Archive for June, 2011

Chehalis National Guardsman gets 10 years for child assault

Monday, June 27th, 2011
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Steven Grant Williams listens to the judge in Lewis County Superior Court this morning as he is sentenced.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS –  A judge this morning sent a Chehalis man away for as long as he possibly could in a child abuse case the jury found involved deliberate cruelty to a 7-year-old boy.

“This case was shocking, the pictures of (the child) were shocking,” Lewis County Superior Court Judge James Lawler said. “I’ve been involved in the court system a lot of years, and I’ll tell you, those pictures set me back.”

Steven Grant Williams, 40, was sentenced to eight and a half years in prison for second-degree assault of a child, to be followed by a year and a half of community custody.

The maximum penalty is 10 years with the state Department of Corrections. The standard range for the crime is about two and a half to three and a half years.

Williams, a National Guardsman who had moved to Chehalis with his girlfriend just months before he was arrested last summer, was convicted by a jury at the end of last month.

The boy lives with his paternal grandmother, and had spent two or three weeks weeks visiting his mother and Williams, the first time they’d had him since they moved back to Washington from southern California.

When he testified, Williams admitted he left a handprint-shaped bruise on the butt of his girlfriend’s 7-year-old, and switched to using a belt because he thought it wouldn’t leave marks.

He suggested some of the other bruises came from when he held the boy’s head under the shower, trying to teach him to wash his own hair. Williams said the child would thrash around and get so combative, sometimes he would simply let go, and the child would fall in the tub.

A social worker testified that when she saw him shortly after he was returned to his grandmother last summer, the youngster’s two black eyes were so swollen, he had to open his eyes wide just to see.

The mother worked at night, and the jury learned Williams would wait until after she left the house to give the child showers.

Williams had just recently returned from deployment in Kosovo, where he said part of his duties were as an interrogator.

He and the child’s mother told the jury the first-grader didn’t know his alphabet, didn’t know his numbers and didn’t know how to clean himself. Williams told the jury he tried to teach him those things during the visit.

Williams told the jury he didn’t think about giving the boy baths instead of showers.

Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes today asked the judge, who agreed, that Williams be ordered to get treatment for mental health and anger management.

Defense attorney Mike Underwood told Lawler before the sentence was decided, he thought two and half years in prison was appropriate for his client.

Williams was polite when he addressed the judge.

“Your honor, in light of everything I’m losing, I think eight years is excessive,” Williams said, noting his 19-year career in the military.

As he imposed the sentence, Lawler told Williams part of his reasoning was because of Williams lack of remorse.

‘Your comments bear out, this is still about you, and what you’ve lost, and not about what you did to (the child),” Lawler said. “That’s the problem here. That’s what you don’t seem to get.”

At the end of the hearing, Underwood filed a notice of appeal.
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Read the most recent story here

News brief: Heroin supplier given 10-year-sentence

Monday, June 27th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced today the leader of a drug trafficking ring they said operated like a pizza delivery business, using runners and dispatchers and catering to customers from Pierce, Thurston, Lewis, Kitsap, and Grays Harbor counties, was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Last summer, the Spanaway man was among 23 people arrested in a coordinated law enforcement effort targeting Mexican cartels distributing large amounts of heroin and methamphetamine in the region, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

In asking for the lengthy prison term, prosecutors noted Jose Manuel Campos Pinedo, 34, dealt in black tar heroin, one of the drugs which has fueled cartel violence, according to a news release.

According to the U.S. State Department, there have been 22,700 narcotics related murders in Mexico since 2006, as Mexican cartels battle to decide who will control the supply of drugs, such as black tar heroin, into the United States, the news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office stated.

Read more about it in The (Tacoma) News Tribune, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, June 27th, 2011

MILL FIRE

• Firefighters were called to the Sierra Pacific sawmill in Centralia on Sunday morning after a piece of equipment caught on fire. Someone was making repairs with a torch when molten metal dropped onto a “man lift”, Riverside Fire Authority Capt. Tim Adolphsen said this morning. The fire in the Port of Centralia’s industrial park off Harrison Avenue was extinguished, but caused an estimated $10,000 damage to the roughly $50,000 piece of equipment, Adolphsen said.

THEFT

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning they investigated a burglary to a garage on Friday in which a Stihl chainsaw, a gas cutting torch and two bottles of gas were stolen. It happened sometime Wednesday evening on the 200 block of East Oakview Street in Centralia, according to the sheriffs office.

• Somebody went into a barn and a residence on the 300 block of North Fork Road outside Chehalis and stole an electric wok, popcorn popper and a welder along with a knife sharpener and stainless steel kitchen utensils, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The sheriff’s office reports a deputy called Saturday about the burglary concluded it happened sometime between 3 p.m. June 18 and 9 a.m. the following day.

