Archive for August, 2012

News brief: Motorcyclist killed in Centralia collision with pole

Wednesday, August 29th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A Chehalis man died after his motorcycle slammed into a metal sign pole in Centralia last night.

Police say the 45-year-old was traveling on First Street near G Street when he lost control and hit the no parking sign ripping it out of the ground. It happened near a curve in the road and appears to have been related to excessive speed, according to Sgt. Carl Buster.

The man was taken to Providence Centralia Hospital and firefighters ordered an airlift for him but he was pronounced dead at the hospital, according to responders.

His name has not been released pending notification of his next-of-kin.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Tuesday, August 28th, 2012

GOLD JEWELRY PILFERED

• A Silver Creek woman who was asked by the man she hired to mow her lawn yesterday if she had any gold jewelry he could buy called the sheriff’ office early this morning after discovering several pieces she had shown him – including an angel pendant and a platinum and diamond ring – were missing from her home. A deputy summoned to the 300 block of Huntting Road learned the loss was estimated at almost $6,000, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The man said his name was Jeremy, Cmdr. Steve Aust said.

FREEZER THEFT

• Police were called just before 10 p.m. yesterday to the 300 block of South Pearl Street in Centralia when a resident spotted someone on their back porch stealing meat from a deep freezer. The individual dropped the meat and ran away, according to the Centralia Police Department. Officers were not able to locate a suspect.

PHONEY REFILL SUSPECTED

• Chehalis police were called to Rite Aid pharmacy on South Market Boulevard yesterday after a check with a provider on a called-in prescription revealed it was not legitimate, according to the Chehalis Police Department. The case is under investigation, police said.

FUNNY MONEY GIVEN TO BANK

• Wells Fargo Bank in Chehalis contacted police after finding two counterfeit $100 bills among their deposits from local businesses. The money, which displayed the same serial numbers, are being turned over to the U.S. Treasury, Chehalis Police Department Sgt. Gwen Carrell said this morning.

ASSAULT

• A 35-year-old Tacoma man was arrested early on Sunday morning after police responded to Motel 6 in Centralia and found his 47-year-old girlfriend with a bloody lip. The couple was in town for a dart tournament and were fighting, according to police. Officers were told he had grabbed her by the hair, dragged her back into the room and put her in bed. The suspect was booked for unlawful imprisonment but has been released from jail and faces a possible misdemeanor assault charge instead, according to the Officer Carl Buster.

DRUGS

• A 30-year-old Elma man was arrested early Saturday after an officer approaching two men yelling near Garbe’s Tavern on Northwest Chehalis Avenue in Chehalis saw one of the men run behind a car and throw something that turned out to a baggie of powder that field-tested positive for methamphetamine. Jerry E. Lithicum was booked into the Lewis County Jail for possession of methamphetamine, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

STOLEN CAR SLIPS BY OFFICERS

• Centralia police were contacted yesterday by the Bellingham Police Department about a vehicle reported stolen there because a Centralia officer on Saturday had run the vehicle’s license plates at the Motel 6 when investigating a dispute. The victim didn’t report it missing until he returned home from a trip. The car and driver have not been found since, according to Centralia police.

FLASHLIGHT TASER MISSING

• Someone broke into a vehicle parked on Northeast Cascade Avenue in Chehalis in the night and stole a Taser, according to a report made to police on Saturday. It wasn’t a police Taser gun but a product that looks like a flashlight and called a Shock Light, according to Sgt. Gwen Carrell.

RAIL RIDE ENDS IN CENTRALIA

• A pair of 21-year-olds from Oregon were arrested for trespassing last night in Centralia after they were found riding on a BNSF rail car in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department. Jay G. Williams and Desiree M. Rutherford were not booked into the jail, according to police.

News brief: Hitchhiker robbed, beaten in Tenino

Monday, August 27th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Tenino police say they are looking for a pair of men considered to be armed and dangerous following an incident last week in which a hitchhiker was robbed and beaten by someone who picked him up in Tenino.

