Archive for December, 2011

Drug task force arrests eight in East End

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011
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The Lewis County Sheriff's Office's armored personnel carrier with its SWAT team rolled through the east end today. / Courtesy photo by Lewis County Sheriff's Office

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Alleged drug dealers and users were swept up in Packwood and Morton today as the sheriff’s office and friends served search warrants.

Eight people were arrested altogether in what Lewis County Sheriff Steve Mansfield is calling “Operation Merry Christmas”. Three of them were wanted on unrelated outstanding warrants, according to the sheriff’s office.

Mansfield said some 15 or more officers from four agencies participated starting at 9 a.m. at the 100 block of Edmonds Road in Packwood.

The action followed a three-month investigation by the Lewis County Regional Drug Task Force, which had been conducting undercover “buys”, according to the sheriff.

According to a news release from the sheriff’s office:

Arrested were Sherri J. Hamrick, 46, for four counts of delivery of methamphetamine; James D. Hamrick, 29, for two counts of delivery of methamphetamine and felon in possession of a firearm; and Amaris R. Smith, 21, for possession of methamphetamine. All are Packwood residents.

Two individuals were picked up in elsewhere for warrants. They are Bradley J. Miller, 35, of Packwood, found at the 100 block of Mount Rainier Drive; and Effren E. Barron, 40, found at the 12900 block of U.S. Highway 12.

Mansfield said officers came across a small marijuana grow today, and seized one-eighth of an ounce of suspected methamphetamine.

The news release went on to name:

Venus D. Hamilton, 48, was arrested in Morton on the 900 block of Davis Lake Road for delivery of methamphetamine.

Then law enforcement moved to another location on the 6300 block of U.S. Highway 12 in Morton where they picked up two others.

They are Brandon Piatt, 31, of Glenoma, for four counts of delivery of methamphetamine; and Sheila Schmitt, 44, of Morton, for possession of narcotics.

Mansfield said more arrests are expected in the East End over the next two weeks.

One Packwood resident on Edmonds Road told the sheriff she couldn’t thank him enough for cleaning up the drug dealers in her neighborhood, Mansfield said.

“It’s quite touching to have some hug you and say ‘thank you, thank you, thank you’,” Mansfield said.

The sheriff credited Lewis County Sheriff’s office Sgt. Rob Snaza for putting together the operation.

Assisting the task force and other deputies were members of the Centralia Police Department, the state Department of Corrections and the Washington State Patrol.

All were booked into the Lewis County Jail.

“This Christmas they’ll be spending it in my jail, unless they find a way to bail out,” Mansfield said. “Which, I hope they don’t.”
•••

CORRECTION: This news story has been corrected to reflect the noontime arrests of Brandon Piatt and Sheila Schmitt on the 6300 block of U.S. Highway 12 took place in Morton, not Packwood as the sheriff’s office incorrectly reported to the news media.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

FIRE CLAIMS SALKUM HOUSE, PETS

• A Salkum family escaped a fire last night that destroyed their home and killed several pets. Firefighters from three departments called about 12:20 a.m. to the 100 block of Orchard Drive off Spencer Road found the two-story house fully engulfed in flames, according to Lewis County Fire District 8 Assistant Chief Don Taylor. It was an open loft-type construction so the fire had a lot of room to build, Taylor said. It was finally contained after about two hours, he said. One woman trying to get her animals out suffered smoke inhalation, but didn’t want to go the hospital, according to Taylor. Two other adults and three small children were fine, he said. A Labrador dog and one cat got out, but four small dogs were found deceased under a bed, he said. There was one bright spot, according to Taylor. “We assumed because of the intensity of the fire all the unaccounted-for pets had perished” but beneath the pile of dogs, a cat was found alive, he said. Firefighters administered oxygen to the singed cat and this morning it was going to be taken to a veterinarian, he said. The fire seemed to have begun in the garage area, he said.

