Archive for October, 2011

Read about attorney for south Thurston County driver says victims at fault …

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Olympian reports jurors were told two men who confronted a young driver outside a Boy Scout awards dinner are to blame for being struck and injured.

Kody M. Chipman, whose residence has been described as both in Rochester and Tenino, is on trial for vehicular assault in Thurston County Superior Court, according to news reporter Jeremy Pawloski.

Chipman allegedly knocked two men down with the open door of his car when he fled a confrontation about his speeding on a private driveway in Olympia in late March.

Read more here

News brief: Man stabbed in Centralia

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 21-year-old man was arrested after he allegedly stabbed another man on the 1100 block of South Tower Avenue in Centralia last night.

Police and aid were called just before 8 p.m. and told the suspect was running away and being chased by acquaintances of the victim from inside the victim’s home, according to Centralia police.

Police were told Arnulfo Alaniz had chased the victim around a car, the victim fell down and he began stabbing him, Officer John Panco said.

An arriving officer found the suspect running and he was taken into custody following a small scuffle, according to Panco.

Alaniz, 21, of Centralia, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for two counts of first-degree assault and one count of third-degree assault, Panco said.

Alaniz reportedly swiped at one of the people chasing him but missed, Panco said.

Panco said this morning there was a a dispute over something related to the past, but he didn’t yet know the details.

The victim, said by police to be 20 and by the fire department to be 25, was treated and taken to the hospital with lacerations on the back of his neck, his forearm and his wrist, according to responders.

Panco said a photo of the weapon found on the ground the next block over depicted what looked to be a butcher knife.

Coroners inquest into Ronda Reynolds death: Responders ponder, suicide or homicide

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011
2011.1010.inquest.mcleod.bradd_2

Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod presides over the inquest into the 1998 death of former trooper Ronda Reynolds. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Janice Nielsen had been an emergency medical technician about three years when she was summoned to 114 Twin Peaks Drive in Toledo early on the morning of Dec. 16, 1998.

Nielsen, another EMT and a deputy went into the small walk-in closet where the victim lay.

“There was a lot of blood,” Nielsen said.

On Monday, when she spoke from the witness stand, Nielsen said she recalled finding “everything unusual.”

Nielsen was the first to give testimony in the coroner’s inquest in Chehalis into the controversial death of former trooper Ronda Reynolds.

Her account of what she saw has not been heard publicly before; she was not among the many individuals who testified two years ago when the related civil case was heard in Lewis County Superior Court.

Nielsen’s report from the call has never been found, she told Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod.

The EMT said she looked over the body and attempted to find a pulse. She said she moved the blanket a little to look under Reynolds’ pajama top to “visualize” her back.

“We are allowed to determine death in part based on lividity,” she explained.

A pillow was resting up off her head, and Nielsen could see the entry wound and a gun resting on the side of Reynolds’ face, she said.

Under further questioning, Nielsen said she didn’t recall that she moved the blanket to check the victim’s neck, and was very careful not to touch the gun.

Nielsen described to the inquest jury what she felt was “odd.” Such as the writings on the bathroom mirror and items in the car as though Reynolds were getting ready to go somewhere, she said.

And Reynolds’ husband, Ron Reynolds, was particularly calm, she said.

“I guess I can’t tell you why it struck me the way it did, but it struck me different than I had seen in the past,” Nielsen said.

There were no smudge marks that she recalled, if someone had already checked the pulse, she said.

She estimated she was inside the house about 25 to 30 minutes after being toned out, but didn’t know for sure what time she arrived because of the missing report.

She says she did not move the body.

Nielsen was the first of five individuals who gave testimony on Monday, in a Lewis County District Courtroom. She took the stand after lunch, after a morning of Coroner McLeod whittling down 20 potential jurors to seven.

More than 40 witnesses are expected over the next week or so as the 13-year-old case is aired once again

pc.ronda Copying_2

Ronda Reynolds

Reynolds, 33, died with a bullet in her head in the home she shared with her new husband, Toledo Elementary School Principal Ron Reynolds. The couple were separating and she had plans to fly home to her family in Spokane later that morning.

Over the years, her manner of death was changed repeatedly by the coroner back and forth between suicide and undetermined as it was reinvestigated and then more recently underwent a judicial review.

Newly elected Coroner McLeod and his chief deputy swore in the jury of five women and two men after lunch on Monday.

McLeod told them the following are what they would attempt to determine: the name of the deceased, when the death occurred, where the death occurred, by what means and cause did the death occur and finally, the manner of death.