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Andrew B. Miller

Police responded to the 700 block of Huston Street in Tenino about 11:30 p.m. on Wednesday after citizens reported hearing someone yelling for help, according to the Tenino Police Department.

The victim, a 25-year-old Tenino man, said he was hitchhiking and picked up by a red Jeep with two males and a female inside, according to a news release from police.

“At one point the driver pointed what appeared to be a Glock .40 caliber handgun at the victim ordering him to empty his pockets or get shot. ,” Police Chief John Hutchings stated in the news release.

Then, outside the Jeep, the driver punched the 25-year-old in the mouth and again ordered him at gunpoint to empty his pockets, according to Hutchings. The victim fled on foot yelling for help, Hutchings wrote.

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Tony L. League

Police suspect Andrew B. Miller, 20, of Yelm and Tony L. League, 23, of Olympia, but have not been able to find them, according to the news release.

The chief is asking anyone with information on their whereabouts to contact Tenino Officer Chris Davis at 360-489-8466, Thurston County dispatch at 360-704-2740 or Crime Stoppers at 360-493-2222.

Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Monday, August 27th, 2012

BRUSH FIRE CENTRALIA

• Firefighters called about 6:15 p.m. yesterday to smoke in the area of Salzer Valley Road outside Centralia found tall grass burning. The fire about a mile out of town was contained to an area of about 100 feet by 100 feet, according to Riverside Fire Authority.

ROBBED IN CENTRALIA

• A woman in her early 20s called police to the 400 block of West Cherry Street in Centralia yesterday after two males robbed her of her wallet and X-box. The victim said they came to her purchase the X-box, but instead, one ran out the door with the game system and her wallet while the other one held her from behind, according to the Centralia Police Department. One of the males was known the victim only as “Danny”, according to police.

ASSAULT

• The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reported this morning deputies are looking for a 29-year-old Centralia man who fled in a car after allegedly assaulting his girlfriend’s son on Friday night in Centralia. Deputies were called about 8:30 p.m. to the area of the 1600 block of Windsor Avenue to a report a teenage boy was running from a man, according to the sheriff’s office. The man fled in a car and the 17-year-old said his mother’s boyfriend had choked him, according to Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown.

BEAR HUNTER RESCUED

• More than a dozen responders hiked into a wooded area in East Lewis County on Saturday afternoon to bring out an injured bear hunter, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The 63-year-old man from Roy had hurt his ankle and members of Packwood Search and Rescue, Mount Rainier rangers and Pierce County Fire District 23 from the Ashford area carried him a quarter mile out in the area of Forest Service Road 5230, according to the sheriff’s office.

DRUGS

• A traffic stop about 6:45 p.m. on Saturday on Coal Creek Road near Centralia-Alpha Road led to the arrest of a 53-year-old Chehalis man with more than 200 gram of marijuana, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The driver was arrested for driving under the influence and misdemeanor possession (less than 40 grams) of marijuana,a and the passenger, Timothy J. Haston, 53, was arrested and booked for possession with intent to deliver, Chief Civil Deputy Stacy Brown said.

BURGLARY AND THEFT

• Police were called to an apartment on the 1400 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia where someone cut a window screen and reached in and stole a pack of cigarettes on Friday morning.

• A Centralia woman called Centralia police Friday after getting notices from collection agencies and realizing someone had opened multiple credit accounts in her name.

• A motorized scooter was stolen from a yard at the 1300 block of Central Boulevard in Centralia, according to a report made to police about 2:20 p.m. on Friday.

• A 2006 Saturn was found by a passerby in the park and ride lot on Camas Road near Toledo with a window smashed out and its it door and truck open about 1:40 a.m. on Sunday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. The driver who was subsequently contacted by a deputy said he had left it there locked.

• Morton police are asking for the public’s help after a call last week from an Olympia resident who said someone stole bicycles and the bike rack from off his motor home, possibly when he stopped to in Morton to eat.

• Morton police and the state patrol on Thursday recovered a vehicle stolen from Marysville that was sold online on Craigslist to a Morton resident. It was returned to its owner, Morton police reported.