ONALASKA PANTRY FIRE EXTINGUISHED

• Firefighters were called just before 1 o’clock this morning to a home off Middle Fork Road in Onalaska where wood stove ashes had begun smoldering in a waste basket in a pantry. A father got the family outside safely and the damage was minimal, Lewis County Fire District 1 Chief Mark Conner said.

THEFT

• A deputy took a report yesterday of several thousand dollars worth of tools and various equipment stolen from an outbuilding on the 5500 block of Jackson Highway near Toledo, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. It occurred sometime between Monday and Wednesday, according to the sheriff’s office.

• A Playstation and a compressor were among the items missing after a burglary to a house and garage on the 300 block of North Buckner Street in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department. It was reported at noon time yesterday.

• A Centralia man who got up early yesterday morning to walk his dog discovered both his $8,000 mower and the car trailer it had been loaded onto missing. A deputy called about 7 a.m. to the 1500 block of South Schueber Road was told they had been parked in front of the man’s shop the night before. The mower is red and the home made trailer is 18-feet long and black, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• Centralia police took a report of a vehicle prowl to a motor home yesterday evening from the 1100 block of Crosby Avenue.

WOMAN ARRESTED AFTER SEEKING SHELTER IN TRAVEL TRAILER

• A 46-year-old woman was arrested overnight after she broke into a travel trailer in Centralia apparently seeking a warm place to stay, according to the Centralia Police Department. Police called just after midnight to the 300 block of North Iron Street found a heater inside had been turned on but nothing missing. Lisa A. Palmer, of Centralia, was booked into the Lewis County Jail for burglary, according to police.

UNDER THE INFLUENCE AND STUCK ON RAILROAD TRACKS

• A 70-year-old driver was arrested after he somehow got his vehicle stuck on railroad tracks in Centralia and was found to be driving under the influence of drugs. Police called about 7:15 p.m. yesterday to the 900 block of South Tower Avenue booked James G. Hangartner into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

THREE-YEAR-OLD PEDESTRIAN SURVIVES NEAR MISS BY PASSING VEHICLE

• A toddler escaped injury yesterday when she apparently got out of her father’s hand stepped into a Centralia street and was brushed by a passing vehicle. Police and aid called about 6:50 p.m. to Main and Rock streets said the 3-year-old girl was unhurt. The “bump” apparently spun her around but didn’t knock her down, Riverside Fire Authority Capt. Ken Colombo said. The driver was not cited, according to police.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

THEFT

• A pair of teenage brothers were arrested yesterday for second-degree burglary after they allegedly crawled through the  window of a neighbor’s mobile home in Centralia. Police, called about 12:30 p.m. to the 1700 block of Harrison Avenue, were told the boys were looking for batteries for a “remote control something”, police said. The 14-year-old and his 15-year-old brother were booked into the Lewis County Juvenile Detention Center.

• Centralia police were called about 6:30 a.m. today to the 100 block of Sunnyside Drive in Centralia where a .22 caliber rifle had been stolen from a vehicle overnight. The missing gun is a Winchester 77, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Police took a report yesterday of a vehicle prowl on the 1000 block of South Schueber Road in Centralia in which a purse had been stolen  last Thursday. The vehicle had been unlocked, according to the Centralia Police Department.

Trusted Winlock grocery manager stole some $1 million from employer

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011
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Benjamin C. Macy hangs his head as he listens to his former employer speak of the ongoing thefts from his grocery store.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The former Winlock grocery store manager accused of stealing lottery tickets was sentenced to prison today, as attorneys agreed the theft from his employer was closer to $1 million over the years.

Benjamin C. Macy, 52, was employed at the Cedar Village IGA some 30 years. He was arrested in May 2010 after a video surveillance camera showed him scratching off dozens of $20 tickets at 4:30 in the morning.

Macy hung his head as Cedar Village owner Raleigh Stone addressed him this morning in Lewis County Superior Court.

“Ben, you were one of the richest men I knew,” Stone said, reading from a page he’d written. “Rich in family, friends, community and co-workers who equally respected you for the man they thought you were.”

“I trusted you like a brother,” Stone said.

