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.
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.
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.
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