DUI

• A 27-year-old motorist from Puyallup was arrested for driving under the influence about 9 p.m. on Saturday after officers got multiple calls about an erratically driving vehicle on Interstate 5 in Centralia. After exiting the freeway at Harrison Avenue, concerned citizens were able to take the keys from the vehicle and keep Leslie C. Miller at the scene until police arrived, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Kalin E. Maxwell, 20, of Centralia, was arrested for driving under the influence after a single-car accident about 1:10 a.m. on Saturday at the 200 block of North Washington Avenue in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• A 19-year-old Toledo man was reportedly uninjured but his car sustained major damage when he ran a stop sign at Cousins and Twin Oaks roads and ran through a fence on Saturday, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

WRECK

• A woman reportedly was uninjured when she accidentally drove off the road into a pond on Northwest Louisiana Avenue at Airport Road in Chehalis on Friday evening. It happened about 6 p.m. and passersby assisted her in getting out of the water, according to the Chehalis Fire Department.

INJURY AT HORSE EVENT

• Lewis County Fire District 1 called to an equestrian event yesterday off Gish Road in Onalaska arranged for an injured person to be airlifted to Southwest Washington Medical Center in Vancouver. Further details were not readily available.

The unclaimed dead are laid to rest

Saturday, August 25th, 2012
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Roses and baby's breath adorn urns of the unclaimed dead at Claquato Cemetery.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust.

A handful of people joined staff from the Lewis County Coroner’s Office on a spread of browned lawn beneath towering evergreens to pay their respects to the unclaimed dead who were buried this week.

The short memorial service at Claquato Cemetery on Wednesday afternoon was held for 14 individuals who have died in Lewis County over the past 14 years with no relatives to take custody of their bodies.

A red rose lay atop each of the brown-paper wrapped containers holding their ashes as Chaplain Brian Carter offered a brief prayer.

“We lay to rest these forgotten souls knowing full well you have not forgotten them,” Carter said.

Sondra Peckinpaugh came from her home across the street from the cemetery, even though she didn’t know any of the dead.

“I was kind of hoping more would be here,” she said.

Peckinpaugh said she has sometimes in the 40 years she’s resided near the so-called county section of the memorial park “adopted” a grave of an un-named person.

She regularly decorated with flowers a burial spot of a “Jane Doe” found in a river in the 1980s, she said.

Claquato Cemetery Manager Lacie Jendryka said a decision has not been made yet as to exactly how the grave will be marked. It won’t include all the names; a list will kept in cemetery records though, she said.

Many of the plots in what sometimes has been known as the welfare section do have flat headstones.

The burial of multiple cremated remains together in a single concrete liner is the first of its kind in the park, according to Jendryka.

Not all the dead are truly forgotten, some have friends still in the area, just no  family who could legally claim their bodies, according to the coroner’s office.

At the Twin City Senior Center in Chehalis during lunchtime announcements prior to the service, site leader Lou Morales passed around a list of those who were set to be buried.

Morales attended the ceremony with her parents, Lewis County Commissioner Ron Averill and his wife Jan Averill.

Three of the names were recognized by seniors, she said. Some there felt sure one of them, Mary Katherine Gibson, still had family in the area, she said.

“A lot of them would have liked to have come,” Morales said.

•••

For background including the list, read “The unclaimed dead of Lewis County” from Sunday July 29, 2012, here

Read about real drugstore cowboy James Fogle dies in prison, and his brief time in Lewis County …

Friday, August 24th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

The Seattle TImes reports the real life Drugstore Cowboy died yesterday at the Monroe prison.

James Fogle, 75, spent a summer in the Lewis County Jail, towards the end of a life lived mostly behind bars, a life the Seattle Times describes as inspiration for his autobiographical novel made into a movie of the same name – the 1989 film that featured actor Matt Dillon.

It was June 28, 1995, when Fogle was arrested in Centralia. He was sitting in a car with glass on his hair, shoulders and in his coat pockets after he broke into the Centralia Pharmacy at 212 N. Tower Ave. with a crowbar and carried out a tray of bottles of prescription narcotics, according to court documents.