Stone went on to say Macy was named in his will, had delivered the eulogy for Stone’s mother, and continued to steal from the store even after knowing Stone withdrew $50,000 from his retirement in order to pay the bills.

“It’s a shame you and your family made more money off my business than my family did in 31 years,” Stone said.

Some 50 people packed the seats in the Chehalis courtroom this morning as Lewis County Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead and defense attorney Don McConnell told the judge what they felt the sentence should be.

Macy pleaded guilty in October to five counts of first-degree theft.

In a separate civil case, Macy agreed to pay Stone almost $305,000, and sign over his house, a $30,000 truck and coin collection.

“I gave all those last week to Mr. Stone,” attorney Don McConnell told the judge.

McConnell said he’d never met someone more sorry than his client.

Macy stood and turned toward his former employer when it was his turn to speak.

“It’s been going on a long time,” Macy said. “Way too long. Raleigh, I’m sorry,” he said.

The former Winlock resident apologized to Stone’s family, to his former co-workers and his own family for embarrassing them.

According to Stone, while people generally thought the theft was only lottery tickets, it was much more.

Since January 2005, the forensic accountant determined more than $900,000 was missing, and that was above and beyond thousands of dollars from the previous years in which the statute of limitations had passed, Stone said.

And then there was more than $538,000 in lottery winnings from stolen tickets, he said.

Halstead said the thefts added up to in excess of $1 million. McConnell said his accountant determined it was something less than that.

Th standard sentencing range, established by the legislature, is 12 to 14 months in prison. Halstead recommended 12 months and one day.

Judge Richard Brosey told Macy his actions could possibly had put the only grocery in Winlock out of business.

There’s no excuse, no justification, Brosey said.

He sentenced Macy to 14 months in prison.

Macy, who has been free on bail since his arrest, was handcuffed and led out of the courtroom.

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Benjamin C. Macy is taken away by a corrections officer from the Lewis County Jail.

•••

Read background here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

SCHOOL BUS DRIVER QUITS AFTER ALCOHOL TEST

• Police were called after a Chehalis school bus driver finished her morning route reportedly smelling of alcohol last week. The driver, identified as a 58-year-old woman who has been driving a school bus for more than 20 years, resigned rather than be fired, Chehalis School District Superintendent Ed Rothlin said today. While she lost her job, she’s not likely to be arrested for driving under the influence because there was quite a time delay in the reporting, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Two employees reported to the transportation supervisor the driver smelled of alcohol about 8:30 a.m. on Tuesday and the driver was taken for a blood alcohol test in which she tested somewhere between .04 and .08, according to police and the school district. Rothlin didn’t divulge what the level was but said the drug and alcohol policy is strictly enforced and anything above .04 is grounds for discipline. Police weren’t called until about 11 a.m., after the driver had been tested and allowed to go home, according to Deputy Chief Randy Kaut. The school board held a special meeting on Friday to accept her resignation, Rothlin said.

FIGHTS

• A scuffle in a parking lot about 2 o’clock this morning on the 1000 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia ended with two reportedly intoxicated individuals arrested, a man for assaulting his girlfriend and the girlfriend for grabbing the officer to get the officer off her boyfriend, according to police. Police were called at about 2:10 a.m. when witnesses observed 27-year-old Darrell S. Maxfield assault a woman, according to the Centralia Police Department. Maxfield refused to comply with orders and was taken to the ground and the female repeated came at the officer, according to police. The un-named woman was booked for third-degree assault and Maxfield was booked for fourth-degree assault, according to Centralia Police Department.

• A 47-year-old Packwood man reportedly “squared off” with police and wound up getting taken to the ground and Tased yesterday evening on the 500 block of North Pearl Street,  according to Centralia Police Department. Charles A. Park was booked into the Lewis County Jail after the approximately 5 p.m. incident that involved a warrant arrest, according to police.

• A woman arrested for possession of marijuana after trying to pick a fight on the 400 block of West Third Street in Centralia last night was subsequently also arrested for second-degree malicious mischief when she used the backseat of a patrol car for a toilet, according to police. Lisa A. Palmer, 46, of Oakville,  was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to Centralia Police Department. The patrol car was taken out of service so it could be sanitized, according to police. She was released without charging.

