Archive for March, 2012

Breaking news: Holdups at two Chehalis banks, two in custody

Saturday, March 17th, 2012
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Twin Star Credit Union was closed temporarily after an attempted robbery this morning.

Updated at 1:37 p.m. and 2:22 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Two subjects are in custody after holdups at two Chehalis banks this morning.

Police were called about 10 a.m. to Twin Star Credit Union on South Market Boulevard just south of 13th Street.

A deputy spotted a suspicious car nearby at the same time an alarm alerted officers to a robbery at Chase Bank, Sgt. Gary Wilson said.

“A chase, a wreck and a dog bite,” Wilson said of what followed.

A car being pursued by police wrecked on a curve along Cooks Hill Road in Centralia where one male fled on foot, according to police. Centralia Police Officer Ruben Ramirez and his dog Lobo caught him, Ramirez said.

Wilson said the subjects may be responsible for a bank robbery in Olympia last night as well, but he had not confirmed that.

Just after 11:30 a.m. Twin Star remained temporarily closed with a sheriff’s patrol car parked out front and arriving customers departing without being able to take care of business.

About eight blocks to the north, Chase Bank’s front door displayed a similar notice, apologizing for the temporary inconvenience.

Chehalis Deputy Police Chief Randy Kaut said one man had gone inside Twin Star, and implied he had a weapon by keeping his hand in his pocket.

He didn’t get any money there, Kaut said. The credit union doesn’t have cash drawers like a regular bank, he said.

A black Acura left and that’s what the deputy saw down the street, a man running out of Chase Bank and getting into a black Acura in a parking lot nearby, according to Kaut.

The robber’s routine was similar inside the second bank, except he left with cash, Kaut said.

Officers impounded the vehicle and will get a search warrant to get inside of it, he said. An officer could see money inside it, Kaut said.

The two men are being checked at Providence Centralia Hospital with minor injuries before being booked into jail, according to police.

They are Robert T. Hendrickson, 23, of Centralia and Robert J. Hughes, 32, of Tenino.

•••

Correction: This has been updated to correctly reflect that Chase Bank is north of Twin Star Credit Union.

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Chase Bank on the 600 block of South Market Boulevard is closed after a morning robbery.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, March 16th, 2012

DRUGS

• A 21-year-old motorist pulled over for speeding yesterday on U.S. Highway 12 near Ethel yesterday was arrested after two and half pounds of marijuana and 18 Ecstasy pills were found in his trunk. A trooper smelled marijuana and subsequently had a K-9 sniff the vehicle, according to charging documents. Samuel N. Daggett, 21, of Mountlake Terrace, showed a valid medical marijuana authorization, but said it was for an ailment the trooper understood not to be approved by the law, according to charging documents. Daggett was charged today with one count of possession of a controlled substance and a count of felony possession of marijuana. His father was in court and asked to co-sign a $25,000 unsecured bond for his release. Charging papers note Daggett said at the jail the amount authorities claimed was wrong, as he had just paid for two pounds of marijuana not two and a half pounds.

INDECENT EXPOSURE

• A 65-year-old man was arrested and jailed yesterday morning after two individuals saw him urinating in a parking lot across from R.E. Bennett Elementary School  in Chehalis about 10 a.m. A driver stopped in traffic told police he made no effort to hide his exposed (parts), according to charging documents. James L. Stephens, who is moving from Rochester to the 300 block of South Market – near where he was observed – was charged with felony indecent exposure because he has been previously convicted of a similar offense or a sex offense, according to authorities. Defense attorney Bob Schroeter told a judge this afternoon Stephens’ criminal history includes a 30-year-old conviction. It was first-degree rape, according to charging documents. He is a registered level three sex offender, according to Chehalis police. Stephens was released on a $15,000 unsecured bond.

FRAUD ONLINE

• A 19-year-old Chehalis woman called the sheriff’s office yesterday after she learned she’d been tricked out a $2,200 engagement ring set she tried to sell on Craigslist. After receiving what she thought was confirmation payment had been made into her PayPal account, she sent the goods via UPS to an address in California, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. It turned out the email “confirmation” was fake, according to Brown. The sheriff’s office advises counterfeit payment confirmations can look authentic, but should be independently verified. It’s a common scheme they are seeing, according to Brown.

• A woman called Centralia police yesterday to report she was ripped off by a fake ad that popped up on her computer. It warned there was a virus and charged a fee to repair it, according to the Centralia Police Department. After she paid, she realized it was a scam, police reported. The amount stolen was not indicated by police.

THEFT AND BURGLARY

• Police were called about 6:45 p.m. yesterday to the 1600 block of West Mellen Street in Centralia where someone had apparently broken in to a home while the residents were away. Damage of an unspecified nature was found inside, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Police took a report about 12:15 p.m. yesterday of a car prowl on the 100 block of South Silver Street in Centralia. A stereo was taken, according to the Centralia Police Department.

WRECKS

• Officers were called to a school bus hitting a parked vehicle about 3:25 p.m. yesterday at West First Street and North Washington Avenue in Centralia. Police said there were no injuries and the damage as minor.