When Centralia’s detective Fitzgerald advised him of his rights for an interview the following day, his response was short.

“I think I’m pretty well screwed here, I better talk to my attorney,” court documents relate.

He added he’d been on a binge after his wife died a week earlier. The address in his file was in Tacoma.

At 58, his nine listed past convictions which included robbery, burglary and drugs stretched back to a 1957 crime of taking a motor vehicle without permission.

Fogle’s handwritten motion in the court file a month later asked a judge to appoint him adequate counsel.

“So far I have seen no one I recognize as counsel, spoke with nothing but a voice over the telephone briefly and have been shuffled through this system like a pig led to slaughter,” Fogle wrote.

He complained that after his initial appearance in court, instead of the lawyer he was led to believe he was to see, he was presented with a reporter.

Still, it was court-appointed Centralia attorney Don McConnell who told the court Fogle’s defense to second-degree burglary would be general denial.

However, he pleaded guilty as charged and on Aug. 30, was sentenced by Lewis County Superior Court Judge H. John Hall to five years plus eight months in prison. Deputy Prosecutor Ruth Vogel – working for then elected Lewis County Prosecutor Nelson Hunt – signed the document.

According to his court file, Fogle was released from prison and by the end of 1999 was granted his request to a probation officer to reside in Palm Desert, California, as he was a writer and would be closer to his publicist

His Washington probation officer lost track of him shortly before his term of active supervision ended, but noted Fogle, or someone on his behalf, continued to make payments on his court ordered legal obligations.

In the summer of 2001, Fogle was brought from a Snohomish County corrections facility back to Lewis County, for a probation violation: failing to notify DOC of his changed address.

Judge David Draper gave him 60 days in jail.

Seattlepi.com’s Scott Sunde writes that Fogle’s convictions that followed his Centralia Pharmacy incarceration were in 2001 for a Snohomish County burglary, in 2004 for a burglary in Kent in which he was found asleep inside a drugstore near paper bags filled with $10,000 worth of pills and his final felony in May 2010 when he and a partner robbed a pharmacy in Redmond.

Seattle Times news reporter Jennifer Sullivan writes Fogle’s death yesterday following a battle with lung ailments occurred during his 16 year sentence.
•••

For more, read:

• ” ‘Drugstore Cowboy’ author James Fogle dies at 75″ from The Seattle Times on Thursday August 23, 2012 at 8:04 p.m., here

• “The real ‘Drugstore Cowboy’ dies in state prison” from Seattlepi.com on Friday August 24, 2012 at 10:08 a.m., here

News brief: Possible insanity plea in trooper assault case

Friday, August 24th, 2012

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The Centralia man accused of assaulting a trooper alongside the freeway last month was finally arraigned yesterday and pleaded not guilty to all counts.

Don K. Gonzales, 23, was suffering from some type of mental issue when the events occurred but has gotten stabilized during his time in jail, according to his attorney.

“He’s made a remarkable recovery,” Defense attorney Ken Johnson said yesterday afternoon.

Gonzales was walking along the shoulder of Interstate 5 near Main Street in Chehalis on July 3 when Trooper Rob Moore contacted him. After Moore told him to drop a knife, Gonzales allegedly threw a semi truck lug nut at the trooper’s face, breaking his nose and his glasses.

He is charged second-degree assault, plus three counts of third-degree assault regarding the wrestling match in which three passersby jumped in to help the trooper detain him.

Gonzales has been locked up on a no-bail hold, but yesterday Lewis County Superior Court Judge Richard Brosey set bail at $250,000. A trial date was scheduled for the week of October 8.

Johnson says there is the potential of an insanity plea.

“There’s nothing that went on that was at all logical,” Johnson said of the events of July 3.
•••

For background, read:

• “View from the ground: Helping trooper take down fighting suspect” from Sunday July 15, 2012, here

• “Sharyn’s Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup” from Thursday July 5, 2012, here