Archive for July, 2011

Former Lewis County deputy’s reinstatement to be appealed

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – While a judge decided last week former Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Hal Sprouse should get his job back, that isn’t likely to happen anytime soon.

Sheriff Steve Mansfield plans to appeal Friday’s decision by a Cowlitz County Superior Court judge, a sheriff’s office spokesperson said yesterday.

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Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield

“The only comment we have is we are appealing the case and we have no other comment at this time, due to the current litigation,” Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

Sprouse, now 61, was terminated by Sheriff Mansfield in January of last year, and the Lewis County Civil Service Commission subsequently upheld the firing.

Sprouse’s termination stemmed from the sheriff’s office’s contention that Sprouse was insubordinate and violated the chain of command when he contacted a deputy prosecutor to say he believed some of his superiors were engaging in intimidation and witness tampering – of him – during an outside investigation of Mansfield’s handling of a runaway girl case in 2009.

Court documents indicate the intimidation that Sprouse was alleging followed a complaint by the Lewis County Deputies Guild to the Lewis County prosecutor that led to an investigation by the Washington State Patrol about potential misconduct by the sheriff including allegedly harboring a runaway; the 16-year-old girlfriend of Mansfield’s son.

Sprouse believed he was being intimidated as a potential witness in any action that might be brought against the sheriff, documents in the court file state.

The sheriff’s office also contended Sprouse was dishonest when he failed to reveal to a superior he had spoken to the deputy prosecutor about his witness tampering concerns.

While the Civil Service Commission that reviewed Sprouse’s termination concluded Sprouse was not insubordinate, did not violate the chain of command and was not untruthful, the three-panel board still decided the sheriff terminated Sprouse in good faith for just cause.

The commission wrote in its April 27, 2010 decision Sprouse’s call to the deputy prosecutor was without a good-faith belief a crime was committed; that it was vindictive and retaliatory for a letter of discipline he had been given.

“This action, in our determination, irreparably erodes the confidence the Lewis County Sheriff and his command staff have in Deputy Sprouse,” the commission wrote.

Sprouse filed his appeal of the commission’s decision in Lewis County Superior Court in May of last year. All three local judge’s recused themselves, so an outside judge was asked to preside.

Cowlitz County Superior Court Judge Stephen Warning’s ruling on Friday overturned the firing, Sprouse’s attorney Rick Cordes said yesterday.

“The judge said the evidence didn’t support that Sprouse was being vindictive when he went to the deputy prosecutor,” Cordes said.

The Tacoma attorney, Richard H. Wooster, who is representing the sheriff’s office, declined to comment on the case.

While Sprouse’s situation wasn’t necessarily directly related to the runaway girl case, “It’s all part of what was going on when he had these conversations with sheriff’s office (superiors) and the conversation with the deputy prosecutor,” Cordes said.

Sprouse was the first deputy to respond in March 2009 to the report of a runaway girl by her parents, – a girl who was staying with the sheriff’s son on the sheriff’s property, according to Cordes.

He didn’t feel comfortable investigating his boss,” Cordes said. “During that time, he felt there was some pressure to ‘stay in line’.”

Documents in the court file – Sprouse’s appeal of his termination – describe that as sheriff’s office command staff investigated a leak to the press of the outside investigation of the sheriff, Sprouse was given a letter of discipline for allowing his adult son and the son’s girlfriend to view a sheriff’s office report on the matter.

It didn’t lead to a conclusion about who leaked the report, but Sprouse was angry about getting disciplined and it was after that Sprouse began making allegations, according to a document filed by the sheriff’s office attorney Wooster.

Sprouse shared his concerns with two sergeants, who disagreed he was the target of witness tampering, according to Wooster’s filings.

On Oct. 24, 2009, Sprouse was informed there would be an interview in a few hours with another sergeant who would review his concerns, Wooster wrote, and he was directed not to speak about it to anyone other than his union representative.

Before that interview, Sprouse contacted the on-call deputy prosecutor, Jonathan Richardson and claimed witness tampering and intimidation, according to documents in the court file.

