested.
Sheriff Mansfield has said he has no comment on the situation.
“It doesn’t have anything to do with me or my wife,” Mansfield said the day after the petition was filed.
“If he’d have done those things, he’d have gone to jail,” Mansfield said.
Larson wrote that she called 911 on March 30 after John Mansfield came into McKenzie’s salon and took her son out of her friend’s arms “very forcefully”.
When she told him he couldn’t take the child, he shoved her and they argued, she wrote.
John Mansfield took the toddler out to his own mother while he came back inside to get a blanket, yelled at the hair dresser and then left, she wrote.
Larson, John Mansfield and their baby were swept into the news two years ago when the state Attorney General’s office was asked to look into a complaint that Sheriff Mansfield improperly handled a runaway report the parents of the then-16-year-old Larson attempted to file with the sheriff’s office.
Larson was at a residence on the Mansfield’s property, and was not picked up and returned home.
The Attorney General’s office review, dated Nov. 18, 2009, blamed a lapse of three days in entering the girl’s name into the relevant computer databases for runaways on Mansfield personally and on Mansfield’s decision not to ask an outside agency to handle the case; but declined to file any charge against the sheriff.
Among the instances from the past Larson cites in her April 21 handwritten request for the protection order:
John Mansfield once shoved her trying to get her phone; shoved her to the ground and sat on top of her.
One night, when she refused to give him her phone, “he shoved me off the bed, I hit my head on the ceiling and could barely breathe.”
He followed her and her boyfriend from Centralia to Adna, calling her and threatening her. “He constantly texts me even after I repeatedly asked him to stop.”
“One time John held me against the wall with his (undecipherable) gun and hit me in the face, giving me a black eye …”
Larson filed a proposed parenting plant with the court, asking that the child reside with her.
A hearing is set for June 1, when the visiting court commissioner returns, for John Mansfield to respond to the conditions currently in place in the protection order.