A small number of members of the news media and the public were in the courtroom yesterday, along with persons deemed “especially interested” such as Ronda Reynolds’ mother, her lawyer, the elected Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer and representatives of Sheriff Steve Mansfield. Elected coroners from both Cowlitz and Thurston counties are sitting in.

McLeod announced that not only would the jurors not hear testimony from Ron Reynolds or his three sons, he has also excused former Chief Deputy Coroner Carmen Brunton from testifying, for health reasons.

Brunton was at the scene that morning, and signed the death certificate. She was not called to give her account in the judicial review two years ago.

Also testifying yesterday were the first arriving deputies, their sergeant and then-detective’s Sgt. Glade Austin who oversaw the sheriff’s office investigation. Austin is expected to finish up on the witness stand this morning.

Retired Lewis County Deputy Gary Holt said he got the call at about 6:21 a.m. and arrived at the house about 6:42 a.m.

The victim’s husband said she shot herself, basically there was an argument with her talking of suicide and when he woke up he couldn’t find her at first, Holt told the coroner and the jury.

The three sons were allowed to leave, he said. They weren’t interviewed.

“I think he said (he woke) around 6,” Holt said about Ron Reynolds.

Holt, mostly viewing and re-reading what he wrote in his reports 13 years ago, said he saw the pillow – back a little bit – saw the weapon and the electric blanket was turned on. He said he wasn’t sure if the gun was under the blanket.

As McLeod had him look through photos, he said for some reason pictures he took came up missing; he didn’t know why.

Reading from a report, Holt said Ron Reynolds told him they were separating; she was talking of suicide, and he was trying to keep her with him to keep her safe but he fell asleep around 5 a.m.

After Ron Reynolds found his wife in the closet, he said he did move the pillow a little bit to check the pulse,” Holt said.

Holt described Ron Reynolds’ manner as somber, saying he didn’t show a lot of emotion, until his wife’s friend Laurie Hull showed up; then he cried, Holt testified.

He confirmed the medics didn’t move the body.

Former Reserve Deputy Robert Bishop recounted what he had already told a panel of jurors in November 2009 during the judicial review.

He was skeptical then and remains so.

“I do not believe she committed suicide, I believe this was a homicide,” Bishop said.

Bishop said he arrived at the home at 6:45 a.m. and looked at Ronda Reynolds’ body from outside the closet.

“My recollection was the blanket was pulled up and the right hand was under the blanket and the left hand was visible,” he said.

Under questioning, and reading aloud reports, Bishop said he overheard Deputy Holt ask Ron Reynolds why he didn’t hear the gunshot. His answer was both the closet and bathroom door had been closed, Bishop said.

Bishop returned to the bathroom and observed the position of the body.

“It did not appear the door could have been closed, due to Mrs. Reynolds being in the way,” he said.

Bishop testified he noted Ron Reynolds was not wearing a wedding ring, and that he observed a wedding ring in the soap dish in the bathroom.

The bathroom was humid, as though someone had taken a shower, he said.

Sheriff’s Cmdr. Steve Aust briefly took the stand, noting that back then, it wasn’t common practice for patrol sergeants to write a report; his wasn’t written until 2001 when the case was reopened.

Aust recounted arriving to the house at 7:12 a.m. and then taking then-Chief Criminal Deputy Joe Doench to view the closet.

He directed Deputy Holt to take a taped statement from Ron Reynolds, he said.

Former detective’s sergeant Austin testified last yesterday and addressed a wide variety of topics, including his decision five months after the death to close the case as a suicide.

Austin testified he did not go the scene, but he interviewed numerous individuals and reviewed the reports and evidence.

His May 27, 1999 report cited two outside experts, one he wrote agreed the death was likely a suicide and another – blood spatter expert Rod Englert – he wrote told him the death was a suicide.

Under questioning by Coroner McLeod, Austin acknowledged his report was a poor characterization of Englert’s opinion.

“In my report, I said he said it was suicide,” Austin testified. “Really, what he said, is he agreed with us it could be suicide. So that was probably an error of semantics on my part.”

Austin will resume testifying this morning.

2011.1010.inquest.glade.austin_2

Retired detective Sgt. Glade Austin testifies about the sheriff's office investigation into Ronda Reynolds' death. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

Schedule for today:

Today Oct. 11
Morning, 9 a.m. until noon

• Glade Austin, continued
• Dave Neiser – retired Lewis County sheriff’s detective

Today Oct. 11
Afternoon, 1:30 p.m. until 4:45 p.m.