Within the week, the sheriff’s office learned what Sprouse had done. He was terminated Jan. 15, 2010.

Sprouse’s lawyer Cordes argued in one of his briefs to Judge Warning, as the Civil Service Commission had already stated, that deputies are sworn to uphold the laws of the state of Washington and nobody may order a deputy not to report a crime.

Cordes said Sprouse wants his job back, and theoretically Friday’s decision mean’s he will get reinstated with back pay and benefits.

Except the sheriff’s office is appealing, he said.

And that means, “If he wins, then they’ll owe him for close to four years in back pay,” Cordes said.

Sprouse, who started work at the sheriff’s office in November of 2001 after retiring from the Phoenix, Ariz. Police Department, is currently selling real estate locally.

Side notes:

Deputy Prosecutor Richardson passed along Sprouse’s allegation of witness tampering to elected Lewis County Prosecutor Michael Golden, who referred the matter to the Washington State Patrol.

After a limited inquiry, the state patrol concluded no further action would be taken on Sprouse’s allegations.

And, the investigation of Sheriff Mansfield ended in Nov. 2009, with the state Attorney General’s office faulting Mansfield for failing to ask an outside agency to handle the runaway case, but declining to file a criminal charge against the sheriff.

•••

Read the Lewis County Sheriff’s Civil Service Commission, “Decision after hearing” in the matter of Deputy Hal Sprouse: signed April 27, 2010, here

News brief: Steven Moulton’s bail raised to $500,000 in alleged public restroom assault on boy

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A judge ordered 22-year-old Steven Moulton of Morton to undergo an evaluation at Western State Hospital when Moulton appeared in Cowlitz County Superior Court yesterday, according to KATU television in Portland.

Moulton is charged in Cowlitz County with kidnap, assault and molestation for a July 9 incident in a restroom at at a ballpark in Castle Rock in which he allegedly pushed an 8-year-old boy to the floor, choked him and bit him.

Moulton is in the Cowlitz County Jail. His bail was raised to $500,000, KATU reports.

Moulton also has a pending case in Lewis County from last summer when he was found inside a park bathroom stall with an 8-year-old boy who said Moulton covered his mouth with his hand and punched him twice in the face.

Also, the Washington State Patrol revealed on Friday Moulton was identified as the person who groped and kissed a 9-year-old boy at the Maytown rest area in south Thurston County on June 27.

Charges have not yet been filed in that case.

Moulton has previously been found not competent due to a developmental disability.

•••

Read:
• “Breaking news: Morton’s Steve Moulton a suspect in a third bathroom assault” from Friday July 15, 2011, here
• “Castle Rock public bathroom attack suspect charged with kidnap, assault, molestation” from Thursday July 14, 2011, here
• ” ‘Developmental delays’ may put alleged attack in Morton park restroom case on hold” from Friday Nov. 26, 2010, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

THEFT

• Centralia police said a 23-year-old woman from Olympia tried to flee from an officer yesterday afternoon and was captured by a police dog. Tiarra C. Rupe was contacted about 4:40 p.m. near the 100 block of Virginia Drive in Centralia, according to police. Rupe was detained for third-degree theft, treated for the dog bite at the hospital and booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police yesterday took a report of the theft of several gold rings as well as a silver and turquoise necklace. The loss is estimated at $2,900. It happened sometime within the past week at the 300 block of North Tower Avenue, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Centralia police were called just before 4 p.m. yesterday about a burglary at the 2700 block of Russell Road. Prescription medication was taken, according to police.

Wanted: Mystery “shopper” stealing from woman’s freezer

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011
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Surveillance footage from inside a Centralia area garage captured this image about 4:50 a.m. on Saturday

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Diana Howard says she has a regular nighttime visitor to her Centralia-area garage, picking through the stock of goods she keeps in her freezer, and she’d like him to “shop” elsewhere.

Four times in the past month, the 63-year-old has discovered various items missing from the upright freezer she keeps in her detached garage, she said.