RESTAURANT CASH AND CHECKS STOLEN

• Police were called yesterday evening after two purses containing thousands of dollars in cash as well as customers checks were stolen from a restaurant on the 600 block of North National Avenue in Chehalis. A group of people had come in to the Ocean Sky inquiring about banquet facilities and it seems it they could have been intentionally distracting the employee while the purses were snagged, according to Chehalis police.

SHERIFF’S OFFICE: MOSSY STORE BURGLARIES SOLVED

• Four teenage boys are facing arrest for two August break-ins at a Mossyrock-area store in which cash, boxes of candy, cans of Monster energy drinks were stolen, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning. Deputies followed up on local rumors and found a 14-year-old and three 15-year-olds who admitted to the burglaries at the Mossyrock Park store and cafe on the 200 block of Ajlune Road, according to the sheriff’s office. The loss is estimated to as much as $2,500, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. The case is being referred for possible charges, Brown said.

FRIEND EMPTIES, THEN REFILLS  MAN’S BANK ACCOUNT

• A 35-year-old Centralia man was arrested for 13 counts of forgery following a report taken Monday from a longtime friend and former roommate on West Roanoke Street that his checking account had been emptied. The victim thought the checks had been stolen sometime since Nov. 1, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. When Beau J. Armstrong was arrested, a deputy learned he had just deposited $3,225 into the account, possibly to cover up what he had done, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. Armstrong was booked into the Lewis County Jail, Brown said.

SISTER TAKES WOMAN’S CHECKS

• Tracy L. McPherson, 41, was arrested Thursday for second-degree theft after allegedly stealing a checkbook from her sister’s Onalaska home and writing some two dozen checks at grocery stores and Home Depot, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office said yesterday. She said she was paying off debts, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

THEFT

• Centralia police on Friday took a report of a missing bank deposit bag containing more than $1,000. A business from out of the area contacted police about the possible theft after the money was not deposited into a Centralia bank, police said. The case is under investigation.

• Unspecified household items were stolen in a burglary at the 1100 block of Mellen Street in Centralia which was reported about 11:30 a.m. yesterday.

•  A 1991 Ford Ranger was reported stolen sometime between 10 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. on Saturday from the 900 block of state Route 7 outside Morton, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The truck has a license plates reading B744058, according to the sheriff’s office.

• A 2003 Ford F350 pickup stolen from the 300 block of Newaukum Valley Road outside Chehalis was found stuck in a creek off the same road on Saturday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• A Chehalis man called the sheriff’s office on Friday when he spotted his stolen utility trailer being pulled behind a pickup at the Rock Shop in Ethel and the truck was subsequently stopped on the 800 block of Gish Road in Onalaska, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. David Shive, 51, of Toledo, told the deputy he’d borrowed in from a friend on Tucker Road but the friend said he didn’t know anything about that, according to the sheriff’s office. Shive was booked into the Lewis County Jail for possession of stolen property, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said this morning.

• Three surveillance cameras were reported stolen from a business and apartment building on the 500 block of North Tower Avenue in Centralia on Sunday afternoon, according to police.

• Police were called about 5:20 p.m. yesterday to a car prowl on the 500 block of West Third Street in Centralia.

• Keys and a knife were reported stolen from a vehicle on the 100 block of Jalyn Street in Centralia on Friday afternoon.

DRUGS

• A 25-year-old Centralia woman was arrested about 8:30 p.m. yesterday for possession of methamphetamine, according to Centralia Police Department. Ericka D. Romero was booked into jail following her contact with police at Mellen and Alder streets, according to police.

• A 53-year-old Centralia man was arrested for possession of methadone and unspecified prescription pills following a traffic stop on the 500 block of South Rock Street in Centralia yesterday evening. Anthony L. Pender was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to Centralia Police Department.