• Jerry Berry – retired Lewis County sheriff’s detective
• Dr. Daniel Selove – forensic pathologist who conducted autopsy
• Joe Doench – retired Lewis County sheriff’s chief criminal deputy
• Gordon Spanski – retired Lewis County undersheriff
•••

See the rules governing the procedures for McLeod’s coroner’s inquest, here

Read about the November 2009 judicial review, here

News brief: Elderly woman injured in Napavine collision

Monday, October 10th, 2011
2011.1010.Veh.accident.HWY603_2

Courtesy photo by Lewis County Fire District 5

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A 92-year-old Winlock woman was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center after a single car wreck today just south of Napavine, according to the Washington State Patrol.

Margaret J. Perrotti had to be extricated from her 1993 Dodge Spirit after it left the roadway and struck an embankment, a power pole and tree before coming to rest on its driver’s side, according to responders.

Fire and aid units from Lewis County Fire District 5 were called shortly after 1 p.m. to the accident on Highway 603, according to District 5 Lt. Laura Hanson. They were assisted by members of District 15, according to hanson.

The state patrol said she was traveling southbound near milepost 8 before the crash occurred. The car was described as totaled.

Perrotti suffered trauma to her chest area, according to the state patrol. The cause is under investigation.

Update Tuesday October 11, 2011: The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reports the driver died.

The state patrol noted Perrotti passed at 10:35 p.m. the night of the wreck.

Breaking news: Skeletal remains found in Gifford Pinchot

Monday, October 10th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Skeletal remains and jewelry were found yesterday, possibly related to the woman missing in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest during the Rainbow gathering this summer, according to the Skamania County Sheriff’s Office.

After several extensive searches in the area where 54-year-old Marie Hanson of South Lake Tahoe was last seen in early July, searchers made the discovery yesterday afternoon, according to Undersheriff Dave Cox.

“We will continue with this investigation to attempt to positively identify any remains that we locate throughout this process,” Cox stated in a news release this morning. “We are hopeful but not jumping to any conclusions at this point.

“Marie’s family have been notified of this development and are requesting that we all respect their privacy during this time.”

Investigators are on the scene today looking for any additional items of evidence and processing the scene, Cox said.

Hanson went missing during the gathering in the Skookum Meadows area, southeast of Mount St. Helens and about 30 miles north of Carson.

•••

Read more about Marie Hanson’s disappearance, in her hometown newspaper, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, October 10th, 2011

BURGLARY AND THEFT

• Two people were arrested yesterday after an incident at the 900 block of North Pearl Street in Centralia. Police were called about 12:20 p.m. because someone was thought to be inside the house. After a search, police found nobody inside, but did locate an item left behind – with a suspect’s name on it, according to Sgt. Kurt Reichert. Christopher Snipes, 34, of Centralia, and April L. Jones, 28, of Toledo, were found a couple of hours later walking along Pear Street and booked into the Lewis County Jail first-degree burglary, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Police were called just after 10 a.m. on Friday to the 600 block of North Tower Avenue in Centralia where a 58-year-old man allegedly struck a clerk who tried to stop him for shoplifting three 24-ounce cans of beer. Terrance G. Miller, Centralia, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree robbery, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DRUGS

• A 49-year-old Centralia man was arrested on Saturday evening for possession of marijuana with intent to deliver, according to Centralia police. Steven T. Reis, of Centralia, was arrested and then released after contact with police at the 800 block of Pear Street, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Two people were arrested in Centralia on Saturday afternoon for possession of methamphetamine. Kari A. Freudenthal, 37, and David A. Haslip, 40, both of Olympia, were booked into the Lewis County Jail after contact with police at the 1100 block of Harrison Avenue, according to the Centralia Police Department.

ASSAULT

• Chehalis police were called Saturday afternoon to the 200 block of Southwest Fourteenth Street where a 27-year-old resident said someone else in the home poked him the ribs with a small dagger. They struggled and the resident pushed him away, according to a Chehalis police report. Police will be investigating the incident at the home where several unrelated individuals live, according to Deputy Chief Randy Kaut. The man was not injured, according to Kaut.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were called about 5 p.m. yesterday to the 600 block of M Street about slashed tires.

•••

Correction: An item above was corrected on Oct. 16, 2011 to reflect that Steven T. Reis of Centralia was not booked after his arrest by Centralia police for possession of marijuana with intent to deliver.

Read about crane topples during bridge removal near Dryad …

Sunday, October 9th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

KOMOnews.com reports a 30-ton crane tipped over as workers were removing the temporary bridge in the Dryad-Meskill area today.

The television news site reports there were three minor injuries; however none of the three fire districts in the area were called out for any kind of accident today.

The 180-foot bridge connecting River Road to Leudinghaus Road over the Chehalis River was put in place after the previous bridge was knocked out during the December 2007 flooding, according to KOMO.

Read more here