It’s disturbing to realize that when she is sleeping, someone has been prowling around in her garage, she said. Howard thinks he may live nearby, because he seems to know when she makes a run to Costco, she said.

“He’s very fond of seafood,” Howard said. “First it was (a carton of) cigarettes, the next time a six-pound bag of scallops, then a carton of cigarettes, then a whole bag of shrimp.”

Early last week, Howard set up a surveillance camera at her property on Old Highway 99 near 220th Avenue Southwest.

She was hoping it would capture pictures of the intruder, but when it did just before 5 o’clock on Saturday morning, she was more than startled.

“That was without a doubt, the creepiest feeling I’ve ever had in my life,” Howard said yesterday.

She reported it to the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office, and is hoping someone will recognize the man in the footage.

In the surveillance photos, she can see he brought a black garbage bag with him, pulled it out and began loading it up, she said.

“It’s just bizarre, he’s picking through the freezer,” she said. “He passed up the Costco lasagna, go figure.”

Howard said her husband passed away a year ago, and sometimes at night when she can’t sleep, she goes into her garage to smoke a cigarette and pray.

“I feel very fortunate I have not run into him,” she said.

Howard said she never used to lock the garage, and intentionally left it unlocked after she installed the camera.

But it’s locked now, she said.

Thurston County sheriff’s Lt. Greg Elwin said today they will be reviewing the pictures when they get them.

He cautions however, that “baiting” a felon by leaving a door unlocked is potentially dangerous and not a good idea.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, July 18th, 2011

SEXUAL ASSAULT

• A 19-year-old Centralia resident was arrested for second-degree rape after police were called last night to a residence on North Schueber Road in Centralia. Centralia Police Department Officer John Panco said the 19-year-old man was visiting a young woman at her home, and at one point wanted to have sex, she said no, and he forced himself on her. Officers subsequently tracked down the 19-year-old and he was booked into the Lewis County Jail, Panco said. However, the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office has decided he should be released without charges pending further investigation.

• Centralia Police Department Officer John Panco said today that police actually arrested a 17-year-old Centralia resident for second-degree rape on June 16, not last Thursday as he originally reported. The teenager was booked into the Lewis County Jail on Thursday, charged as an adult and ordered held on $75,000 bail, according to court documents. He had been being held at the Lewis County Juvenile Detention Center. Earlier in June, Allen M. Price allegedly forced himself on a teenage girl he had gone on a date with, according to charging documents. His arraignment is scheduled for Thursday.

THEFT

• A deputy took a report yesterday of a 9 mm pistol with two fully-loaded magazines stolen from a cabin from the 100 block of Sunstone Drive in Packwood. A Tacoma man had rented his cabin to a friend over the weekend and learned a 16-year-old guest had stolen an iPod from the cabin, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. After retrieving the iPod, the victim asked a neighbor in Packwood to check to see if his gun remained in the cabin. It was missing and the teen is a suspect, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said this morning.

• Chehalis police were called about 5:40 a.m. yesterday about a burglary to a shed on the 600 block of Southwest Chehalis Avenue. The resident followed tracks in the dew on the lawn and found his missing pressure washer nearby, just as a young man appeared and seemingly was going to take the pressure washer away, according to police. Another neighbor joined in the chase, as the subject fled on a motorcycle, police said. It was tracked by its license plate to a home in Centralia and 27-year-old John W. Franken, of Centralia, was subsequently arrested and booked for second-degree burglary, Deputy Chief Randy Kaut said.

• A deputy took a report on Saturday that someone backed a blue pickup truck up to a house on the 100 block of Fircrest Road outside Chehalis and loaded it up with somebody’s else’s table saw, washer, dryer, wood stove and refrigerator. The victim believed it occurred on July 8, possibly at about 6 p.m., according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• A deputy was called Saturday to the 300 block of Schoen Road in Silver Creek where a woman reported the theft of a brand new, still in-the-box Craftsman “Rotovator”. The loss is $389. It was taken from outside a shop sometime between July 9 and Saturday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• Somebody removed an air conditioner from a window and entered a home on the 900 block of North Tower Avenue in Centralia, according to a report made to the Centralia Police Department on Friday. The intruder went through things but nothing appeared to be missing, according to police.