• A 24-year-old Rochester woman was arrested for possession of methamphetamine on Saturday night in Centralia, according to police. Shanna M. Rogers was booked into the Lewis County Jail following her contact with an officer on the 100 block of North Pearl Street, according to Centralia Police Department.

• A 44-year-old Centralia woman was arrested for possession of methamphetamine on Friday morning after contact with an officer at the 1300 block of Bayne Street in Centralia, according to police. Sara M. DeSalvo was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to Centralia Police Department.

UNDERAGE DRINKING

• Eight individuals were arrested when deputies broke up a Friday night underage drinking party at a rock pit off Evans Road near Toledo, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Several people took off on foot but others, ages 17 to 20, were issued citations for being minors in possession of alcohol, according to the sheriff’s office.

JEWELRY STORE LOSS ABOUT $40,000

• Some $40,000 in jewelry was stolen from the antique store in Centralia that was burglarized last week, according to Centralia police. A witness who heard the alarm about 3:30 a.m. on Thursday on the 100 block of South Tower Avenue saw two males carrying items out of the shop and putting them in a silver sport utility vehicle, according to Centralia police. A police pursuit on northbound Interstate 5 reached speeds of more than 100 mph and continued north. The license plate of the suspect SUV turned out to have been stolen several blocks away from the jewelry store, according to Sgt. Kurt Reichert.

Report: Triple murderer surprisingly charming and well-mannered

Monday, December 19th, 2011

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John Allen Booth Jr. sits in a visiting area in the Lewis County Jail after his conviction in Salkum-area murders

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – So I interviewed convicted triple murderer John Allen Booth Jr. at the jail on Friday.

A personable enough guy, notwithstanding the fact he’d just been found guilty several hours earlier of shooting four people in the head, including a 16-year-old boy.

Of course, I suspect he was friendly towards me, given that he’s been locked alone in a jail cell for 16 months. Plus, I’m not somebody who chased him down, locked him up or got in his way when he was trying to collect drug money.

Charming is probably an overstatement, however, I’m guessing there are people who would use that description.

I thought it would be good to hear from the 32-year-old former Onalaska man directly, given two weeks of a trial where others were in charge of painting the picture of who he is and then his own testimony that left me – and I’m sure others – with several questions.

So what in the heck did that mean, after the jury announced its verdict Thursday, and you say, “And vote for Barack Obama”? I asked.

He laughed. He tends to say things just to get a reaction, he said.

“It was pretty much that, or tell ’em all to fuck off,” he said. “It didn’t mean nothing.”

This was no comprehensive interview.

I’d hoped to meet with Booth in the afternoon, after his sentencing was over and all that would be left was for him to pack up and get ready to go to prison for the rest of his life.

However, for whatever reason, my visit got arranged for early in the morning, before his 10 o’clock appearance in Lewis County Superior Court to be sentenced.

Really only enough time to ask a few questions, try to at least learn a couple of basic facts and make our acquaintance for perhaps another interview in the future.

So I asked, how do you suppose John Lindberg got out of that house alive; hiding in the bathroom while – as prosecutors described – everyone else was shot to get rid of witnesses?

“I don’t think that’s what was going on,” Booth began.

But he stopped before sharing his theory. He’d already testified he was not there.

“I’m gonna appeal, this is gonna have a new trial within the next five years,” he said. “That’s a guarantee, so I’m not gonna say too much.”

Ineffective assistance of counsel will be the main issue, he said.

“My lawyer was almost incompetent,” he said. “I mean, I like the guy, he’s a great guy.”

But Roger Hunko can’t put two sentences together, he said.

He offered this: Lindberg lied about what he said he saw, Linn Perry’s testimony didn’t match with what he said in police interviews, Denise Salts isn’t all there, she was shot in the head after all, he said.

Our visit in the Lewis County Jail lasted only about an hour, I mostly listened. Had to listen hard because we were separated by a glass partition.

The 6-foot 3-inch inmate sat on a ledge on the other side, handcuffed with his ankles shackled.

“That extortion case was bullshit, that’s not how I work,” he said. “Am I a big dude? Yes I am. But I never threaten anybody, I make them invite me to their homes.”