• Centralia police were called just before 6 o’clock this morning to a car prowl on the 900 block of South Pearl Street. Taken overnight were a stereo, speaker and amplifier, according to the Centralia Police Department. The vehicle had been locked and it’s unknown how someone got inside, according to police.

• Chehalis police were called just before 5 p.m. on Saturday by a woman who said she saw a man take her purse she had left in a shopping car at a grocery store on the 2100 block of North National Avenue.  No arrest was made.

• A woman called Centralia police yesterday from the 500 block of South Silver Street about receiving a counterfeit $20 bill during a garage sale. Officers have a description of a male suspect and his vehicle, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police were called Saturday to a business on the 100 block of High Street about a counterfeit $20 bill they received. Police were given a license plate information of the vehicle belonging to the person who passed the bill, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DRUGS

• Centralia police arrested a 27-year-old woman on Saturday evening at West First and K streets for possession of methamphetamine. April L. Jones, of Toledo, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police arrested a 47-year-old man on Saturday for allegedly attempting to obtain prescription medication by fraud. The arrest is connected with a location of the 1200 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia. Douglas B. J. Gogel, of Tacoma, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

VANDALISM

• Police took a report early Saturday morning of someone “tagging” with spray paint property n the 1200 block of B Street in Centralia.

WRECKS

• Lewis County Fire District 5 was called early Sunday morning to a two-vehicle collision on Interstate 5 in the northbound lanes just north of the U.S. Highway 12 and Avery Road interchange. One car had rolled over and off the roadway and the driver was nowhere to be found, according to Firefighter Kevin Van Egdom. responders searched for more than 30 minutes using a thermal imaging camera, and concluded the driver must have left on his or her own accord, according to Van Egdom.

• An 18-year-old man who was airlifted to a Seattle hospital following a two-vehicle collision in Randle early Saturday with what was described as a lacerated liver and kidney was listed in satisfactory condition this morning. Troopers called about 1:45 a.m. to U.S. Highway 12 blamed driving under the influence on the wreck that also sent two others to the hospital. The investigating trooper reported that William K. Bloomstrom, 25, of Randle, exited the parking lot at the One-Stop Mini Mart in his pickup truck at a high rate of speed and hit the passenger side of an eastbound Chevrolet Cavalier. The passenger in the car, Cody W. Moorhead, 18, of Shelton, was flown by helicopter to Harborview Medical Center, according to the Washington State Patrol. The driver of the Cavalier, Charlotte J. Rathbun, 18, of Winlock, had a sore shoulder and thumb; the passenger in the truck, Benjamin E. Eastman Jr., 32, of Glenoma, got cuts on his nose and right arm, according to the state patrol. They were both taken to Morton General Hospital. Both vehicles were totaled. Bloomstrom was reportedly uninjured. Bloomstrom is under investigation for vehicular assault, according to the patrol.

Breaking news: Sword robber strikes again, same store

Monday, June 27th, 2011
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Market Street Market employees talk with a Chehalis police officer today after the store is held up again.

This news story was updated at 3 p.m. and 4:28 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A male armed with a sword robbed the Market Street Market in Chehalis this morning, the second such hold up at the business in a little more than a week.

“It was the same guy, he was wearing the same thing, the same clothes” owner Danny Kim said. “At least he should have changed his clothes.”

Kim said it happened about 8 o’clock this morning.

It was a similar situation as what occurred at the convenience store between 12th and 13th avenues on South Market Street in Chehalis about 10:30 p.m. on June 18, according to police.

That night, a male, described as possibly in his mid-20s, pointed a roughly two-foot long sword at two clerks and made off with an as-yet undisclosed amount of cash. His face was covered with a bandana.

Today, Kim said he was alone in the store when the robber came in.

“He just walk in with a sword, ‘give me money’,” Kim said. “I give him money, he was out. It was 30 seconds.”

Nobody was injured.

Kim wasn’t working when it happened before, but he saw the images captured by security video of the subject, leading him to think it was the same individual.

Clerk Don Thayer Jr. wasn’t working this morning, but came into the store to talk with his boss and police.

The 43-year-old Chehalis man said he was working when it happened the first time.

The guy came in at closing and sort of ducked down then showed his weapon, Thayer said.

Thayer thought about tackling him, but he kept pointing the sword at him, he said.

“Like I said, let him take what he wants and get out of here, he’ll eventually be caught,” Thayer said.

Kim, who has owned the business since, 2006 said his store hasn’t been robbed before.

“I’ve never heard of anybody around here getting robbed, except the bank,” Kim said.

Chehalis Police Department Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said this afternoon officers have a suspect in custody and are interviewing him now.