• Centralia police took a report on Friday morning from the 500 block of Hunt Street where a blue Dodge truck and a trailer full of scrap metal were stolen. The truck has a temporary license plate, according to police

• Centralia police took a report of an attempted vehicle prowl on the 2400 block of Leisure Lane yesterday.

• Centralia police were called about 6 p.m. yesterday to the 1000 block of North Gold Street to take a report of a stolen mailbox.

• Chehalis police were called Saturday morning to the 1000 block of Southwest 20th Street where someone reported the “end caps” from a luggage rack on a vehicle had been stolen.

DRUGS

• A 20-year-old Napavine woman was arrested for possession of methamphetamine on Sunday night in Centralia. Rosa M. Sanchez-Anderson was booked into the Lewis County Jail following her contact with an officer about 11:45 p.m. at South Tower Avenue and East Summa Street in Centralia,  according to the Centralia Police Department.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police took five reports of graffiti between Friday and Sunday in two places on North Tower Avenue, on the viaduct on the 100 block of East Sixth Street, and on the 400 block of West Main Street.

DUI

• A 50-year-old Winlock man was arrested yesterday for driving under the influence after witnesses said they observed his car “all over the road” near Nikula Road, saw the driver stop, leave his car to urinate, and then fall down on the ground when he tried to get back inside, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. He then drove away, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. Tony A. Smith was subsequently arrested at his home and booked into the Lewis County Jail, Brown said.

CRASHES

• Centralia police were called about 6:30 p.m. yesterday to a two-car collision at West Sixth and North Pearl streets. One woman was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with what police described as minor injuries.

• Troopers and aid were called early Sunday morning to a single-vehicle collision on state Route 6 about a half mile west of Chehalis. An eastbound vehicle struck a fence on the right-hand side of the highway and rolled, according to Washington State Patrol. The driver, Leslie L. Candler, 26, of Raymond, was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital with neck pain, the state patrol reported. His 1997 Toyota Tacoma was descried as totaled.  Candler was expected to be cited for driving under the influence, according to the investigating trooper.

Firefighters practice for a mass casualty incident in the Boistfort Valley

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

By Michael and Jen Peterson
For Lewis County Sirens

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"Moulage" artist Sarah Banning applies makeup to Civil Air Patrol cadet Jordan Bartlow on Saturday in Boistfort in preparation for a mass casualty incident drill conducted by first responders. / Courtesy photo by Michael Peterson

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CAP cadet Jerry Hughes "plays dead" on the floor of the bus at Jones Road off Wildwood Road. / Courtesy photo by Michael Peterson

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Ed Mund, left, assists incident commander RJ Remund as Lizzie Barnts and Tim Baars look on. / Courtesy photo by Michael Peterson

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Onlookers: A few vultures show up to offer assistance with the "dead" patients. / Courtesy photo by Jen Peterson

News brief: Judge says Lewis County deputy should get his job back

Saturday, July 16th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Former Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Hal Sprouse yesterday won his appeal of his firing.

Sprouse, 61, was terminated by Sheriff Steve Mansfield in January of last year, and the Lewis County Civil Service Commission subsequently upheld the firing.

A Cowlitz County Superior Court judge yesterday ruled in his favor, he said.

“We’ve been fighting the civil service ruling,” Sprouse said today. “The judge overturned it.”

He had been asking to be reinstated with backpay and benefits, he said.

His appeal was filed in Lewis County, but a Cowlitz County judge has been handling it because of potential conflicts, he said.

Sprouse said he was happy about the judge’s decision.

“I expected it all along ’cause I really believe what I did was correct, was what I should do, and was within the law,” he said.

His firing was related to him giving information to the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office, he said. He didn’t want to discuss the details however, referring further questions to his lawyer

The county has the right to appeal the decision, he said.

Sprouse, who started work at the sheriff’s office in November of 2001 after retiring from the Phoenix, Ariz. Police Department, is currently selling real estate locally, he said.