Booth described his “style” is more like sitting down and talking, giving people options.

“I don’t threaten people,” he said again. “Cause I know that I’m a three-striker. If I go to someone’s house and start slapping them around and taking their shit, I’m never getting out of prison.”

“Do I collect money? Yes I do,” he said. That’s business. My muscle’s my hustle.

“I got  a thousand one liners.” He smiled.

It’s something he’s done his whole life, he said. When he was young, he used to punch people in the mouth, but as he got older he found didn’t need to do it that way, he said.

Born in Centralia, by age 13 he was out there, running amok, a young gang member, he said.

“I don’t have regular contact with family members,” he said. “I’m from the streets, we kind create out own family.”

He’s not sure where his parents are, he said. His mother, Paula Wilson, came to see him one time, he said. His father has spent time in prison, and for all he knows, may be dead, he said.

Booth said he has one older brother who might live in Rainier, Ore.

Booth bounced around between his parents, and lived in a lot of places, like Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma, Federal Way, even southern California, he said. And was locked up in juvenile a lot, he said.

Said he became a member of the Crips gang before age 13. In the early 1990s, remember that gang-banging “was at it’s fullest,” he said.

At age 16, he moved  back to Onalaska, to what was his grandmother’s house on Middle Fork Road, he said.

“I was an athlete, so I always figured I’d be a pro boxer,” he said. “But then, once I got locked up all the time, I couldn’t get nobody to sponsor me. So it was all bad.”

By the time he was 31 years old, he’d been in prison three times. He got out in December 2009, after serving five and a half years for hitting a man in the head with a crowbar at a Saturday night dance in downtown Centralia.

He lived in the Tacoma area, and had 18 months of community supervision from the state Department of Corrections.

“When I was out there right now, I had a 9 to 5 job. I’m on parole, I had to have a job,” Booth said.

He was happy at the upholstery foam making business where he worked, he said. It was a good company.

But was also was a personal trainer, teaching people how to work out and to fight.

“I pretty much had it going on, I thought,” Booth said.

But as part of a gang, he pretty much had to sell drugs, he said.

So what about Robbie Russell, I asked, and the theory Russell had you extorting money from David West Sr., thinking West Sr. should owe him the money from his bail from the June 2009 incident when the two of them of in trouble attacking, threatening a group of teenagers in Winlock? (West Sr., who along with his teenage son D.J. and a friend Tony Williams were fatally shot inside the West’s Salkum-area home, made a plea deal and was a witness against Russell in an upcoming trial.)

“Basically what they say, I’m a goon for Robbie Russell … I don’t work for nobody ya know,” Booth said. “If you’re a friend of mine, I’m extremely loyal, I’m coming through for you no matter what.”

There were so many things going on that never came out, Booth said.

West Sr. was going to prison, he said.

“He owed me some money, he needed to pay that money, he was paying that money,” he said. “It was not a big deal.”

Booth’s red and white striped prison garb literally hangs on his lanky frame.

It wasn’t that way in August 25, 2010 when he was arrested some four days after the shootings. Then, he said he was 220 pounds but in jail he’s dropped 50 pounds – of muscle – he said.

No it’s not nerves or anything like that, he said.

They don’t feed him enough, he said. He’s allergic to pork, so instead he gets noodles, he said.

He’s only let out of his cell once every three days, and so he spends his time reading a lot, doing crosswords and push ups, he said.

And he slept fine the night before, he said. That was after the jury convicted him on every count, and knowing he would be going upstairs to a courtroom in less than an hour where he would be told the mandatory sentence was life with no possibility of release.

“It doesn’t bother me,” he said. “I’ve known this was coming since the day I got arrested.”

He decided to turn himself in – before he was captured without incident in Spokane – to help out his friend, former cell mate, Ryan McCarthy, he said.

Only, Booth calls him by his nickname White Folks.

He compared it to Darcas Allen getting 490 (420) years for being a getaway driver for Maurice Clemmons who fatally shot four police officers in Lakewood and then was shot dead by an officer.