• A truck driver was tracked down at a loading dock in the Port of Centralia after he reportedly backed up on Harrison Avenue to make his turn, twice striking a car behind him. A deputy called about 3:50 p.m. learned the 61-year-old driver from Rochester moved out his way after the first bump only to have him back up further and get her car again, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. He told the deputy he heard a horn but was unaware of the collisions, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. His Peterbilt  tractor-trailer rig was undamaged, but the Saturn sustained an estimated $3,000 damage, according to Brown. A Toyota Camry also somehow involved was not damaged, Brown said. The 75-year-old truck driver from Alberta, Canada was cited for hit and run, Brown said.

News brief: “This is a drill, only a drill”

Friday, March 16th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Attention scanner listeners: Dispatchers in Lewis County’s 911 center will be participating in a drill today, practicing how to deal with an undisclosed emergency situation.

The radio communications will be conducted on a secondary frequency, and will be preceded by an announcement it is an exercise, according to Laura Hanson at Lewis County Communications.

The drill is expected to begin about 1 p.m. and could continue until as late as 2:30 p.m., depending upon actual emergency communications needing attention at the same time, Hanson said.

The mock scenario will involve some type of incident taking place close enough to the Historic Courthouse on Main Street in Chehalis that dispatchers would have to “shelter in place”, Hanson said.

Also taking part in radio and phone communications simulating their response will be Chehalis police, fire, the sheriff’s office, the jail and other county departments, according to Hanson.

For the 911 center, it is an opportunity to check and refine their continuity of operations plan, according to Hanson.

News brief: Minor flooding in Grand Mound

Friday, March 16th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Chehalis River at Grand Mound reached flood stage at 6 o’clock this morning and is expected to crest around 5 p.m., according to the National Weather Service.

Heavy rains yesterday caused minor flooding on the Chehalis and Skokomish Rivers, the weather service reports. A flood warning continues on both rivers; the Chehalis in Thurston County until late tonight.

The Chehalis River is expected to continue to rise slowly today and crest just above its flood stage of 14 feet, according to the weather service.

•••

Check the National Weather Service, here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

ATTEMPTED DOG-NAPPING

• A resident of the 500 block of Jackson Street in Centralia called police about 10:15 a.m. yesterday after he caught someone trying to steal his St. Bernard. He had gone in the backyard to get his dog and spotted its back end going around the fence toward an alley “kind of struggling” according to police. He saw a guy pulling his dog away, grabbed the dog and then alleged dog-napper shoved him before running away, according to Officer John Panco.

THEFT

• A deputy took a report yesterday of several appliances stolen from a vacant house on the 500 block of South Street in Centralia. The victim is “Fannie Mae” and the contact person is an assistant from a real estate company. Missing was a hot water heater, a dishwasher, a double oven and range as well as the kitchen sink, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

• A deputy took a report yesterday evening of items stolen from a barn on the 100 block of Kahout Road in Curtis, including the metal coupala from atop the barn, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Also missing is a barber chair with a white cushion and stainless steel frame and 30 to 40 wood boards, according to the sheriff’s office. The theft occurred sometime between Jan. 2 and Saturday.

• Police responded to Oakview Elementary School in Centralia just after 3 o’clock this morning where a window had been broken and someone apparently went inside. Unknown if anything was missing, according to the Centralia Police Department.

DUI

• Centralia police arrested a man yesterday on the 1400 block of Lewis Street after he reportedly drove his truck through a neighbor’s yard then went inside a home and refused to answer the door when police knocked. His vehicle had caused “damage”, according to the Centralia Police Department. Officers got a search warrant and then found Zachary S. Gunderson, 30, hiding inside with Jason R. Moore Sr., 29, according to police. Gunderson was arrested for driving under the influence, obstruction and hit and run, according to police. Moore was arrested for obstructing.

WRECKS

• Centralia police responded to a two-car accident on the 2000 block of Northeast Kresky Avenue in Chehalis about 11:10 a.m. yesterday. While the damage to the vehicles was serious, the injuries were not, according to Chehalis police. One driver had turned in front of the other, Sgt. Gary Wilson said.

• Deputies didn’t find a driver when they responded yesterday morning to a wreck on the 300 block of Big Hanford Road outside Centralia. A 1999 Plymouth had struck a guard rail and gone into a ditch, sustained an estimated $1,000 damage, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. It was towed.

STOVE FIRE

• Firefighters were called about 9:20 a.m. yesterday to a kitchen fire at a dental office on the 2400 block of Borst Avenue in Centralia. The damage was limited to an electric range, according to Riverside Fire Authority.

B Street homicide: Defendant says self defense

Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

Updated at 7:31 p.m. on Thursday March 15, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Prosecutors said the owner of the house on Centralia’s B Street told his house guests to stop arguing, then went and loaded his handgun before he “called the victim out of the bedroom” and shots were fired, killing 43-year-old David Wayne Carson.

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David Wayne Carson

The accused, Weston G. Miller, told police he acted in self-defense yesterday, that Carson rushed him with a knife, according to charging papers. Detectives haven’t found evidence Carson was armed, Elected Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer wrote in court documents.

Miller, 29, was charged today with first-degree murder, with a maximum possible penalty of life in prison.