Jonathan A. Jamerson, 23, currently staying with a relative in Chehalis, was booked into the Lewis County Jail this afternoon for two counts of first-degree robbery, according to Kaut.

More later

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Saturday, June 25th, 2011

MILL FIRE IN MORTON

• Fire broke out a lumber mill in Morton this afternoon, drawing firefighters from Morton and Glenoma. It started on the ground inside a large building and worked its way up, burning the underside of the roof, insulation, light fixtures and various hydraulic and air lines, according to Fire Investigator Jay Birley. “It could have been worse, the building had sprinklers that put a good brake on the fire,” Birley said tonight. It happened about 3:45 p.m. at the “Tubafor Mill” on the 300 block of state Route 7, according to Birley. They didn’t have any product inside and weren’t operating today, he said, but workers were there conducting maintenance. Nobody was hurt. The damage was such he didn’t expect operations to resume in that portion of the building on Monday, he said. Sawdust was probably a contributing factor, but the cause remains under investigation, Birley said. The mill is now called TMI Forest Products Inc. and manufactures Western Red Cedar fence boards, according to information from the company’s web site.

TEENAGER HOLDS GRANDMOTHER IN HOME

• An 18-year-old Centralia resident was arrested yesterday for unlawful imprisonment after he allegedly refused to let his grandmother leave a home on the 1300 block of West Main Street in Centralia until she agreed to buy him cigarettes. Police, called just before 11:30 a.m. yesterday, say he destroyed various items in the home and went out the window when officers arrived. A police dog tracked the suspect down, according to the Centralia Police Department. Galen R. Whitmeyer was booked into the Lewis County Jail for unlawful imprisonment and malicious mischief, according to police.

BULLET THROUGH WINDOW IN CENTRALIA

• Police were called about 1:45 p.m. on Thursday to a home on the 1300 block of West Main Street in Centralia after a man arrived home and found a bullet hole through a window. The officer found a .22 caliber (low velocity) round inside the house; it had only hit the window and curtains and fallen to the carpet, according to police. Police Sgt. Brian Warren said the resident didn’t have any reason to think he was targeted. Officers are investigating.

MAN CAUGHT MAILING MARIJUANA

• A Rochester man was arrested after he allegedly tried to mail an ounce of marijuana to an out-of-state friend, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported yesterday. A deputy was called Wednesday to the UPS distribution center on Hamilton Road south of Chehalis where the sender had dropped off the package containing marijuana and coffee grounds, sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust said. The investigation concluded Scott R. Griggs, 30, of Rochester, was trying to send the marijuana to a friend in Pennsylvania, Aust said. Griggs was arrested on Thursday and booked into the Lewis County Jail for attempted delivery of marijuana, Aust said.

Breaking news: Onalaska murder trial: Guilty of second-degree manslaughter

Friday, June 24th, 2011
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Ronald Brady listens to the jury's verdict this evening

This news story was updated at 11:55 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – A jury found Onalaska resident Ronald A. Brady guilty of second-degree manslaughter today.

The elements of the crime include acting with negligence, failing to even be being aware of the risk death may occur; that being a gross deviation from what a reasonable person would do in the same situation.

Brady, 60, was on trial this week in Lewis County Superior Court for first-degree murder, in the death of 56-year-old Thomas McKenzie of Morton.

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Thomas McKenzie

The jury began deliberating about 3:15 p.m. today and came to a verdict by 6 p.m.

They were given instructions to consider both first and second degree murder as well as first and second-degree manslaughter.

There was no finding Brady acted in self defense on the night of April 19, 2010, according to Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes.

Brady admitted firing five or six shots with a .22 caliber rifle, three of them toward a suspected burglar outside of an uninhabited house he owns and has been re-building since a fire in the late 1990s.

Brady admitted when he testified yesterday McKenzie was moving away from him while Brady stood “pretty much” in the garage after he’d opened the garage door to confront what believed were burglars returning from earlier in the day.

He told a detective he didn’t think a .22 had that kind of “stopping power”.

Because the crime was committed with a firearm, Brady faces a mandatory minimum of three years in prison – with no possibility of reduction for any “good” time – along with a standard sentence of between 21 and 27 months, according to Hayes.

After the verdict was read, Brady handed his keys and other items to one of three individuals who have sat behind him throughout the trial.

But Judge Nelson Hunt did not order him taken into custody. Brady was told to return to court next Thursday to learn his sentencing date.

The jury also decided Brady was not guilty of first- or second-degree assault in the case of McKenzie’s wife, Joanna McKenzie who testified she that while she took cover behind a truck in the driveway, she heard the glass in its windshield shot out and felt “air or something” graze her face.

“They didn’t believe a single thing Joanna McKenzie said,” Centralia defense attorney Don Blair said tonight after he and prosecutors met with jurors following their findings.