“On White Folks, they’d a hung him if they couldn’t get me,” he said.

I’m glad he’s going to see daylight again, so, whatever, Booth said.

Booth asked if I’d seen the toxicology reports.

“Everybody there was higher than a kite, with the exception of me,” he said. “I don’t do drugs. At all.”

“When you get all them tweekers, with guns and stuff, they’re unpredictable,” he said. “So am I surprised that that happened to ’em? Not a bit.”

Is it relevant? he asked. Kinda, he answered himself.

“Don’t’ get me wrong in this whole situation, you know what I’m saying. I feel for people’s losses,” he said.

He understands they lost loved ones and are lashing out, but he wasn’t there, he explained.

“The only thing I’m devastated about is I’m never getting out of prison,” Booth said. “And that actually hurts a little bit sometimes.”

“Hey, how come you didn’t report on me spitting in Dusty Breen’s and Dan Riordan’s faces?” Booth asked, referring to two Lewis County detectives.

I didn’t know, I told him.

It was coming back from court, a month or two ago, and he’d told Riordan to stop sitting behind him, he said. “And, I always do what I say, that’s me, no matter what,” Booth said.

He’d been sitting there for a reason, Booth said, and if anybody knows why I did it, he does.

Do you know what you’re going to say, when you get to speak at sentencing? I asked. Yeah, wanna know what I’m gonna say? he said.

“I can wait,” I answered.

Time was running out. Several times I said I had to leave, but I kept having just one more question.

“Hey, here’s my quote for the day,” Booth said. “Everyone out there that hates Big Six, to all of them fuck you.”

There’s more to the case than came in court, he said.

Like he has evidence he was in Rochester at about 2:18 that morning, Booth said.

“I was in Rochester when all this stuff went down,” he said. “They pinged me on my cell phone … which would be 40 something miles from Wings Way,” he said.

I had a bad jury, Booth said.

“Like I said, I’ll have a new trial in the next five years,” Booth said. “If anyone thinks they’ve seen the last of me, they’re sadly mistaken.

“I’ve never lost an appeal and I always come back. And in a case like this, you can’t help but to win.”

Salkum triple murder: Victims cry, defendant lashes out at sentence hearing

Friday, December 16th, 2011
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Denise Salts, left, has a victim's advocate read her statement to the court during John A. Booth's sentencing on Friday in Lewis County Superior Court. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

This was updated at 3:23 p.m. and 7:22 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Convicted triple murderer John Booth Jr. turned toward the packed courtroom benches this morning after he was sentenced to life in prison and loudly, clearly stated: “Fuck you.”

It wasn’t clear who he was specifically addressing, but he had just listened to victims and their families for some 20 minutes tell the court he was a loser who should never again see the light of day.

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David "D.J." West Jr.

Because Booth’s conviction yesterday gave him a “third strike”, the mandatory sentence he got today was life in prison with no chance for release.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey told the courtroom the slayings were among the most gruesome in modern Lewis County history.

“Your conduct was vicious,” Brosey said.

“If there’s a case that justifies the death penalty in Lewis County, this would have been it,” the judge said.

Three jail guards sat directly behind Booth, with at least two more in the room along with a large number of sheriff’s deputies.

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David West Sr.

The 32-year-old former Onalaskan was found guilty by a jury yesterday on all counts: first-degree murder for the deaths of 16-year-old David “D.J.” West Jr. and 50-year-old Tony Williams of Randle. He was also convicted of second-degree murder for David West Sr., 52, and the attempted murder of Denise R. Salts, 52, as well as attempted extortion and being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Booth denied even being present when the four were shot in their heads, but the jury took less than two hours to make its decision.

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Tony Williams

Two people who survived the events of Aug. 21, 2010 inside the Salkum-Onalaska area home addressed the court before Booth was sentenced.

John Lindberg held a blue bandana-handkerchief in his hand as he came forward to speak.

He thanked the offices of the sheriff and prosecutor and apologized to the court for the profanity he repeated when he testified.