He was arrested after “fleeing” his own house yesterday afternoon.

Miller is described as a lifelong local resident, a former welder who collected on-the-job injury payments until the end of last year. Neighbors say the past few months he’s had financial issues, including getting the power shut off in his home.

Carson’s family says he had been staying with Miller for about a week, with plans to use a college grant to become a “bush” pilot in Alaska.

Prosecutor Meyer today told a judge Miller is a danger to the community.

“This was an unprovoked attack, he shot the victim two times and the victim is deceased,” Meyer said.

Meyer said detectives found in his house five guns, a silencer, a laser site for a gun and a bullet-proof vest.

Miller’s domestic violence assault two years ago means he’s prohibited from possessing firearms, according to Meyer.

Neither Centralia police, prosecutors or charging documents shed light on how the two men knew each other or any details about the dispute between Carson and his girlfriend Sara Delsavo. Only that the couple were arguing in a bedroom and Miller told them to quit it on two, perhaps three occasions.

Delsavo allegedly indicated that the day before, however, Miller offered to shoot Carson for her, and showed her his silencer, according to charging documents.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt ordered Miller held on $1 million bail.

Defense attorney Bob Schroeter had argued for much lower.

He pointed out the victim has a “rap sheet” that runs eight pages and an outstanding warrant for criminal trespass.

Miller’s only background was a two-year-old fourth-degree assault gross misdemeanor, Schroeter said.

“He poses no threat to the community whatsoever,” he said. “(The documents) seem to insinuate my client got in the middle, tried to rectify a situation.”

Police believe Carson was shot with a 9 mm handgun.

Miller was interviewed by police after his arrest.

According to charging documents, he said he got his gun from his bedroom, loaded it, put it in the pocket of his sweatpants and returned to the victim’s room.

He said he saw (Carson) just a few feet away from him with a knife in his left hand, and that he came at him, causing him to pull out his gun and fire, charging documents say.

Delsavo told police her boyfriend only moved toward Miller when Miller called him, and said her boyfriend was not armed, according to the documents. She heard several gunshots, she said.

Police have said they think three shots were fired.

Miller was also charged with five counts of second-degree unlawful possession of a firearm.

When detectives searched his home, they found a .22 caliber rifle, a Walter .22 caliber pistol, a Walter 9 mm pistol, a Rohm revolver and a MAC-10 semi-automatic, according to charging documents.

Several of the victim’s family members were in the courtroom when Miller appeared, including Carson’s 21-year-old daughter and 17-year-old son.

His older brother Dan Carson spoke earlier about a life cut short.

David Carson – always the adventurer – had just signed up for college and was going to learn to fly, so he could go work in Alaska, he said.

“He seemed pretty excited Saturday when I talked to him about it,” he said.

The family grew up in Centralia, but when David was young, he hitched a ride on a train to California and his life took a turn for the worse, according to his brother.

“David, he never liked to following the rules much,” he said. “He always wanted to play or look for some bug or a bird.”

A bum on the train molested him, there was a gun and David Carson shot and killed the man, his brother said. He spent five years in juvenile detention in California, he said.

Dan Carson recalls his brother got out when he was 16.

One of his greatest loves was dogs and he took a job in San Bernadino caring for expensive show dogs, his brother said. He even worked with the St. Bernard from the movie “Beethoven” and a chihuahua from a Taco Bell commercial, he said.

Then that ended with some kind of a squabble, he said.

“He got into meth for awhile and he went down that road,” Dan Carson said. “Committed enough stuff, it was pretty much hopeless taking part in the American dream, if you will.”

Then life was good again, when David Carson worked at Hardel plywood in Chehalis as a millwright.

“He bought a truck, was picking it up, even going to church from time to time,” he said.

In the recent past, David Carson stayed temporarily with his mother in Chehalis, and then his girlfriend found him the place to stay on B Street, Dan Carson said.

He was talented, an artist as well, he said.

“He was good at whatever he did, when he decided to put his mind to it,” he said.

David Carson leaves behind his mother, two brothers, two children and a “California pit bull” named Titus.

Miller’s arraignment is scheduled for Thursday, March 22.
•••

For background, read “Breaking news: Man fatally shot in Centralia, suspect arrested” from Tuesday March 13, 2012 at 6:36 p.m., here

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

MAN JAILED AFTER HOSTILE ACTIONS TOWARD PET, VEHICLE

• Deputies were called to a home on the 1200 block of North Fork Road east of Chehalis about 9:20 p.m. yesterday after a man allegedly kicked a small cat across a porch and threw a brick at his ex’s car. A 45-year-old woman said they’d separated about three weeks earlier and he came knocking, wanting her to come back to him, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. She told him to leave, shut the door and then watched as he kicked the animal and damaged the car, according to the sheriff’s office. A deputy subsequently contacted Michael T. Gleason, 48, of Chehalis, and booked him into the Lewis County Jail for second-degree malicious mischief, domestic violence, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said. The case was also referred to the prosecutor’s office for a possible charge of animal cruelty. Brown didn’t have details on the cat’s condition. The damage to the Mercury Cougar was estimated at $750, Brown said.