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Defense attorney Don Blair

“The jurors thought he (his client) made some poor decisions and that’s why they found him guilty of the least possible crime with regard to Tom,” Blair said.

Thomas McKenzie died at the scene; of a gunshot that passed through his chest, and through the pulmonary artery that goes to the lungs.

He leaves behind nine children, parents and siblings, some of whom were in the courtroom during the trial.

His brother John McKenzie said he was “not happy” with the jury’s decision and he felt no “closure.” His brother didn’t get a trial as to what he was doing on the property that night, he said.

“Mr. Brady may get out in five years, my brother can’t,” John McKenzie said after the verdict. “He shot him like a dog. He shot him like he was out on a hunting trip.”

John McKenzie’s wife, Aleta McKenzie, described her feelings this way:

“It’s like the people of Lewis County have no respect for human life,” she said. “It’s like their property or belongings are more important than human life.”

The shooting has generated strong opinions on both sides.

After it happened last year, Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield didn’t arrest Brady, announcing he believed the shooting was justified.

Last autumn, prosecutors filed manslaughter charges against Brady and then upgraded them to first-degree murder soon thereafter.

Prosecutors argued it was intentional and premeditated.

Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes described Brady as a man who was frustrated and angry about repeated burglaries.

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Deputy Prosecutor Colin Hayes

He told his neighbor Elizabeth Nunes earlier that day “nobody gets away with doing this” to him, and he was going to shoot them if they got into his property, Hayes told jurors in his closing statements yesterday.

Brady loaded as much ammunition as his rifle and shotgun could hold and took them to the house on the 2100 block of state Route 508, Hayes said, and waited two hours in the dark hoping burglars would return.

Hayes questioned how Brady could have been afraid, when it was Brady who opened the garage door and began firing after someone had knocked on his door.

“So he switches from defensive to offensive,” Hayes said. “He had a plan the whole day to kill.”

Blair described his client as a man who prepared himself.

Brady discovered he’d been burglarized, and “like a good neighbor” he notified two of neighbors and called the police.

Deputy Duke Adkisson told him it appeared they might return, Blair told the jury.

“Are you going to go and hide, or are you going to prepare yourself,” Blair asked the jury in his closing statements.

The people outside didn’t leave, even after Brady tripped on something inside the house and made noise, Blair said.

Brady testified he opened the garage door planning to shoot out the tires of their truck. He found two flashlights shining in his face, Blair said.

“He shoots into the truck and they do what? They (the flashlights) don’t move,” Blair said. “It’s at that moment, that’s the critical moment.”

His client didn’t know if the intruders were armed and feared for his life, he said.

Deputy Prosecutor Hayes said at the end of today, it’s a fair conclusion, since that’s what the jury decided.

“We respect their decision,” Hayes said. “We respect the whole process of having juries decide issues like this.”
•••

Read some of the previous news stories:

• “Update: Onalaska murder trial” from Friday June 24, 2011 at 1:03 p.m., here

• “Onalaska murder trial: Defendant says he doesn’t know why he fired his gun” from Thursday June 23, 2011, here

• “Onalaska murder trial: Prosecutor: Home owner said he “planned to shoot” burglars” from Wednesday June 22, 2011, here

• “News brief: Onalaska murder trial begins” from Tuesday June 21, 2011, here

• “Onalaska murder trial set for next week” from Thursday June 16, 2011, here

• “News brief: Attorneys argue on allowable questions at upcoming Onalaska murder trial” from Monday Dec. 6, 2010, here

• “Onalaska shooting: Charges upped from manslaughter to first-degree murder” from Monday November 22, 2010, here

• “News brief: Joanna D. McKenzie arrested for drugs in Centralia” from Monday November 22, 2010, here

• “Onalaska man accused in fatal shooting of suspected burglar goes before a judge” from Wednesday Oct. 13, 2010, here

• “Warrant issued: Onalaska burglary suspect a no-show at her sentencing” from  Wednesday Oct. 13, 2010, here

• “Onalaska man charged in April’s fatal shooting of suspected burglar” from Friday Sept. 24, 2010, here

• “When is it OK to use deadly force in Lewis County?: Not so simple to answer, sheriff says” from Thursday July 15, 2010, here

Update: Onalaska murder trial

Friday, June 24th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Ronald A. Brady took the witness stand yesterday in his first-degree murder trial for the fatal shooting of a suspected burglar.

The 60-year-old’s testimony was mostly, but not entirely, similar to what jurors have already heard he told a detective in a taped statement from hours after the incident.

Prosecutors made their closing arguments this morning in Lewis County Superior Court.

After lunch, jurors will hear from defense attorney Don Blair.

Then the case will be given to the jury of six men and six women to decide.

More to come

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Scroll down to read previous news of the trial