“I’d just like to say to Mr. Booth, thank you for not killing me,” Lindberg said.

The 59-year-old plumber hid in a back room in the house during the shootings.

Lindberg shared the prayer he says every morning and night: “I pray he should never see the light of day again,” he said. “For as long as you are on God’s green earth.”

Denise Salts sat with a victim’s advocate who read her statement.

Salts had written it’s her turn to smile, “you’re the loser now.”

“There’s an angry part of me that wants to curse, swear and yell at you,” the advocate read. But then she thinks of Dave, D.J. and Tony, she said.

Tony William’s brother’s girlfriend, who did not give her name, said she believed Williams laid down his life for a friend that night. She spoke of the man, whose 13-year-old son and brother sat in the audience listening.

“Tony was our brother and best friend and some killer took him away from his family,” she said.

Jessica Porter conveyed her anger directly to the defendant, in an exchange not everyone in the courtroom could hear but continued until the judge asked her to address him.

“You took my brother, my dad, and you still sit here smirking and smiling,” Porter said to Booth. “And what did you get out of that? Nothing.”

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Jessica Porter, left, addresses the court with her mother Jodi Porter by her side. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

David “D.J.” West Jr.’s mother, Jodi Porter, spoke just a few words.

“Life in prison is too good for you,” she said. “Not that it matters to you, but you will meet your maker.”

Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher and Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead had argued to jurors Booth and his former cell mate Ryan McCarthy visited the Wings Way house because they were “taxing” West Sr. on behalf of Lewis County drug dealer Robbie Russell.

The prosecutors contended when West Sr. brought out a shotgun to get them to leave, Booth shot him with a 9 mm handgun. The shootings that followed were executions to eliminate witnesses, prosecutors argued.

Meagher gave his sentencing recommendation to the judge.

“I guess as we say, strike one, strike two and, my gosh, strike three, four, five and six,” Meagher said. “This man needs to be sent to prison without the possibility of release.”

Port Orchard-based defense attorney Roger Hunko agreed the life without parole was the sentence the judge would impose.

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John Booth Jr. listens to proceedings, seated next to his lawyer Roger Hunko. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

When Judge Brosey gave Booth his opportunity to speak, Booth just said: “How about some probation?”

“For what,” the judge asked.

“Probably for when you kick me loose,” Booth replied.

The judge moved on.

When the judge imposed the sentence, he told Booth he didn’t think anyone in the courtroom, with the exception of Booth, believed a word of his testimony.

Brosey called Booth’s actions senseless.

He told Booth he could expect his first year in Walla Walla at the state penitentiary to be locked up alone in a cell the size of the judge’s bench and then remain in prison for the rest of his life.

That’s what you deserve, Brosey said.

Booth refused to sign his judgement and sentence document.

The judge held Booth in contempt and threatened to take away his credit for 478 days he’s already served. Brosey also suggested guards should help him affix his fingerprints to the document down in the jail instead of in the courtroom.

When the judge was finished, Booth asked: “Do I get to say anything?”

“You’ve said all you’re gonna say,” Brosey said.

By then, a line of seven law enforcement officers had filled the aisle in between the rows of courtroom benches.

That’s when Booth turned to the audience and made his final statement: “F*** you.”

The outburst elicited at least one “Rot in hell” and several other remarks to the defendant.

Hunko filed a notice of appeal.

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Jail guards and sheriff's deputies keep close to John Booth Jr. and block a path towards audience members and the door. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

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The courtroom on the top floor of the Lewis County Law and Justice Center in Chehalis is filled during the sentencing. / Photo by Sharyn L. Decker

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Chief Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher consults with Deputy Prosecutor Will Halstead and sheriff's detective Bruce Kimsey. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

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Tony Williams' brother Danny Williams and son Cody Williams listen to court proceedings. / Photo by Sharyn L. Decker

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John Lindberg addresses the court. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

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Judge Richard Brosey presides over the murder case of John Allen Booth Jr. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds

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John Allen Booth Jr. is led out of the courtroom and back down to the jail. / Courtesy photo by Bradd Reynolds